Powering Up For Profits In The Professional Residential Cleaning Business

Maid and House Cleaning Services Guide

This is where a professional house-cleaning service could save your sanity. Letting go of some of your duties–or simply having a day off every now and then from household chores–can be great for you and your partner’s well-being, not to mention the health benefits for your family.

Is a House-Cleaning Service Worth It?

Other than simply allowing you to focus on more pressing work and personal matters, having your house regularly cleaned by a professional also has advantages for your health in every aspect.

Keep Dust and Dust Mites Away

This aspect of cleaning can go ignored in our daily lives, but the dust that accumulates behind furniture and in carpets can cause allergies. Dust is a common allergen, and the dust mites that are invisible to the naked eye can also cause allergic reactions. Not only that, but dust can hold onto bacteria and microbes that might make your family sick. A professional grade, high-power vacuum cleaner is a good step toward improving your family’s health.

Get Rid of Pathogens Before They Become a Problem

If you’re not careful, bathrooms and toilets can be breeding grounds for harmful bacteria, along with fungi and mold. A professional cleaner knows the best techniques and products for eliminating hard-to-remove mold, and also knows which areas to target to keep your bathroom as hygienic as possible. This is particularly helpful with young kids, as they are more susceptible to infection.

Take a load off your mind

Having someone else take care of the cleaning means you can relax and enjoy the comforts of home, instead of feeling overwhelmed and irritated by the cleaning that’s waiting to be done. And when you don’t have to spend your weekend cleaning up, you’ll return to work rejuvenated.

 

Cleaning Services Consumer Guide

This cleaning services consumer guide will help you decide what cleaning services are the most appropriate for you and your needs. If you are in the market for cleaning services, you have options and knowing which option is best for you (and your family) can be such a task. So we thought doing some researching and putting together this guide will help you save time and hopefully lots of headaches can be avoided.

items Included in The Cleaning Services Consumer Guide are:

Before Deciding Things – for example “What are your general cleaning requirements?”

We recommend making a list, understanding your needs better so you can discuss your needs with much clarity with the different companies you call for quotes.

Figure out what’s your cleaning budget per month? Per year? This helps your cleaning company put together the best package to fit your needs.

Other Things to Consider –such as “payment options?” What’s best for you, to pay with credit cards, checks, PayPal, etc.’

Professional Cleaning Services: Overview of the industry, etc.

This is a brief overview on the cleaning industry as a whole

Service Options

Local Cleaners or Franchise

Small Cleaning Services or New Market Entrants

Individual Cleaners

Tech Companies in the Cleaning Industry

Points to Consider when Dealing with Tech Cleaning Companies —these are companies that are truly technology companies offering cleaning services

Prices that are too good to be true –what does it mean for you as the client?

Absence of Effective Quality Control Systems

Inadequate Training

Benefits and Pitfalls of Hiring “under the table’ Individuals to Clean for You

Pros & Cons – and legal considerations

What Happens When Unprofessional Companies Enter the Market?

Biggest Issues of Doing Things the Wrong Way

Why Use the Services of ‘traditional’ Cleaning Services

This is not a sales guide to get you to use Tremendous Maid. This consumer services guide is a bit long but trust me, we put a lot of time and effort to give you the best info based on research and our own experiences from the industry.

 

How much does house cleaning cost?

Before you hire a house cleaner, it’s a good idea to get familiar with house cleaning prices in your local area. That way, you know you’re getting a fair price. A standard 3-bedroom home usually costs between $70-$138, but your cleaner might charge more or less. The cost of house cleaning depends on where you live, what kind of tasks you need done, and how long it’s likely to take.

This house cleaning price guide will break down everything you need to know about house cleaning costs, based on our data from thousands of house cleaners and completed cleaning tasks. By the end of this guide, you’ll have a clear idea of the price you can expect to pay for common cleaning tasks around your home and you’ll know how to get started with hiring your house cleaner.

House cleaning prices for different types of cleaning

House cleaning prices depend a lot on the type of house, the tasks, and how much work is involved. We’ve reviewed all our recent house cleaning tasks posted in the marketplace to give you approximate price guides for each.

What factors affect the cost of cleaning your house?

As you can see from our price guides above, the cost of different services can sometimes vary by hundreds. Here are the factors that might increase or decrease the price of your house clean:

If it’s a minor task that’ll take a few minutes, or one that might take a full day

The number of bedrooms

The number of bathrooms

How many m2 your home is

How detailed the clean is (expect to pay more if you need a deep clean)

Any extras (like oven, cabinets, windows, carpets)

Whether you’ll provide the equipment and supplies

Your location/suburb

How difficult or easy it is to access and complete the job

How urgently you need the job done

Whether you need the cleaning done on a weekend or weekday

Average hourly rates of house cleaning in Australia

The average hourly rate of a house cleaner depends on whether they’re employed (and their employer covers their expenses/tax/super) or they’re self-employed.

 

Guidance for people working in, visiting or delivering to other people’s homes.

steps to protect yourself, your staff and your customers during coronavirus.

Complete a COVID-19 risk assessment. Share it with all your staff. If you have fewer than 5 workers, or are self-employed, you don’t have to write anything down as part of your risk assessment. Find out how to do a risk assessment.

Clean more often. Increase how often you clean surfaces, especially those that are being touched a lot. Ask your staff and your customers to use hand sanitiser and wash their hands frequently.

Ask your customers to wear face coverings where required to do so by law. That is especially important if your customers are likely to be around people they do not normally meet. Some exemptions apply. Check when to wear one, exemptions, and how to make your own.

Make sure everyone is social distancing. Make it easy for everyone to do so by putting up signs or introducing a one-way system that your staff and customers can follow.

Increase ventilation by keeping doors and windows open where possible and running ventilation systems at all times.

Take part in NHS Test and Trace by keeping a record of all your staff and contractors for 21 days. From 18 September, this will be enforced in law. Some exemptions apply. Check ‘Maintaining records of staff, customers and visitors to support NHS Test and Trace’ for details.

Turn people with coronavirus symptoms away. If a staff member (or someone in their household) or a customer has a persistent cough, a high temperature or has lost their sense of taste or smell, they should be isolating. By law from 28 September employers must not require someone who is being required to self-isolate to come to work.

more things to be aware of if your business provides services in other people’s homes:

Explain safety measures to your customer before entering their home. Make sure that members of the household know they should maintain social distancing from you.

Avoid crowded areas. Identify busy locations in the house such as hallways and avoid moving through them where possible.

Limit contact with customers. Bring your own food and drink and take breaks outside where possible. Avoid sharing items such as pens or tools.

When working in a household with people at higher risk, take extra measures to avoid contact, such as working in a separate room from them.

Communicate and train. Make sure all staff and customers are kept up to date with how safety measures are being used.

This document sets out guidance on how to open workplaces safely while minimising the risk of spreading COVID-19. It gives practical considerations of how this can be applied in the workplace.

Each business will need to translate this into the specific actions it needs to take, depending on the nature of their business, including the size and type of business, how it is organised, operated, managed and regulated. They will also need to monitor these measures to make sure they continue to protect customers and workers.

This guidance does not supersede any legal obligations relating to health and safety, employment or equalities and it is important that as a business or an employer you continue to comply with your existing obligations, including those relating to individuals with protected characteristics. It contains non-statutory guidance to take account when complying with these existing obligations. When considering how to apply this guidance, take into account agency workers, contractors and other people, as well as your employees.

 

Housecleaning Tips to Keep Your Home in Tip-Top Shape Year-Round

If you lead a busy lifestyle, you know the drill. You start off the week with a mostly clean and tidy house (depending on how many chores you accomplished over the weekend). By midweek, though, you realize that you haven’t put away your dry-cleaning and haven’t folded your laundry. There’s a growing stack of mail in the hallway, a used gym bag by the door, a pile of fresh laundry on the bed, dirty dishes in the sink (and clean ones in the dishwasher, which didn’t just finish its cycle).

To top it off, your vanity looks as if a bomb went off in the beauty aisle at Saks. By Friday, the house is a full-blown disaster zone—that is, until you rest from your week and tackle the massive (and much-needed) tidying-up job. Then the cycle starts all over again. We promise it’s quicker than you think. Keep scrolling to study up on the house cleaning tips that will transform the state of your home permanently.

Make the bed as soon as you get up. Making the bed first thing in the morning will kick-start your productivity levels and make it that much harder to crawl back into bed.

Wipe your bedside table each morning. Keep wipes near your bedside table, and give your bedside table a quick wipe when picking up your phone in the morning. That’s one less chore to tackle on the weekend.

Edit your closet as you go. Keep a hamper or bag in your closet where you can throw items of clothing that don’t work anymore as you’re getting ready in the morning. Sort through it once a month, and toss, donate, or sell.

Immediately rehang items you wore. Don’t just throw clothes on a chair if they can be worn once more before laundry day—hang them. Keep dry clean–ready items in a separate section of your closet.

Have a dedicated hamper for every person in your home. One hamper is not enough. Have a laundry basket for each person in your house, plus an extra one for linens. If you’re feeling extra organized, use hampers that have two baskets in each so you can separate whites in advance.

Start a wash cycle as soon as you get home. If you have enough laundry, start a wash cycle first thing in the evenings so you have time to dry and fold. Don’t ever let unfolded laundry make it into your bedroom. Keep a folding area near your washer/dryer, and be ruthless about folding/ironing as soon as the drying cycle is done.

Spray your shower with cleaner after each shower. Give your shower a quick clean daily by spraying it with cleaner, quickly wiping surfaces, and letting it rinse out.

Hang towels on bars and robes on hooks. Your towels need to properly air-dry in order to be able to reuse them two to three times. Make sure they’re properly hung to dry. If you’re a bathrobe person, a dedicated hook for it in the bathroom will make your space feel a little more like a hotel room.

Keep a laundry hamper in your bathroom for towels. Your bathroom is not a hotel; don’t leave towels on the floor or in the tub. If they’ve gone past their three-day use, quickly throw them in the hamper.