The serious study of history includes seeing and interpreting it through different disciplines. Therefore, an archaeologist and an economist and then a sociologist would all see history through the lens of their own interests. One way to look at history is through systematic sets of laws that divide one period from another. Therefore, we can study and correctly conclude that the Code of Hammurabi (from around 1770 BC in Babylon), the Magna Carta (the foundation of English law from 1215), and the Nuremberg Laws of Race (1933) all signaled important milestones in human history.
Western culture owes much to Moses receiving the Ten Commandments on Mt. Sinai around 1240 BC. Three major world religions point back to that pivotal event. The cleaning industry experienced an event that will be viewed in the future just as pivotal as what happened on Mt. Sinai.
The International Sanitary Supply Association was originally chartered for manufacturers and distributors of chemicals and equipment used in the cleaning industry. The very first time I learned about the association, a distributor proudly told me it was the trade association of soap salesmen. Founded in 1923 by Albert Richter who wanted to trade information between distributors around the US, the ISSA became a global trade Association in 1966.
I mopped floors at five star hotels in Miami Beach starting in 1974 and launched my first janitorial company in 1977. No internet (Al Gore had not invented the world wide web yet), my library at the University I was attending was all I had as a resource and everything I could find out about my new business and my new career, I learned from my sanitary supply distributor who was an ISSA member.
How does a truly great commercial cleaning company operate? Hiring and training and supervising my staff, the best way to deal with service defects, what constitutes quality service and hundreds of issues I had to figure out all by myself with the help of my supply company. What I needed was an operating standard to compare what I was doing with what was considered the best practices of my industry. Nothing of the sort existed so it was my best guess based on what other industries did.
The single most important event in the janitorial industry was the publication of the Cleaning Industry Management Standard (CIMS) by the ISSA. Not the voice of God or even a modern day Moses but the best practices of our industry agreed on by some of the best-organized janitorial companies in the country. A collaborative effort by the best minds of our industry organized by the ISSA, several years in the making but then the most amazing move by the Association is that CIMS is public and available to the entire industry free through the ISSA. (http://www.issa.com/?m=download )
CIMS is a standard for us to go by, a framework from which we can assemble the management structures of our businesses and a way for clients and prospects to know they are dealing with the best in the industry. CIMS is how the best companies organize their businesses spelled out in detail. For the very first time the janitorial industry is able to point to a set of practices that constitute how a company should operate.
The CIMS program is not simple and certification is a major endeavor but the results are worth every single bit of effort. There are currently 116 companies that have achieved CIMS Certification with 92 opting for an additional Green Building designation, which provides for the US Green Building Council’s LEED program.
Every janitorial and cleaning service owner needs to have a copy of the CIMS document and build around this standard. Certification may be a long way off in the future or maybe not at all but the standards are sound and provide a yardstick for managerial excellence.
Showing posts with label CIMS. Show all posts
Showing posts with label CIMS. Show all posts
Tuesday, April 24, 2012
Wednesday, July 20, 2011
How our Prehistoric Predecessors Learned to Bid and Estimate Janitorial Services
In prehistoric times, when janitors roamed the wilds, hunting and gathering clients and buildings, there was a method they used to bid and estimate new jobs.
These were very different days, long before cell phones, computers, high speed burnishers and internet connections. At night these savages did primitive dances with mops after commandeering office overhead radio systems. An unrelenting, primal beat of the Doors, Sly and The Family Stone and the Jefferson Airplane blared as they helped themselves to candy not meant for them, from receptionist’s desk top, glass containers which they enjoyed without remorse.
These were brutal and lawless days, eons before CIMS, the Cleaning Industry Management Standard, which codified how janitors were expected to behave and organize their tribes. The janitorial business was only rock and roll back then.
These were very different days, long before cell phones, computers, high speed burnishers and internet connections. At night these savages did primitive dances with mops after commandeering office overhead radio systems. An unrelenting, primal beat of the Doors, Sly and The Family Stone and the Jefferson Airplane blared as they helped themselves to candy not meant for them, from receptionist’s desk top, glass containers which they enjoyed without remorse.
These were brutal and lawless days, eons before CIMS, the Cleaning Industry Management Standard, which codified how janitors were expected to behave and organize their tribes. The janitorial business was only rock and roll back then.
Tuesday, July 12, 2011
Checklist for Success in the Janitorial Business
You are being lied to! Inc. Magazine, Entrepreneur Magazine, Home Business Success Magazine, and a bunch of business opportunity magazines have told you that you can be rich and famous in your own cleaning business. If you are reading this then you have read one or more of these articles.
There is the story of some smiling Mr. and Mrs. Average holding a broom, posing with one foot on a mop bucket who are now millionaires with a successful janitorial business. The story is true but then the article goes on to say that, you can do the same thing.
Here is the truth, you CAN, but you may not.
There is the story of some smiling Mr. and Mrs. Average holding a broom, posing with one foot on a mop bucket who are now millionaires with a successful janitorial business. The story is true but then the article goes on to say that, you can do the same thing.
Here is the truth, you CAN, but you may not.
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