How To Cut The Cost Of Your Commercial Window Cleaner

In today’s economic climate, many organisations are looking for ways to cut costs. This applies to Facilities Managers, Private School Bursars, Hotel Managers, Scheme Managers for Housing Associations and Site Managers.

One way to reduce costs is to look at Window Cleaning. An obvious method of doing this is to put your window cleaning out to tender. If you select several other companies to quote, you can ensure that you’re paying no more than market rate for the work done, and keep your current contractor on their toes.

This process can however be extremely time consuming and you may be happy with your existing window cleaner. If this is the case, what other options are there? Here are some suggestions:

Intervals – How frequently do your windows need cleaning? Do you absolutely require them to be cleaned every month? It is worth considering whether the overall frequency can be adjusted. Skipping a couple of months, for example during holiday periods such as during the summer and at Christmas, could reduce your bill by 15%. If you are looking for more significant savings, consider increasing the interval to every six weeks rather than monthly and you could be saving 25%.

Prioritise – This of course, depends on the type of property you have and its usage. You may feel that it is not appropriate to reduce the frequency, because you cannot risk damaging the impression you create for visitors or customers, or those that use the building. If this applies to you, look carefully at which parts of the building are most important. Some windows or glass areas will be more important from a stakeholder perspective than others. You might be able to reduce the frequency of the less significant areas.

External vs internal – In some buildings, internal windows are cleaned os often as external windows. Since they are subjected much less to the elements, this may not be necessary. Internal windows could be washed half as often as external windows. In some office environments, you may even be able to do less than this. And remember the option of prioritising, when it comes to internal windows as well as external ones.

Access methods – Some window cleaners charge different rates for using different types of access equipment. It is worth getting your window cleaning contractor to break down their quote as much as possible for different parts of the building. If your contractor is charging different rates, then consider carefully whether the more expensive methods are necessary. If they are, then look at whether it is possible to reduce the frequency of cleaning of the most expensive areas.

Itemised costing – What you want to have is a proactive dialogue with your current contractor about cost reductions. To do this you will need detailed knowledge of how their prices have been calculated. Ask them to give you an itemised breakdown showing: each section of the property; internal vs external windows; difficult to access windows. Armed with this breakdown you can review the building looking at cost reduction opportunities.

About the Author:
Creative Commons License

This article is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-No Derivative Works 3.0 Unported License, which means you may freely reprint it, in its entirety, provided you include the author's resource box along with LIVE links (without "nofollow" tags).

No Comments

Leave a reply

Spam Protection by WP-SpamFree