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Commercial Cleaning

How to Ease Tenants' Minds About Cleanliness

With building residents now hypersensitive to cleanliness and disinfection, property managers can find themselves fielding calls from nervous tenants who want reassurance that the building they are...

Phil Harper

A Multi-Family Property Manager’s Guide

With building residents now hypersensitive to cleanliness and disinfection, property managers can find themselves fielding calls from nervous tenants who want reassurance that the building they are occupying is being properly cleaned and disinfected.

“I get calls pretty regularly from property managers who are looking for advice around handling the increasing demands around cleanliness from their residents,” says Phil Harper, Co-Founder and President of WellNest Professional Cleaning based in Northern Virginia. “I tell them it all comes down to building resident and workforce confidence.”

Building this trust, however, is easier said than done. But it can be done, says Harper, in fact, all it takes is an emphasis on three key elements: Visual Confirmation, Communication, and Transparency. We explore each below.

An apartment building community lounge with armchairs arranged around a round table on a red rug, seen from the balcony above

Stationary bikes and treadmills lined up beside the windows of an apartment community fitness room

**Visual Confirmation **

The first key element, according to Harper, is as simple as the old motto: Seeing is believing.

“Whether you hire a day porter, shift from night-time to daytime cleaning or beef up cleaning and disinfection procedures during high traffic times, letting your tenants see for themselves the work being done can go a long way toward easing their minds,” says Harper, who is certified by The Academy of Cleaning Excellence as am Accredited Infection Prevention Expert and serves on the ISSA’s Government Affairs Advisory Committee.

But be wary of hygiene theater – it can backfire – particularly in an area like Northern Virginia.

“Over the years that I have been serving this market, I’ve come to really appreciate the uniqueness of this area’s residents,” says Harper. “They demand science-based, data-driven approaches, which means they will sniff out anything that comes across as performative.”

His advice: Make sure you are cleaning and disinfecting in the right areas, at the right time and using the right products. In other words, work smarter, not harder.

Cleaning and Disinfecting Logs

Going hand in hand with visual confirmation is documentation – let your residents know – in writing – what is being cleaned when and by whom by using a cleaning and disinfecting log.

“By posting cleaning and disinfection logs in common areas such as elevators, bathrooms and laundry rooms, residents can see visual evidence of accountability of the cleaning and disinfection program,” explains Harper.

To help you get started, here is an example.

Exclusive Bonus: Download the Cleaning & Disinfecting Log

Communication

The final key element to building resident confidence is – not surprisingly – communication.

“If you think you’ve communicated enough, communicate some more,” advises Harper. “Detailed, thorough communications with your tenants regarding your cleaning and disinfection protocols will drive confidence and trust.”

But don’t just shove a tenant memo under the door and consider it done. Harper recommends frequent, multichannel communication.

“Make a point of reaching out to your residents on regular basis,” says Harper. “In my experience with working with more than 2,000 customers in Northern Virginia, communication preferences are varied. Some of our clients love text, while others prefer email or phone calls. Many commercial clients prefer recurring, predictable, and steady communication channels.”

Transparency

At the heart of all of these three key elements – visual confirmation, logs and communication – is transparency.

“With people working from home, kids distance learning and risks associated with venturing out into public, people don’t want their homes and community areas to be one more source of anxiety,” says Harper. “By communicating with authenticity, transparency and authority, property managers have the opportunity to build a relationship of trust.”

Checklist of steps property managers can take to reassure residents, including posting occupancy limits for elevators and laundry rooms, offering hand sanitizer in common areas, and arranging package drop-off at residents’ doors

To learn how WellNest can be your strategic cleanliness partner, schedule a commercial cleaning consultation or contact Phil Harper at (571) 749-2121.

WellNest Professional Cleaning is Northern Virginia’s leading provider of Commercial and Residential Cleaning services. With a staff of nearly 50 full-time employees and a fleet of over 15 vehicles, WellNest has cleaned over 100 million of high-end square footage in the past 3 years alone.

Head to gowellnest.com to learn more.

Exclusive Bonus: Download the Cleaning & Disinfecting Log

Phil Harper, President of WellNest Professional Cleaning

About the author

Phil Harper, Co-Founder & President

Phil leads WellNest's strategy, operations, culture, and customer success. Before starting the company, he spent years as a CPA with Big 4 consulting experience, which shows in how WellNest is run: careful systems, real accountability, and an expectation that every visit earns the next one. A Penn State alumnus, Phil lives in Loudoun County with Nicole and their three kids. He was recognized as a Washington DC 40 Under 40 honoree by the Leadership Center for Excellence and serves on the ISSA Government Affairs Advisory Committee.

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