Industrial cleaning products, with their power and their intense aromas, are designed to make big, traffic heavy spaces feel as clean and nice as a well kept home.
Cleanliness,
they used to say – and probably still do, actually – is next to godliness. This
presumably makes a clean business premise something of a temple. A temple
marking the success that only good cleaning practices can bring. We all know
that customers and clients won’t hang around long if one’s premises is
perceived to be dirty (the word “unclean” carries enough connotation on its own
to back that point to the hilt – if someone perceives one’s premises to be
unclean, then one might as well kiss one’s profit margins farewell) – what we
may not realise is just how difficult they can be to keep clean. There’s no
room for compromise here – it’s industrial
cleaning products or nothing.
Why?
Because industrial premises (“industrial” premises are any buildings at all
that experience human traffic as a result of business activity – so bars,
restaurants, warehouses, offices, and so on) carry such a high volume of people
every day that nothing else will do. This is the difference between an
industrial place and a home: even the most vital home cleaning routine will not
make a scratch on the surface of industrial dirt. It just isn’t possible. The
only way to cut through the soiling caused by all those feet and hands is to
ensure that one has the right industrial
cleaning products for the job.
What
one means is: even if a company cleans in the same way that they would “at home”, the products they are using simply
aren’t up to the industrial environment. If, however, they exchange the
substances they use, from home type brands and strengths to their industrial
equivalents – well, then. The difference is astonishing. It’s all about size.
One would never try and put a Formula 1 engine in an old mini – and one should
never try and clean a bathroom that gets used 500 times a day, with
preparations designed for use in the home water closet. It just doesn’t work. Industrial cleaning products, which
would feel awful in the home – too powerful, too strongly scented, and so on –
are designed to tackle that kind of
usage: that’s why they smell so much and have so much vivacity behind them.
Think,
for a moment, about speakers, as in stereos. Really big ones are not suitable
for houses. They are built to carry sound in pubs, at gigs, at festivals.
Conversely, small speakers are built to carry music in small rooms. Houses. Now
then. Cleaning products: big ones, with big oomph, are not suitable for houses
– they’re built to carry cleaning power in pubs, at gigs, at festivals; in
offices and restaurants and museums. Big places
with lots of people. Industrial cleaning
products are built strong to fill big spaces effectively – to give those
spaces the same effect, cleanliness wise (on the nostrils, on the eyes) as big
speakers would, music wise. Big speakers would fill that large space with
enough sound that the space would feel like a home, with a stereo playing. Industrial cleaning products fill the
same space with enough cleanliness that the place feels like a home too. A nice
clean one. And that’s the kind of impression that keeps customers coming back.
| Additional articles about cleaning supplies |
|
|
| About the author |
A general rule: the cheaper the industrial cleaning product the stronger the smell. Go for a sensible midrange price and your industrial cleaning product choices won’t drive your customers away |
| Please Rate This Article |
Number of ratings: 0
Rating: 0