1 / 26

Team Cleaning Made Easy

Team Cleaning Made Easy. Why Team Cleaning . Higher quality due to consistency of movement Increased predictability of results Less equipment Clear accountability Easy to add a new teammate Final inspection takes place while members are still available. Why Team Cleaning.

elon
Télécharger la présentation

Team Cleaning Made Easy

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Team Cleaning Made Easy

  2. Why Team Cleaning • Higher quality due to consistency of movement • Increased predictability of results • Less equipment • Clear accountability • Easy to add a new teammate • Final inspection takes place while members are still available

  3. Why Team Cleaning • Higher productivity • Less theft • Less cost to customer • City Wide believes team cleaning to be the way to best clean a building

  4. Team Members • Light duty Specialist • Vacuum Specialist • Restroom Specialist • Utility Specialist • All positions have distinct roles and responsibilities for success

  5. Light Duty Specialist • Performs trash run and scheduled dusting • Requires brute on wheels, liners, microfiber duster/rag, and cleaner • LDS is the first to move through the area in the predetermined route • Pull trash in the areas in accordance with the scope of work • Normally we pull all trash nightly • Change liners if trash is wet or liner damaged

  6. Light Duty Specialist • Also if scheduled, dust as needed in designated areas • LDS leaves trash liner out from desk if the Vacuum specialist needs to vacuum under desk • If not, they replace trash can to position and move on • Stage Brute Trash in designated areas so that they don’t leak or spill • Production rate of 15-20,000 sq/ft/hr

  7. Vacuum Specialist • Performs all vacuuming functions • Preferably using high efficiency vacuum • Follows LDS in exact route • Has 50-100 ft extension cord • Vacuum in “as needed” manner with specific focus on highly traveled routes • Vacuums under desks IF the LDS has left out the trash can

  8. Vacuum Specialist • Edge vacuuming is performed on a periodic basis as schedule • Vacuum is the preferred method to clean all hard surface floors over dustmops or brooms • Vacuuming is the slowest task, be careful to not assign additional duties • However, we want to use the vacuum the full time in the building • 12-15,000 sq/ft/hr production

  9. Restroom Specialist • Cleans all restrooms • Needs cart, mop system, disinfectant, liners, consumables and peroxide cleaner • Production rate is 2.5 - 3 minutes per fixture • Use glasses and gloves at all times • Clean restrooms starting in area LDS starts and follows path • Completely finish all restrooms and then assist Utility Specialist to finish building

  10. Utility Specialist • Usually the most senior member of team • Responsible for final inspection, lights and addressing absenteeism • Cleans entryways and breakrooms and any other area not clearly covered by other three positions • Helps coordinate trash and final clean-up • Loosely follows path of LDS

  11. Kick Off the Flow • All positions start at the janitor closet • Light-duty specialist starts the workflow • Vacuum specialist starts immediately behind the light-duty specialist • Don’t worry about how closely the two positions start because very quickly the light-duty specialist will get ahead of the vacuum specialist

  12. Kick Off Continued • Light-duty specialist pulls all trash in the path, and leaves the trashcan either on the desk or out from the desk for the vacuum specialist • If the vacuum specialist sees the trashcan out from the desk, then this is the signal that this particular desk needs to be vacuumed under • If trashcan under desk, then no need to vacuum there • FOLLOWING THE PATH IS PARAMOUNT TO SUCCESS

  13. Work Flow • Light-duty specialist moves as quickly and efficiently as possible so that they can finish in time to circle back and help either the restrooms or the utility specialist • Light-duty specialists it should also take great care to stage building trash on a liner to prevent leakage • Trash to the dumpster should be at once at the end of the night of possible

  14. Vacuum Specialist Flow • Vacuum specialist moves quickly through the building following the light-duty specialist and in the same path nightly • Using the same path will allow the vacuum specialist to become familiar with the area that needs to be cleaned and will help determine what is the appropriate amount of time to be spent in the area • The vacuum specialist is typically the constraint to higher productivity • Don’t have them do anything except vacuuming until vacuuming complete

  15. Utlity Flow • While the vacuum and the light-duty specialists are moving throughout the building, the utility specialist is addressing the common areas, lobby’s, and breakrooms in the area where the first two positions are working • Utility specialists will typically have either maid cart or brute so that they can do all functions in these areas • Utility is last to clear an area with a final inspection and the turning of the lights

  16. Utility Continued • If the utility specialist gets done before the vacuum specialist in a given area, they will help either the light-duty specialist or the rest of specialist • There may also be some dusting in the area that needs to be done but to use utility specialist can help out with or perhaps detailed work

  17. Restroom Specialist • Restroom specialist should leave the janitor closet with everything they need to clean the restroom • They should work in the area that the light-duty specialists in first and gently follow that same path • Productivity restroom specialist has to be 2 ½ to 3 minutes per fixture and generally speaking there is no opportunity to cut time in restrooms

  18. Restroom Specialist • Restroom specialist will continue cleaning restrooms only until they are completely done • At that point they restock their car for the next night and then circle back and help assist utility specialist

  19. What’s the deal? • It may be obvious to you by now that we are trying to get maximum time out of the vacuum specialist • The reason is that we only want to buy one vacuum • Multiple people can help with light-duty utility or restrooms but only one vacuum person per team is viable • Start the vacuum person on their route and do everything possible to keep them vacuuming until the entire job is done…vacuuming is the bottleneck!!!

  20. One more Thing about Vacuuming • Vacuuming is also by far and away the best way to get dirt out of the building • We want a vacuum as much and as often as we can within the time constraints of the building • If the vacuum specialists would get done early, we would prefer they continue with edge vacuuming or under desks • The goal high-performance cleaning is to take dirt out of the building…. Vacuuming is the best way to accomplish the task

  21. Timelines • From a workflow standpoint, timelines and checkpoints should be established for different parts of the building • This will give the crew certain milestones that they need to meet in order to get the building clean and the allotted time • the utility specialist will be responsible for making sure they get the team gets out of a certain area on time with the quality this desired

  22. Equipment is important • With a high efficiency vacuum, microfiber hand tools, a high efficiency mop system, and selected chemicals the crew can perform at a level that will make the location very competitive • However, if the crew uses old mop buckets, upright avcs, cotton rags, and dangerous toxic chemicals, then the old productivity standards will apply

  23. What about dusting? • Dusting should be done in sections rather than nightly • We need to do a great job vacuuming and dusting in order to only dust weekly • High efficiency Vacuums and microfiber once again key • If able, utility will dust along with LDS • Figure dusting person out AFTER you have planned for LDS, Vacuum and Restrooms timelines

  24. What if less than four people? • All four functions to be performed regardless of number of people • Divide time allotted by number of people to get hours per person • Start position planning with calculating time for Vacuum Specialist and then Restrooms. • TWO PERSON EXAMPLE • Start actual work with LDS followed by vacuum specialist • LDS will probably then take the tasks left that take the most time since their productivity is higher • Vacuum person takes next task

  25. Debrief the Night • How did it flow? • Did we get it all done? • How accurate were the checkpoints? • Where did we lose time? • What adjustments need to be made? • What is the goal for time tonight?

  26. Watch Videos • Watch training vids on team cleaning and workloading for more information. • The END….

More Related