Price By The Hour or Job for House Cleaning? - YouTube

Channel: Angela Brown Cleaning

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Hi there, I'm Angela Brown, and this is Ask a House Cleaner.
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This is the show where you get to ask a house cleaning question
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and I get to help you find an answer.
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Today's question comes from a brand-spanking-new house cleaner who is going to start her own business.
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And she wants to know “What am I supposed to charge customers for house cleaning?
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I have no idea what the going rate is.
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I have no idea what I'm supposed to charge.
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Wow.
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That is a that is an exciting question because every house cleaner at some point has asked
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that question.
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So, what you need to know, and this is based on Home Advisor and Angie's List which are
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two national websites that do house cleaning referrals across the country.
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And this is the country of the United States.
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In the United States, the going rate for house cleaning is anywhere from $25 to $45 per hour.
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There's a range in between you could say the average is $35 an hour and that would be a
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fair price just about anywhere.
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There are some way tiny remote places out in the country the charge a little bit less.
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There are places in New York City and probably Boston and some other really highly populated
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areas where might be a little bit more.
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But the going rate across the country is about $25 to $45 per hour.
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Now there are two ways you can bid a job.
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The first way is you can bid by the hour and you can just charge a flat rate.
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“I charge $30 per hour or $25 per hour.”
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The second way you can charge by the job.
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And it depends on the way your business is setup which will determine which way you choose.
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If you're just getting started in the house cleaning business and you’re brand spanking
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new and you don't have a business plan setup, and you're just getting started, my recommendation
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is this; make it easy on yourself.
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Don't get hung up on, “what is the square footage of the home?”
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And “what is going to be involved?”
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And how… you don't know how to bid a house you don't know how long it's going to take
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to clean.
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You don't know what is involved as far as the chemicals and the cleaning supplies and
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all of the things that you're going to have to bring and provide, in order to offset those
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expenses.
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So, having said that.
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Don't charge by the job when you're getting started.
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It's super complicated for somebody who has no idea what they're doing.
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If you're brand-spanking'-new to the business, (I love this,) just charge by the hour.
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Now, you don't have the credentials because you have not done this as a business.
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You don't have a big list of happy customers.
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Okay?
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So, you don't have the credentials of the referral system behind you.
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You probably don't have a certification of where you've been through house cleaning training.
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So, if you're just kind of winging it, and you're going to figure it out as you go, my
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recommendation is that you don't charge top dollar.
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If you screw up something people are going to be really quick to fire you.
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And say “I’m paying top-dollar and you're just kind of screwing around
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figuring things out.”
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So, don't do that.
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I don't want to encourage you to lowball your prices because I'm a very big advocate that
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has house cleaners we get what we are worth.
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Having said that though if you're just getting started here's an easy way to get started;
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charge $25 per hour.
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And I know that's right at the very bottom of the rung, but here's what that is; this
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is an easy math problem.
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So, the easy math is I only have 4 hours to clean your house. So however big or however
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small your house is, I only have four hours."
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So if I can clean your house in 2 hours it will be $50 dollars.
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If I can clean your house in 4 hours it will be $100 dollars.
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And you can do the math and so can the client so that's super easy.
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When you get to a customer's house and the customer says “Well, I have a hoarding problem
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and I have all of these things that I have collected over the years how long will it
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take you to do that?”
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Please do not try to bid by the job.
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You have no idea what you're doing, and you have no idea how long it's going to take.
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So, bid by the hour and say “Listen I only have 4 hours, let's see how far we can come
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in 4 hours that will cost you $100.”
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Now, as you’re getting started, what this is going to do for you is it’s going to
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fill a time slot.
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They call it low-balling the price.
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And the reason I recommend this is because you don't have a system in place.
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You don't have cleaning systems in place that will tell you how quickly and how fast.
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The more you do this the more proficient you will become.
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You’ll walk into a house and you will look around and will say “This will take me 2.5
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hours and it's going to cost x amount of dollars."
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And you’ll get that good at it.
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But right now, in the beginning, $25 an hour.
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And then you can figure it out as you go you have a chance to create some systems.
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And to figure out how fast and how efficient you are.
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What cleaning supplies you're going to need, and it gives you a little bit of wiggle room.
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Right?
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Because the customer is not taking the biggest bet on you at $50 an hour.
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If it takes her twice as long at least that's the $50 bucks.
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So, they’ll say “Well, I’ll give this girl a chance.
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If it takes her twice as long at least that's the $50 bucks."
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Right?
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So, they will give you a little bit more leeway.
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The second thing is once you fill up your schedule there will be people that drop off.
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That's just the natural progression of this business.
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As people drop off if you decide that you're worth more, and you want to charge more, you
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can certainly raise your prices.
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But keep your beginning clients at $25 so the people that you hire you in the very beginning
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when you're just getting started, that you've got them locked in at that rate.
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This is the only profession I know where you can jump in,
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This is not anything that you should laugh about.
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This is the only profession I know where you can jump in, where you don't need a college
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degree.
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You don't need four years of training, and you can walk in the first day on the job and
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say “I get $25 an hour.”
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Right?
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That's a pretty good income for somebody just starting out on any job.
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On any job that's pretty good money.
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If you work 8 hours a day at $25 an hour you just made $200 in your pocket.
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If you do that five days a week, you just made $1,000 in one week in your pocket.
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Right?
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So my point is that you can earn some pretty good money just starting out even if you start
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at the bottom of the rung.
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And as you start out at the bottom of the rung and you work your way up you're going
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to become quicker at what you do.
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And your processes will change.
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And you may switch altogether from bidding by the hour to bidding by the job.
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But at the $25 an hour there's another element here that's really important.
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Because the math is simple, the math is also simple for the people that you work for.
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So they can turn around to their friends and say; “Listen, I just got this really great
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house cleaner and he only charges $25 an hour.”
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And the person that they're speaking to thinks in their head “Well, wait a second.
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I'm paying my current housecleaner $35 an hour and they're not very good.
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I should give your guy a try.”
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And immediately you're going to pick up some referral business from friends and neighbors
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of the people that you work for.
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So very quickly, your schedule will become full.
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One of the biggest problems that I see and this again goes back to social media.
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There are house cleaners that will jump on the internet and say; “Well, I'm worth $50
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an hour I'm going to charge $50 an hour.”
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Okay.
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That's fine but how do you justify that price?
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If you're just new and you don't have the systems in place, and you're not efficient,
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and you don't have the credentials, and all of these things, you're going to get fired
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very quickly.
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And then instead of having some money coming in, you have no money coming in.
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And now you have to go out and spend money to advertise to get new customers.
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Because you have this attitude that's a little bit on the arrogant side; "Oh, I'm worth so
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much more money."
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If you don't have anything to back it up, guess what?
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You're not worth that much more money!
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You have to be able to back it up.
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And so stay humble in the beginning.
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Charge a lower price, completely fill up your calendar.
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And in the event, that you have customers that drop off.
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And you're going to get new customers, and I'm talking six months down the road and you
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want to raise your prices, you can do that at that time.
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Right?
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Because now you can justify that price.
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Alright, so until I see you again,
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figuring things out.”
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if I can clean your house in 4 hours it will be $100.
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where you don't need a college degree.
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leave the world a cleaner place than when you found it.