Do You Need Insurance and Bonding as a House Cleaner - YouTube

Channel: Angela Brown Cleaning

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Insurance.
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Insurance for house cleaners.
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Why do you need it?
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When do you need it?
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How much does it cost?
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We're going to talk about that today.
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Hi, there.
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I'm Angela Brown and this is Ask a House Cleaner.
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This is a 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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Now today's show is brought to us by HouseCleaning360.com
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Now it's a 360 view of the perfect home.
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If there's a service provider that comes to your home, you should be able to find them
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there on HouseCleaning360.com, including pet taxis.
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What?
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What is a pet taxi?
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A pet taxi is somebody who comes to your house, they pick up your pet, they take them to the
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vet to their appointment.
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They wait for them and bring them home, so that you don't have to take off work.
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If you need a pet taxi, go to HouseCleaning360.com If you offer pet taxi services, if you're
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a licensed driver, and you're insured, and you can offer this service,
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then go to HouseCleaning360.com
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and set up your listing so people can find you.
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All right.
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Onto today's session, which is about insurance.
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Now this is not from one particular house cleaner.
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This is from many house cleaners who ask me this 10 or 15 times a day.
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They say, "Hey, Ang, I'm a solo operator.
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Do I need insurance?
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It's just me.
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Do I need bonding and insurance?"
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Now I partner insurance with bonding because it can be, and I recommend it be, part of
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the same insurance policy.
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When you go to get insurance, you will call an insurance company, and you will ask them
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for insurance and bonding.
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We'll talk about both of those, but first of all, what is insurance?
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Insurance is a little bit of money that you pay a company, an insurance company, every
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single month.
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It's going to be like $30, $40, $50, somewhere in that range.
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What happens is you give them money every month
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and you may never use your insurance policy.
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It's just a guarantee.
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You're paying them a retainer for their services.
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Now if you ever damage something, and the policies go up to about $2 million, if you
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damage something up to $2 million, they're going to kick in and cover the cost of it.
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All you have to do is pay a deductible.
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There are different deductibles, but I recommend you choose one that's at about $100 because
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that's not going to break the bank.
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It's going to be about the cost of a house cleaning.
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You're going to be able to pay it easily, but you're not going to have to pay all the
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money, and I say all the money.
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If you damage somebody's hardwood floors and it costs $30,000 to replace those hardwood
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floors, you do not have to pay the $30,000.
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You pay $100 deductible and the insurance company pays the $30,000.
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You say, "How does that work?
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How do they have $30,000 if I only gave them 30 per month?"
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All right.
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Here's how it works.
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There's a bank account and in the bank account is all the money.
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All the house cleaners add in all the money.
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There's this big pool of money, supposedly, that is the insurance fund.
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Supposedly you're not going to damage somebody's floors, so hopefully, and this is the hope,
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this is the perfect scenario, that you never have to use it.
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If there are thousands of house cleaners paying into the big pool of money and they never
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use it, there's the $30,000 that pays for you when you make a mistake.
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Hopefully, hopefully you never have to use it.
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All right.
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When do you need an insurance policy?
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My suggestion, this is my personal opinion, you need it as soon as you start taking money
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in exchange for house cleaning, even if you're only one person, even if you are related to
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that person.
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If it's your mom and dad and you're at home and you're working for free, you do not need
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a policy.
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When you start taking money in exchange for house cleaning, you need an insurance policy.
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Now if you go to buy a new car and you're on the car lot and you try to drive that car
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off, oh no, no, no, no, no, no.
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They are not going to let you off the car lot without verifying your insurance.
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Because if you get out of the parking lot and a car comes whizzing by, and it smacks
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that car, and it blows it to smithereens, guess what?
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Somebody has to pay for that.
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In essence, what you're doing when you go to a customer's house, you are asking this
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person, "Will you let me have your most valuable possession," and they're saying, "Do you have
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insurance?"
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It would be similar to somebody coming up to you saying, "Hey, can I drive your brand
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new car?"
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This is a person you just hired off the street.
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You're kind of like, "Well, I kind of don't know you very well."
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"Okay.
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Well, there's no insurance on the car, but can I drive it?"
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Are you going to give your brand new car to a perfect stranger and let them drive around
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in it?
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No, you would not do that.
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It's the same scenario with the house.
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You're asking a customer to entrust their most prized possession in your care and you're
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not insured.
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That's really dumb.
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Don't do that at all.
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Period.
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It's a dumb move.
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Now there are house cleaners that lie and they say,
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"Oh yes, I'm insured," and they're not.
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Here's the problem with that.
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If you say you're insured and you're not, what you're doing is you're telling the customer,
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"I'm covered.
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I'm protected.
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You're protected."
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Based on that information, they've hired you, and that might be the defining information
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why they hired you versus another company.
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Let's say you damaged a stainless steel refrigerator and it's $2,500 and it has to be replaced.
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When they come to you and they say, "Hey, you ruined my refrigerator.
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Your insurance needs to pay for this," and then you go, "I kind of lied.
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I'm not insured," now you have to come up with the $2,500 and you have to pay that.
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Check it out on social media when they tell all of their friends that their house cleaner
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lied, that they weren't insured, they don't have the money to cover the refrigerator,
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and what the heck does that do to your reputation?
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That is not cool.
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You cannot recover from that.
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That's going to go viral and people are going to post it and repost it, and people are not
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going to hire you.
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Not cool.
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All right.
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Let's say that you decide you're not going to have insurance and you're just going to
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tell the customer, "Well, I choose not to have insurance."
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You're going to spend a lot of time explaining your reasons why, and that time is better
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spent cleaning their house for money.
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You're going to jump through more hoops trying to explain why you don't have it, then just
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to come up with a $30 or $50 a month.
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Get a policy and do it legally, right?
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It's industry standard to be bonded and insured.
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All right.
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Let's talk about the bonding for a minute.
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What is the bonding?
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Why is bonding important?
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Bonding is another insurance policy that if you or an employee of yours steals something
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from the customer's house, that the bond will kick in and it will pay for the stolen item.
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Then you can repay and make payments to the company to repair and replace whatever was stolen.
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There's a catch, and here's the weird catch about bonding.
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You're probably never going to use a bonding policy, but here's the catch, they have to
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prove you stole it.
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There has to be a police report.
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The police have to interview your people.
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The people that work for you have to confess that they stole it.
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They have to prove that you stole it in order for the bond to pay.
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If you're one person and you know you're honest, you don't need a bond, but here's the catch,
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get one anyway.
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Get one anyway.
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If you're only one person and you know you're never going to steal anything, get a bonding
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anyway.
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It's a small rider.
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It's called a rider.
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That's the legal term.
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It's a rider that smashes onto your insurance policy.
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Let's say your insurance policy is $30 a month and the rider for the bond is like $33.
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It's going to be like another $3 or $4 a month.
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It's not a lot of money, but what happens is it gives your client peace of mind.
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Here's the thing, when you go to a customer's house, if you decide you're not going to have
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a bond, I'm not bonded, okay, again you're going to spend a lot of time explaining why.
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A lot of people don't even understand what a bond is or how it works
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or why you have one.
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They honestly don't even know what it means and why you need one.
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You say, "No, I'm not bonded," now you're going to spend 15 minutes of your time that
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you could be making money for, 15 minutes of your time explaining why you're not bonded.
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Why did you choose to be cheap and not be bonded?
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Here's what happens.
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Then they go to their neighbors.
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"I got this amazing house cleaner.
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She's so awesome.
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She does a great job or he does a great job, but he's not bonded and he's not insured.
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Kind of go at your own risk, but he's really good."
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All right.
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That's not a great recommendation.
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You want to be industry standard.
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The industry standard is bonding and insurance.
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It's really important because everybody does it.
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All right.
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Let's play this game.
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Let's pretend that your air conditioning unit goes out and you're going to hire a HVAC guy
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to come out and fix your air conditioning and your heat or whatever it is.
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There are two companies.
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They both offer the exact same service.
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They have the exact same qualifications.
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They're going to do the exact same thing, and they charge the exact same price.
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I'm just making this up, but let's say that they did.
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Two companies.
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One is bonded and insured.
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One is not.
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Who are you going to choose?
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10 times out of 10 people will choose the company that's bonded and insured.
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Why is that?
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It's an added security and an extra piece of mind.
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That's all it is.
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If you need it, it's there.
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You probably will never use a bonding.
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Probably.
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I'm guessing because you're going to hire honest people and they're not going to steal
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things from customer's houses.
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You might get accused of stealing things from customer's houses, but then the insurance
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and the guarantee is, "Hey, we are bonded.
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Let's get to the bottom of this.
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Let's file a police report.
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This is serious business.
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Let's get to the bottom of this.
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We're covered.
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If we need to, we'll kick in our bond.
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We'll make sure you get back whatever it is was stolen or the value of whatever it is
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was stolen."
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That is the purpose behind bonding and insurance.
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It is a blanket peace of mind for you and your customers, and all things being equal.
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If there are two house cleaning companies in a competitive market, one is bonded and
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insured and the other is not, who are they going to choose?
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My suggestion is just go with the industry standard.
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Buck it up.
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Get the insurance policy, and now you're a professional, and you can advertise that you're
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bonded and insured because it lends an extra layer of credibility.
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All righty.
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That's my two cents.
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Until we meet again,
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leave the world a cleaner place than when you found it.