There has
been much talk about establishing definitive cleaning standards within our
industry, but efforts have met with mixed success. I believe the reason is basic.
There has
been much talk about establishing definitive cleaning standards within our
industry, but efforts have met with mixed success.
Why?
I believe the reason is basic.
A
cleaning standard must be defined by a cleaning purpose. If to "clean to
protect or enhance health" is the purpose, the standard will be quite
different than to "clean for appearance". If to "clean"
within budget or to save time is the purpose, the standard will be defined in
less ennobling ways.
Bottom
Line: The cleaning industry--in its current state of thinking--cannot create
one unified standard (though it can create “specs” based on particular customer
requirements) because the thinking about cleaning is not unified.
Domestic
example: If a mother cleans because she doesn't want her family to become ill,
or to optimize the indoor environment because she loves her family, that's a
different motive and process than to clean because company is coming or because
she wants to save time or money.
Simply
stated, since cleaning is currently performed for different purposes, cleaning
will consistently be measured by a variety of different standards.
In
addition, as long as the customers of the cleaning industry think of cleaning
in a variety of ways--many of them far less than optimal--the cleaning industry
(a for-profit enterprise) will respond with a hodgepodge of
"standards" that reflect a variety of different customer demands (or
purposes).
Thus, it
is far more important to change the way people think about cleaning--starting
first with the people within the industry and then embracing people (customers)
outside the industry.
Since
safety and the protection of human health are major standards drivers in other
successful fields (from electricians to engineers) one of the industry’s major
initiatives should be to promote cleaning as an indoor environmental discipline
(science) in the public interest. Once accomplished, a standard then becomes
viable. Until that happens, no standard is possible.
Moreover,
I simply believe that to "clean to protect or enhance health" is the
best foundation for the industry to build a lucrative and dignified future upon
(with appearance, surface preservation, etc. as pillars of the structure).
Before
such a dominant “health philosophy”--that produces corresponding specs,
standards, etc--can prevail, we must work at changing thinking. We are all in
the PR and marketing business, you could say...
More
Dignity Please
Having
cleaned for a living for many years (before becoming an "armchair
expert"), and witnessing the low self-esteem and lack of dignity afforded
the cleaning worker in many instances, I have a personal axe to grind. Our
industry lacks heart and a dignified reason for existence--a motivating core
belief, if you will.
By stark
contrast, the medical profession has a credo known as the Hippocratic oath
("Do no harm"). It is what inspires many young men and women to
become doctors and nurses. The ultimate standard of care is to "do no
harm" and to promote healing and health. That philosophical basis is
what motivates many healthcare professionals to work long hours (not to mention
the need to pay off medical school bills and afford high liability insurance
premiums).
Still,
medicine is a business. It must deal with many business realities, and
for this reason care is not always optimal, and other standards (specs?) must
be adopted to achievable a practical standard that is also affordable.
But,
medicine--at its core--has its dignity.
The
cleaning industry is not so fortunate. It is a much-maligned field with a low
place on the proverbial totem pole. What the cleaning industry needs first and
foremost--at its core--is an ultimate "standard of care", a reason
for being, the equivalent of "do no harm", a philosophical
foundation.
Just as
it is very important to know
why a doctor decided to
practice medicine, it is also important that we know
why
we clean.
I believe
that to "clean to protect or enhance health" is such a core philosophy
upon which an industry can redefine itself. All the other standardization
aspects will follow when the industry finds dignity and deep purpose--dare we
say inspiration?--in its core beliefs.