![business texting
power washing business
cleaning business
communication
roof cleaning
soft washing](https://lirp.cdn-website.com/9514ef73/dms3rep/multi/opt/business+texting-1920w.jpeg)
![soft wash
power washing
Softwash
Powerwash
house wash
roof cleaning](https://lirp.cdn-website.com/9514ef73/dms3rep/multi/opt/70FF2AFF-2212-4A6B-BBC5-8EF8C9D291A8-1920w.jpg)
![](https://lirp.cdn-website.com/9514ef73/dms3rep/multi/opt/failed+cedar+stain-1920w.jpeg)
![cost of cedar, cedar siding](https://lirp.cdn-website.com/9514ef73/dms3rep/multi/opt/Cedar+house+B-1920w.jpeg)
![](https://lirp.cdn-website.com/9514ef73/dms3rep/multi/opt/SEP+IRA-f58d678b-1920w.jpg)
Before the pandemic, I read somewhere that Cape Cod has an average annual turnover rate of about 25%. In other words, a QUARTER of the local population moves away each year, and a new 25% comes in to take their space. That's probably changed a bit with the recent flood of "wash-ashores" during the pandemic, but you get the idea: this sandbar is practically a revolving door.
Which brings me to a topic I often think about: the companies that claim to have washed "thousands" of homes on Cape Cod... who ACTUALLY washed those homes? Some magically-consistent and stable staff of workers? Or a long, revolving Rolodex of short-term employees, most of whom worked for just a season or two before moving on to other streams of income?
Companies of any size on Cape Cod rely upon a workforce which is in constant flux. Big exterior cleaning companies scramble to find bodies to do this filthy work, and those bodies often have far, far less experience than the companies wish you to know. Through inside channels, I hear the horror stories, and it is indeed a nightmare. One example: A local roof cleaning company quietly replaced multiple asphalt roofs in the last 12 months because the under-trained geniuses they sent to do the work just butchered everything. By the way, that company proudly proclaims its "expertise" in the field of roof cleaning.
My point is this:
Hiring a small owner/operator or mom-and-pop business such as
Outside Cleaners LLC is one way to ensure that the guy doing the actual work has as much experience as the COMPANY claims to have. When the guy on the powerwasher is also the owner of the company and has been doing the job since Day #1, it does make a difference in the finished product.