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Owned by Benjamin

BluLadder Pro Network

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Welcome to the BluLadder Pro Network — the official community of Next Level Clean

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53 contributions to BluLadder Pro Network
My Employee Quit… Here’s What Happened
This past Wednesday I found out my employee was putting in his 2 weeks notice. To be honest, it was a gut punch. The timing felt terrible. We’re just stepping into the busy season, and even though I had already been thinking about hiring, I wasn’t planning on being forced into it quite this fast. For about 30 minutes, I just sat with it, prayed, and worked through that initial wave of stress. Then I responded to him and told him the truth: if he needed support moving forward, I’m here for him. I meant that. That may sound strange to some guys in business, but I really do believe that if we keep giving, it comes back. Luke 6:38 came to mind immediately: “Give, and it shall be given unto you; good measure, pressed down, and shaken together, and running over, shall men give into your bosom...” That verse gave me hope in the moment. I felt like the Lord was reminding me not to clamp down in fear, but to keep my hands open. So instead of spiraling, I just started taking the next step. I put together a hiring video. I built out a hiring page on the website. I started posting. I took phone call after phone call with applicants. I listened to their stories. I tried to stay calm and present instead of reactive. Within just a few days, I had screened over a dozen people. Out of that process, I found Bryan, who I believe is a great cultural fit with a lot of upside and long-term potential. I also connected with Samuel for part-time help, and there’s another strong candidate in the mix as well. So what started as a moment that felt like loss quickly turned into a moment of expansion. Even more interesting, my former employee may still become part of the bigger picture. Instead of viewing him only as someone leaving, I can now potentially send overflow work his way on a subcontract basis at around a 60% commission, which should put him well north of $50/hour whenever I’m overloaded. That changes everything. Now I can market more aggressively. Now I don’t have to panic if the new guys take time to learn.
0 likes • 10h
@Darius Irani Thanks it’s easier to feel optimistic now that I’ve got new hep lined up 😆 For contract work if he’s providing his now vehicle, tools , and GL insurance, he’ll get 60% of any revenue for any work he does for any of my clients. Client remains mine, and non compete will be in place. I trust him well enough to not poach customers, otherwise it wouldn’t be an option. It’s pretty easy to find out if that starts happening and that would instantly result in me not giving him any more work.
0 likes • 10h
@Matthew Keehn It can be a real fight sometimes, but it’s alway nice when you see the silver lining coming through And that’s awesome! I’m glad that video helped, softwashing is one of my favorite services to do, and I wish I could do it more! Sometimes it feels like it takes a long time to properly prep some properties (much like painting does), but once you’re set up the work happens fast and is very profitable!
Lessons Learned: Door Hanger Close Rate
One thing I’m learning is that your door hanger close rate isn’t just about how good you are at sales or even just your pricing. It’s also about who you’re marketing to. I recently moved to a new city and started my window cleaning business in an area I didn’t know well. So I began door hanging in neighborhoods that looked like solid upper-middle-class areas. I got an average call rate from the door hangers. But once I showed up to quote in person, I ran into a problem. It seemed many homeowners simply couldn’t afford the service. Some even told me they were just curious about what window cleaning costs these days. In one case, a realtor referral turned into a complete waste of time as they were more interested in pitching me their services than hiring mine. Window cleaning is a luxury service. And if you’re pricing your services like a premium offering, you need to be in neighborhoods that can actually support that. I’m also learning that just because someone will pay for gutter cleaning doesn’t mean they’ll pay for window cleaning. Even though both are home services, window cleaning is often seen as more of a “nice-to-have” than a necessity like gutter cleaning. Right now, most of my window cleaning bids fall in the $450–$695 range. At that price point, according to AI, I need to be targeting households earning $150K+ per year. I wasn’t doing that at first and I think I wasted some of my time in neighborhoods that mostly wouldn't pay for window cleaning. One tool that’s helped me a lot is the USPS EDDM (Every Door Direct Mail) website. It lets you see income and age demographics for specific neighborhoods within a ZIP code, which makes targeting much more strategic. If you’re doing door hanger marketing, I highly recommend checking it out: https://eddm.usps.com/eddm/select-routes.htm Bottom line: If your close rate is low, it might not only be your pitch or your price, it might also be who you are targeting.
1 like • 3d
🔥🔥🔥 That’s some real wisdom there, well said!
1 like • 9d
Softwash it. Apply a degreaser or basic soap and scrub with a brush (something like this that you could get at Home Depot https://amzn.to/3NL9xNs ) Then rinse it clean. I charge around $75 for something like that and try to finish in 15 min or so, but it always takes longer than I want.
1 like • 3d
@Carl Vereen great work 👌
Question
What do you guys think of protective coating for the windows so that it stays clean for longer in areas like California?
0 likes • 14d
Honestly, I think they’re a bit overhyped, I’m not a fan. They do have some value in certain situations—like coastal areas with salt in the air or homes where sprinklers are constantly hitting the glass. In those cases, anything that helps reduce buildup is a win. But for most residential windows, it’s not some game-changing “stay clean longer” solution. The glass is still going to get dusty, especially in places like California. From a cleaner’s perspective, the hydrophobic effect can actually make things a little more tedious with a water-fed pole. The water beads instead of sheeting, so you have to spend more time rinsing to get a clean finish. So yeah… it’s not useless, but I wouldn’t call it a must-have either. More of a niche add-on than a real solution, and more of an overpriced hassle that makes work more difficult than anything else. With the added cost and time to apply, I think customers are better off without it and it’s cheaper to get windows cleaned more frequently instead.
1 like • 5d
@Jeremy Azoulay I don’t have much expertise when it comes to the protective coats. The stuff people are using lately might be newer technology, when I researched previously it was essentially the same stuff you would put onto commercial glass or onto shower doors to prevent the hard water stains from setting in faster. It makes the glass hydrophobic so that water fed pole doesn’t work very well, so I’m not sure what the other guys are using these days.
service plans
what do you guys think of adding in screens, tracks, hard water removal, and paint scraping as well as the discount for anybody on a service plan and then having all of that as not free for one time cleans to make service plans an absolute no brainer choice to go with ?
0 likes • 8d
Yeah it’s definitely not set up for customers to build their own package, but if you were to sell it you would have everything visually in front of you as far as preparing a contract goes
0 likes • 6d
@Jeremy Azoulay I’ve done most in Lovable
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Benjamin Millen
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@benjamin-millen-1372
I love God, love my family, and enjoy helping other people grow. I’m a window cleaner currently working on scaling my third window cleaning business.

Active 10h ago
Joined Aug 24, 2025