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So this is what oxidation looks like in South Carolina
I spent 6 hours on a whole house full of windows like this. I’m so grateful that they are paying me monthly for quarterly maintenance to keep this from happening again. I didn’t show it in video but I basically soak the glass and frames down with water from a handheld pressure sprayer. Use a cheap microfiber towel to break the oxidation loose and get it to mix with the water before spraying everything down again to rinse it off. Then when I come back with the mop and squeegee my tools don’t get ruined on every window.
So this is what oxidation looks like in South Carolina
This Is What I Can Offer Y'all
Hi all, I joined last night and have already learned a lot and had many thought prompts. As someone just five months in to my business journey, I don't foresee that I'll have much if anything to teach a majority of you on the technical side of window, gutter and pressure cleaning. There's a whole trove of collective knowledge held in here that would be of huge benefit to me and I will be certainly posting my share of questions and requests for advice. I don't want to be a leach though! So, these are the things I have a background and experience in that perhaps you have some gaps in with your business that I can help with; - Business Development: getting new customers - How to make effective cold calls that generate revenue (mindset, who to call, what to say, what you want from the call) - Account Management: managing existing customers - Marketing - LinkedIN: I'm not personally a huge fan of social media, particularly this platform however, it is a necessary evil in business and especially in the phase I'm in. LinkedIN has been invaluable to me for the last 16 years for new business prospecting in the B2B sector The skillsets above were earned starting from age 21 (37 now) in selling Technical IT Education and IT Managed Services and consulting in ISR, business development, account management and marketing roles. I've had my share of other physical roles too like bricklayers labourer, saw milling and factory work. For the 4.5 years leading up to kicking this business off last November, I was a small business banker with one of the 4 major banks here in Australia, promoted at that bank and then poached by a recruiter to another bank (the 5th largest) in the next tier up from where I was at and was a relationship banker specialising in Agribusiness. I excelled in banking and learned a lot- I don't have a university degree or any formal qualifications either. With that experience I can also assist with; - Analysing, Interpreting & Using Financial Data - Revenue/Cashflow Forecasting - Basic Accounting - General Financial Queries
💬 Start Here
Welcome to the BluLadder Pro Network — built for Next Level Clean pros like you. You’re part of the first wave to join this group. I’ll be dropping tools, templates, and strategies each week to help you run a real business, not just chase gigs. ✅ This group will eventually be paid, but as a founding member, you’re in for free — and unlimited access to the community for good. Here’s what to do next: - Drop a quick intro in the thread below, let us know how long you’ve been in business and where you’re located (City/State) - Try out the free tools (more coming soon!) → bluladder.com/pro/apps - Let me know what tools or resources you’d like next in the “Feature Wishlist” post Once we’ve got 15–20 active people in here, the founding tier closes and we go paid. Let’s make this a group worth being in.
cleaning limescale deposits on stone
I was asked if I could clean limescale deposits, on stone from Spain (natural stone). I watered with CLR then I brushed and rinsed with demineralized water, without result. Could someone here advise me? Thanks
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