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Will You Add? - What Role Does Ethics Play in Your Cleaning Company?
Fax Resume Distribution - Submitting Your Resume through Fax around to notice and it is only $5.00.The resume is considered to be one of the most important documents you need to submit when you are applying for a job. It will tell the employer about your qualifications for the position you are applying for and it also tells them why you are more qualified than the other people who are also lining up for the same job.When you watch TV or when you look at the classifieds section in your newspaper, you will usually see companies advertising a vacant position in one or more of their departments. If you are unemployed and you see this kind 3. One of your employees is cleaning in a computer room and unplugs a computer so she can plug in her vacuum, causing a major computer problem for the client. Such an error might cause an employee to hide her mistake and play dumb. But as her employer, you need to encourage honesty, no matter how serious the offense. 4. You just received a check from a client and see that they not only paid their current invoice, but also paid the previous in Employment Background Screening In the past few years, news headlines have screamed of high profile scandals involving big names and companies like Martha Stewart, Enron, and Tyco. Because of these high profile scandals, businesses and individuals are becoming more and more aware of the importance of ethics in the workplace and in everyday life. What role do ethics play in your cleaning business?An employee background check can include a number of verifications such as the applicant's educational background, previous employment, social security number, credit history, criminal history, drug history, and medical history.All these checks are to ensure the employer or the company that the candidate is indeed trustworthy and would not create any problems with the other employees or company records or in general with the company in the future.An employee background screening might involve some basic information such as educati You will often (and perhaps always) be cleaning your clients' buildings at night when no one from the business is around. In addition, you might have access to areas that have confidential or nonpublic types of information. Because of this, it is critical that your customers can trust your cleaning company and believe that you and your employees will act ethically. Business ethics set standards and establish a value system for how your business will operate. It is important to remember that ethics are much more than just not "breaking the law". They are standards of "right" and "wrong" that dictate what people should and should not do. Acts such as intentionally abusing company equipment and employee theft are clear-cut breaches of ethics. However, there are many gray areas that are not so easy to classify as right or wrong behavior. Here are some examples of issues your cleaning company and employees might run into: 1. There is a box of old phones, calculators and small electronics labeled as trash. Your employee should pick it up and throw it away. Since the box is labeled as "trash" is it really stealing if an employee takes something out of the box for his or her own use? After all, the business you're cleaning no longer wants these items. 2. One of your cleaning employees is working alone in a building. The employee is vacuuming behind a copy machine. Tucked way back and covered with dust is a $5.00 bill. This bill has obviously been there for quite some time. What happens if the employee picks up the $5.00 bill and sticks it in his pocket? After all, no one is around to notice and it is only $5.00. 3. One of your employees is cleaning in a computer room and unplugs a computer so she can plug in her vacuum, causing a major computer problem for the client. Such an error might cause an employee to hide her mistake and play dumb. But as her employer, you need to encourage honesty, no matter how serious the offense. 4. You just received a check from a client and see that they not only paid their current invoice, but also paid the previous inv Advertising Shrink Wrap Vehicle Challenges n addition, you might have access to areas that have confidential or nonpublic types of information. Because of this, it is critical that your customers can trust your cleaning company and believe that you and your employees will act ethically.One of the greatest ways to advertise if your company has company vehicles on the road is to shrink wrap the entire vehicle with an advertisement or a picture. There are of course challenges to shrink wrapping an entire vehicle and there are some pretty big costs compared to conventional vehicle advertising.To shrink-wrap a van can cost as much as $5,000 and that is a significant amount of money considering that a couple of magnetic signs for the doors would only cost you about $35 per each. To put vinyl letting on a vehicle may only co Business ethics set standards and establish a value system for how your business will operate. It is important to remember that ethics are much more than just not "breaking the law". They are standards of "right" and "wrong" that dictate what people should and should not do. Acts such as intentionally abusing company equipment and employee theft are clear-cut breaches of ethics. However, there are many gray areas that are not so easy to classify as right or wrong behavior. Here are some examples of issues your cleaning company and employees might run into: 1. There is a box of old phones, calculators and small electronics labeled as trash. Your employee should pick it up and throw it away. Since the box is labeled as "trash" is it really stealing if an employee takes something out of the box for his or her own use? After all, the business you're cleaning no longer wants these items. 2. One of your cleaning employees is working alone in a building. The employee is vacuuming behind a copy machine. Tucked way back and covered with dust is a $5.00 bill. This bill has obviously been there for quite some time. What happens if the employee picks up the $5.00 bill and sticks it in his pocket? After all, no one is around to notice and it is only $5.00. 3. One of your employees is cleaning in a computer room and unplugs a computer so she can plug in her vacuum, causing a major computer problem for the client. Such an error might cause an employee to hide her mistake and play dumb. But as her employer, you need to encourage honesty, no matter how serious the offense. 4. You just received a check from a client and see that they not only paid their current invoice, but also paid the previous in Mergers and Acquisitions - Administering the Merger Review Process at the FTC le should and should not do. Acts such as intentionally abusing company equipment and employee theft are clear-cut breaches of ethics. However, there are many gray areas that are not so easy to classify as right or wrong behavior.One of the primary duties of the Federal Trade Commission is to over see Mergers and Acquisitions in industry to prevent one company from inadvertently growing so large that it corners the market and thus becomes a monopoly inhibiting competition in the market place. Administering the Merger Review Process at the FTC is not an easy task and it maybe a good thing as they do not manage these things very well anyway. In fact many times when one company wishes to merge with another the FTC kills the deal by wasting weeks to review all the informati Here are some examples of issues your cleaning company and employees might run into: 1. There is a box of old phones, calculators and small electronics labeled as trash. Your employee should pick it up and throw it away. Since the box is labeled as "trash" is it really stealing if an employee takes something out of the box for his or her own use? After all, the business you're cleaning no longer wants these items. 2. One of your cleaning employees is working alone in a building. The employee is vacuuming behind a copy machine. Tucked way back and covered with dust is a $5.00 bill. This bill has obviously been there for quite some time. What happens if the employee picks up the $5.00 bill and sticks it in his pocket? After all, no one is around to notice and it is only $5.00. 3. One of your employees is cleaning in a computer room and unplugs a computer so she can plug in her vacuum, causing a major computer problem for the client. Such an error might cause an employee to hide her mistake and play dumb. But as her employer, you need to encourage honesty, no matter how serious the offense. 4. You just received a check from a client and see that they not only paid their current invoice, but also paid the previous in I Can't Get No Employee Satisfaction " is it really stealing if an employee takes something out of the box for his or her own use? After all, the business you're cleaning no longer wants these items.I'm not happy. The printer has still not been fixed and now my chair is broken. The problem with this place is that it is falling apart. My boss is okay but has no clue what is going on.That new guy that started last week, who no one bothered to introduce, has been given a job that he has no idea how to do; why didn't they just ask me? I could have told them that a new set of drawings have been issued so even if he did know what he was doing the drawings he is using are obsolete anyway. Sometimes I don't know why I bother turning up.< 2. One of your cleaning employees is working alone in a building. The employee is vacuuming behind a copy machine. Tucked way back and covered with dust is a $5.00 bill. This bill has obviously been there for quite some time. What happens if the employee picks up the $5.00 bill and sticks it in his pocket? After all, no one is around to notice and it is only $5.00. 3. One of your employees is cleaning in a computer room and unplugs a computer so she can plug in her vacuum, causing a major computer problem for the client. Such an error might cause an employee to hide her mistake and play dumb. But as her employer, you need to encourage honesty, no matter how serious the offense. 4. You just received a check from a client and see that they not only paid their current invoice, but also paid the previous in Small Business Image around to notice and it is only $5.00.The single easiest way to increase sales is to look professional. People believe what they see. If you look the part, you get the part. You must be committed to keeping a positive image in the mind of every customer. What you may not realize is that a high public image may not cost as much as you are led to believe. In a small business, image is fifty percent (50%) of your business. The impact you have on your customers, whether it be your appearance, cleanliness of your store, equipment, uniforms or the style of your classy color brochures 3. One of your employees is cleaning in a computer room and unplugs a computer so she can plug in her vacuum, causing a major computer problem for the client. Such an error might cause an employee to hide her mistake and play dumb. But as her employer, you need to encourage honesty, no matter how serious the offense. 4. You just received a check from a client and see that they not only paid their current invoice, but also paid the previous invoice again. They've got lots of money and you work so hard for yours, is it really so bad to just cash the check? They'll never miss it. You and your employees will know what is and what is not legal. Having a written ethics policy to cover those gray areas will guide employees in those not illegal, yet tempting situations that they may find themselves in. An ethics policy can be just a few paragraphs in your employee manual. And making sure that your employees know from the first day on the job where you stand on ethical issues can prevent problems from occurring. What types of situations should your policy cover? This will vary by company; however, you may want to include some of the following: * Conflicts of interest (for example, working for two cleaning companies and divulging client info to the competitor) * What to do with property (money, jewelry, etc) that is found on the floor, on restroom counters, etc. * Not reading information on desks or going through files or desk drawers * Properly disposing of chemicals * Not removing anything that is in the trash * Never allowing friends or family into the building when they are working * Always treating building tenants, employees and visitors with respect * Treating other cleaning company employees with respect Research shows that if a business has a strong sense of integrity there is a positive influence on its bottom line. And in the cleaning field, it is extremely important that your customers know you set high ethical standards for yourself and your employees. Remember, "what goes around, comes around". Treating customers and employees with respect will pay off in less employee turnover and loyal customers. This is the key not only to your cleaning business' survival, but its growth and your financial well-being. Copyright (c) 2007 The Janitorial Store
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