This is the first part of a five-part article on window blinds cleaning.
Many facilities task their building service contractors with cleaning or hiring a subcontractor to clean interior and exterior windowpanes. Windowsills are even dusted regularly as part of a BSC’s contract.
Yet window treatments tend to be an afterthought — at least until they get so dirty they can no longer be ignored. Then they become an opportunity.
According to a recent Contracting Profits survey of BSC customers, two-thirds of facility executives want their contractor to provide window blinds cleaning. That could mean anything from hand washing a building’s venetian blinds to using ultrasonic cleaning technology to restore a set of pleated shades or honeycomb blinds to their previous luster. 
Industry members are unsure if window blinds cleaning can be a major profit center for BSCs. If the demand is there, however, it may make sense to offer window blinds cleaning as a specialty service.
“I think if someone were promoting or touting their services and they needed something to differentiate them, I think blinds cleaning would help do that,” says B.J. Mandelstam, an industry consultant with Only Cleaning Matters, based in Greenwood Village, Colorado.
Customers Want Specialty Cleaning Services from BSCs
 The Down and Dirty on Cleaning in Virus Season
The Down and Dirty on Cleaning in Virus Season Industry Report Reveals Burnout Prevalence Among Cleaning Professionals
Industry Report Reveals Burnout Prevalence Among Cleaning Professionals How Surfactant Use is Expanding in Commercial Cleaning
How Surfactant Use is Expanding in Commercial Cleaning