Legal eagles’ judgement vindicated as they swap courtrooms for commercial cleaning
Solicitors and barristers are famous for cleaning up financially – but how many, like Jane and Dornford Roberts, are just as likely to be cleaning up with a mop and bucket?
The couple,
joint owners of a Betterclean franchise covering a huge area from Dawlish in
Devon to Penzance in Cornwall, have just won the most prestigious accolade in
the franchising world: a Great British Franchisee Award from
whichfranchise.com.
Quite how
barrister Jane and solicitor Dornford ended up as cleaners has raised eyebrows
among their former colleagues in the legal profession, but their £1million-a-year
turnover and the 100 staff they employ suggest they made the right decision.
That
success, and their attitude towards their staff and clients, is what secured
them the prestigious award and secured their place among the franchise world’s
elite.
“The main
challenge we faced was moving from the specialist, solution-based, one-case-at-
a-time approach required during our legal careers to the multi-layered, fast-moving
demands of a business with 60-plus customers requiring a daily service and employing
more than 100 staff to deliver it,” says Dornford.
“If the
designated cleaner for a site is unable to get to work, even at the last
minute, we have a team of mobile cleaners who can cover the shift.
“But if the
mobile cleaners can’t cover the clean, Jane and I will step in and do the
cleaning ourselves, which we have done on many occasions.”
The legal
eagles’ people skills have come to the fore as their business has developed,
with the need to keep their workforce happy proving just as important as keeping
clients satisfied.
“In recent
months, we’ve had to learn how to manage with the recruitment issues the whole
economy has been suffering from,” says Dornford.
“We need to
recruit and retain a lot of staff in relation to our turnover, so we’ve had to
put a lot of thought into how to attract and keep them, not just in terms of
their pay, but also forming relationships with them, listening to them,
accommodating their needs as much as we can, and making sure they’re coping
with their workloads if they’ve taken on extra hours.
“If
customers are willing to pay a little more, we pay our staff a little more - and
for exceptional staff we pay more and reduce our profit margins if need be.
“We’ve
recently given many of our staff larger wage increases than we strictly needed
to, to assist with their personal finances in view of rising prices in the
economy generally, and to recognise their good work.”
The couple
began by buying the Betterclean franchise for Plymouth and Cornwall, followed
by Torbay, and are consolidating their success through a cherrypicking
approach, shedding unprofitable or unviable contracts to concentrate on the
rest.
Five years
into their franchise agreement, the suggestions they’ve made for improvements
are even being written into future contracts.
And, in the eyes of the award judges, too, they’ve acquitted themselves wonderfully.
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