Interested In Advertising? | Contact Us Here
Warning!

 

Welcome to Clean It Up; the UK`s largest cleaning forum with over 34,000 members

 

Please login or register to post and reply to topics.      

 

Forgot your password? Click here

Pete Thompson

  • Posts: 960
Re: The Stigma of Window Cleaning
« Reply #20 on: September 07, 2018, 11:49:00 pm »
This so-called stigma is (in my opinion) a very good thing.

It's only because folk look down on window cleaning (and therefore don't generally know what window cleaners earn) that more people don't do it.

Long may it continue.

Walter Mitty

  • Posts: 1314
Re: The Stigma of Window Cleaning
« Reply #21 on: September 08, 2018, 04:19:29 am »
If there is a stigma attached to window cleaning, it's not one that bothers me.  I can earn decent full-time money for part-time work and, more importantly for me, have the time to pursue other interests that I enjoy.
Anyway, stigma can be beautiful.  Below is a link to some lovely pictures of them:

https://www.gettyimages.co.uk/photos/flower-stigma?sort=mostpopular&mediatype=photography&phrase=flower%20stigma

Arnold Palmer

  • Posts: 20800
Re: The Stigma of Window Cleaning
« Reply #22 on: September 08, 2018, 06:22:28 am »
When asked I tell people that I'm a window cleaner (I've not cleaned a window for money in many years), it's extremely rare that anyone's reaction to that is negative in any way.

I'd never tell someone that I'm a "company director" because I'd feel like a bell end.

If you're going to judge me for being a window cleaner you're not someone that I want to be chatting to anyway.
#aliens

alank

  • Posts: 648
Re: The Stigma of Window Cleaning
« Reply #23 on: September 08, 2018, 09:00:42 am »
Well said soupy.

dd

  • Posts: 2569
Re: The Stigma of Window Cleaning
« Reply #24 on: September 08, 2018, 01:06:36 pm »
When i started window cleaning way back in 2002-3 i had prev held a well respected job in the city of london.

When my peers heard about me becoming a window cleaner; it did alienate me a bit from them as i no longer had anything in common as we all had similar careers at the time; and they found it strange.

And you can kind of see why, its like a doctor deciding to become a rag and bone man, you sort of take a double take..and wonder why; and it is amusing tbh.

Window cleaning is a good job, but even more so its a simple business model.

Nearly 16 years later; am i a bit sick and tired of window cleaning? Yes of course but any job for 16 years becomes tedious.

To be honest with you all, until Lee Pryor started with his plans to sell his house and invest the money into his business, and show us all what can be done even with a simple humble window cleaning business i was looking for a way out of window cleaning all togther as i hit a wall.

I have an engineering business with my father as well, and for a period of time i focused on the engineering business as a possible way out of window cleaning. Tell you what isnt fair, engineering companies struggle to turn over £25-40 per hour per job, as its so competitive, you really need a lot of work and machines running at the same time to make any profit, and then you got materials costs and breakages, and you break a tool in a mazak lathe, or a haas mill, its not £50 down the drain, or even £500 sometimes it's a couple of grand you have to swallow on the job to replace that tool and keep it going. Window cleaning i easily turn over £60 to £120 per hour on some jobs..now thats not fair is it??.

In conclusion, you are either a business owner or a worker. Im sticking with my goal to grow my window cleaning business, and eventually have some other fingers in pies aswell.

Btw i am less than 5k off my 60k target now..

😁😁😁😁
If you can "easily earn" £60-£120 per hour surely you should be earning over 60k annually, especially after 16 years.

Marc Stock

Re: The Stigma of Window Cleaning
« Reply #25 on: September 08, 2018, 02:20:29 pm »
When i started window cleaning way back in 2002-3 i had prev held a well respected job in the city of london.

When my peers heard about me becoming a window cleaner; it did alienate me a bit from them as i no longer had anything in common as we all had similar careers at the time; and they found it strange.

And you can kind of see why, its like a doctor deciding to become a rag and bone man, you sort of take a double take..and wonder why; and it is amusing tbh.

Window cleaning is a good job, but even more so its a simple business model.

Nearly 16 years later; am i a bit sick and tired of window cleaning? Yes of course but any job for 16 years becomes tedious.

To be honest with you all, until Lee Pryor started with his plans to sell his house and invest the money into his business, and show us all what can be done even with a simple humble window cleaning business i was looking for a way out of window cleaning all togther as i hit a wall.

I have an engineering business with my father as well, and for a period of time i focused on the engineering business as a possible way out of window cleaning. Tell you what isnt fair, engineering companies struggle to turn over £25-40 per hour per job, as its so competitive, you really need a lot of work and machines running at the same time to make any profit, and then you got materials costs and breakages, and you break a tool in a mazak lathe, or a haas mill, its not £50 down the drain, or even £500 sometimes it's a couple of grand you have to swallow on the job to replace that tool and keep it going. Window cleaning i easily turn over £60 to £120 per hour on some jobs..now thats not fair is it??.

In conclusion, you are either a business owner or a worker. Im sticking with my goal to grow my window cleaning business, and eventually have some other fingers in pies aswell.

Btw i am less than 5k off my 60k target now..

😁😁😁😁
If you can "easily earn" £60-£120 per hour surely you should be earning over 60k annually, especially after 16 years.

Quote

 £60 to £120 per hour on some jobs

Why dont you read it properly?

Martin Lane

  • Posts: 169
Re: The Stigma of Window Cleaning
« Reply #26 on: September 08, 2018, 03:42:22 pm »
Been window cleaning 37 years, love it even after all them years, never worried what people think, this year two weeks in Orlando Disney hotel in July, then a week in New York in August, there is good money to be made in anything as long as you put the effort it

Martin

dd

  • Posts: 2569
Re: The Stigma of Window Cleaning
« Reply #27 on: September 08, 2018, 03:45:41 pm »
Ding Dong

I never suggested you earn £60-£120 per hour all the time (if you can be bothered to read my short post properly), but when you make that kind of statement about what you earn it implies you are generally earning quite a high hourly rate.

Personally I have never earned over £60 per hour but have a reasonably high annual income.

Marc Stock

Re: The Stigma of Window Cleaning
« Reply #28 on: September 08, 2018, 03:57:05 pm »
Ding Dong

I never suggested you earn £60-£120 per hour all the time (if you can be bothered to read my short post properly), but when you make that kind of statement about what you earn it implies you are generally earning quite a high hourly rate.

Personally I have never earned over £60 per hour but have a reasonably high annual income.

First of all i was comparing the hourly turnover of some jobs window cleaning a relatively unskilled job vs engineering a very specalist and skilled job.

Secondly, wind your neck in. I dont earn anywhere near 60 per hour. Some rounds bring in a TURNOVER of 60 or 100 an hour ( you only need to do 4 £30 houses an hour, which is quite typical in surrey)

As for my earnings. I am on a fixed salary on paye from my company as is my wife.

So why dont you just calm down.

Jees.


dd

  • Posts: 2569
Re: The Stigma of Window Cleaning
« Reply #29 on: September 08, 2018, 05:13:16 pm »
I generally get fed up when people start posting about their hourly rate etc on here because when you do the math it generally does not add up with their actual yearly income, or the way some people complain about prices of equipment etc when they seem to be earning £50/hour or so.

If I could earn up to £120/hour from cleaning windows the last thing I would do is post it on a public forum.

I question your math and all you do is essentially insult my ability to read.

windowswashed

  • Posts: 2580
Re: The Stigma of Window Cleaning
« Reply #30 on: September 08, 2018, 07:19:06 pm »
People need to take a reality check at two things: 1 how low the minimum wage is and 2 the average wage. Typical example: a refuse collector earns more than a delivery driver for under 7.5 tonne. Most low paid jobs are unskilled. I am happy there is a stigma attached to our job which defers others from jumping on the bandwagon so to speak. I've paid off my mortgage alone in this job, I'd never have managed it doing welding, not by a long chance. I'm sick to death of this job after 20 years but it pays better than the average so I will stick at it until my illness gets the better of me and just stick two fingers up to all them people with fancy job titles who earn less. We only get out of this job what we are prepared to put into it so why shouldn't we run it like a business and earn as much as we can and laugh at the muppets who look down upon us.

NWH

  • Posts: 16952
Re: The Stigma of Window Cleaning
« Reply #31 on: September 08, 2018, 08:07:43 pm »
I was speaking to an electrician last week when he told me what he was earning a day and bragging about it I had to smile to myself,if something is good tell someone if something is excellent keep it to yourself a bloke once told me. IMO especially tradesman are realising what  WCs are earning,the thing is with this job as I’ve said countless times you can’t just start WCleaning and earn really good money by the time we’ve all packed up that’s when we will have the last laugh when the type of people your talking about realise they’ve been earning half at best than you as a poxy window cleaner 😉

Re: The Stigma of Window Cleaning
« Reply #32 on: September 09, 2018, 07:18:45 am »
I was speaking to an electrician last week when he told me what he was earning a day and bragging about it I had to smile to myself,if something is good tell someone if something is excellent keep it to yourself a bloke once told me. IMO especially tradesman are realising what  WCs are earning,the thing is with this job as I’ve said countless times you can’t just start WCleaning and earn really good money by the time we’ve all packed up that’s when we will have the last laugh when the type of people your talking about realise they’ve been earning half at best than you as a poxy window cleaner 😉

Yawn.

Marc Stock

Re: The Stigma of Window Cleaning
« Reply #33 on: September 09, 2018, 08:59:13 am »
I generally get fed up when people start posting about their hourly rate etc on here because when you do the math it generally does not add up with their actual yearly income, or the way some people complain about prices of equipment etc when they seem to be earning £50/hour or so.

If I could earn up to £120/hour from cleaning windows the last thing I would do is post it on a public forum.

I question your math and all you do is essentially insult my ability to read.

Like i said to you in my original post, i was comparing the fact that a window cleaner can earn more per hour than an engineering company does and that isnt fair considering the amount of training and experience needed in engineering.

I havent insulted your ability to read, i simply made a comparison between two trades which by the way i can do becouse i am going to and fro between the engineering business and my window cleaning business.

You are quick to take offence, the figures i have posted are true, and in surrey its not unheard of or particularly extraordinary to turn over £60 an hour on some rounds.

I still dont have a full schedual, and im working now around 4 days a week, fully booked up id be probbably turning over around 80k a year but that would drive me nuts working full time doing this job.

My plan to get to 60k is so i can afford to employ spmeone to grow my business in a smaller fashion to Lee Pryor so i can eventually do other things.

You don't seem to understand the difference between turnover and earnings.

I can tell you now, my earnings are very modest as i take what i need to live on from the business and no more.

I don't know what rattled your cage DD but its clear you dont like anything i say.

So that is my response to you.



Shrek

  • Posts: 3931
Re: The Stigma of Window Cleaning
« Reply #34 on: September 09, 2018, 09:05:23 am »
I generally get fed up when people start posting about their hourly rate etc on here because when you do the math it generally does not add up with their actual yearly income, or the way some people complain about prices of equipment etc when they seem to be earning £50/hour or so.

If I could earn up to £120/hour from cleaning windows the last thing I would do is post it on a public forum.

I question your math and all you do is essentially insult my ability to read.

Like i said to you in my original post, i was comparing the fact that a window cleaner can earn more per hour than an engineering company does and that isnt fair considering the amount of training and experience needed in engineering.

I havent insulted your ability to read, i simply made a comparison between two trades which by the way i can do becouse i am going to and fro between the engineering business and my window cleaning business.

You are quick to take offence, the figures i have posted are true, and in surrey its not unheard of or particularly extraordinary to turn over £60 an hour on some rounds.

I still dont have a full schedual, and im working now around 4 days a week, fully booked up id be probbably turning over around 80k a year but that would drive me nuts working full time doing this job.

My plan to get to 60k is so i can afford to employ spmeone to grow my business in a smaller fashion to Lee Pryor so i can eventually do other things.

You don't seem to understand the difference between turnover and earnings.

I can tell you now, my earnings are very modest as i take what i need to live on from the business and no more.

I don't know what rattled your cage DD but its clear you dont like anything i say.

So that is my response to you.

Can I ask - what is the point of turning over all this money if your just taking out 12k a year and leaving the rest in the business?
Why don’t you take it all out and live like a king 👑

dazmond

  • Posts: 23981
Re: The Stigma of Window Cleaning
« Reply #35 on: September 09, 2018, 09:09:17 am »
True that marc....you can earn more per hour window cleaning than a lot of other trades/jobs but it takes years to get a decent round together
to make enough for a half decent living unless your gonna spend a lot of time and money getting customers......

People can look at me and think I'm doing great(which I am).....but it's took me a long time to get where I am today(a lot longer than more business minded guys would take)....
price higher/work harder!

AuRavelling79

  • Posts: 25404
Re: The Stigma of Window Cleaning
« Reply #36 on: September 09, 2018, 09:16:23 am »
I generally get fed up when people start posting about their hourly rate etc on here because when you do the math it generally does not add up with their actual yearly income, or the way some people complain about prices of equipment etc when they seem to be earning £50/hour or so.

If I could earn up to £120/hour from cleaning windows the last thing I would do is post it on a public forum.

I question your math and all you do is essentially insult my ability to read.

Of course it doesn't add up to their (our) yearly income.

It's a bit like saying steam engines topped over 120 mph in the 1930's. It was a rare occurance.

But they could average 60 mph on the fastest scheduled runs.

But Thomas the Tank would plod around at 30 mph.

Now if he (DD the Dutiful engine) is turning over 55k as a single operator he's got his round very well sorted.

Well chuffed, I'd say.

 :D

It's a game of three halves!

Marc Stock

Re: The Stigma of Window Cleaning
« Reply #37 on: September 09, 2018, 10:00:50 am »
I generally get fed up when people start posting about their hourly rate etc on here because when you do the math it generally does not add up with their actual yearly income, or the way some people complain about prices of equipment etc when they seem to be earning £50/hour or so.

If I could earn up to £120/hour from cleaning windows the last thing I would do is post it on a public forum.

I question your math and all you do is essentially insult my ability to read.

Like i said to you in my original post, i was comparing the fact that a window cleaner can earn more per hour than an engineering company does and that isnt fair considering the amount of training and experience needed in engineering.

I havent insulted your ability to read, i simply made a comparison between two trades which by the way i can do becouse i am going to and fro between the engineering business and my window cleaning business.

You are quick to take offence, the figures i have posted are true, and in surrey its not unheard of or particularly extraordinary to turn over £60 an hour on some rounds.

I still dont have a full schedual, and im working now around 4 days a week, fully booked up id be probbably turning over around 80k a year but that would drive me nuts working full time doing this job.

My plan to get to 60k is so i can afford to employ spmeone to grow my business in a smaller fashion to Lee Pryor so i can eventually do other things.

You don't seem to understand the difference between turnover and earnings.

I can tell you now, my earnings are very modest as i take what i need to live on from the business and no more.

I don't know what rattled your cage DD but its clear you dont like anything i say.

So that is my response to you.

Can I ask - what is the point of turning over all this money if your just taking out 12k a year and leaving the rest in the business?
Why don’t you take it all out and live like a king 👑

Yes of course.

Its all about business discipline.

I am not growing my business so i can have the latest TV or car, 3 holidays a year and trendy designer clothes. To me that is a waste of time and money.

I am growing my business so it can support a team of window cleaners eventually with my minimual input.

So by taking a modest wage of 15k a year each for both me and the missus i am leaving money in the business to grow it.


Dry Clean

  • Posts: 8864
Re: The Stigma of Window Cleaning
« Reply #38 on: September 09, 2018, 10:37:50 am »
Say you don't care what others think with one breath and then brag about earning the next and you're only fooling yourself,
if you're ashamed of what you do for a living then money wont make a difference.

Go

Re: The Stigma of Window Cleaning
« Reply #39 on: September 09, 2018, 10:43:47 am »
True that marc....you can earn more per hour window cleaning than a lot of other trades/jobs but it takes years to get a decent round together
to make enough for a half decent living unless your gonna spend a lot of time and money getting customers......

People can look at me and think I'm doing great(which I am).....but it's took me a long time to get where I am today(a lot longer than more business minded guys would take)....

I reckon in year two it’s easy to hit £30-40 k pa. about the same as the self deployed trades around here.