Inc.

Giving Employees the Tools to Excel Helps This Company Clean Up

RON HOLT GOT INTO residential cleaning in the early 2000s, when he saw a surge in demand that the mom-and-pop shops dominating the industry couldn’t meet. The result was Two Maids & a Mop, his Birmingham, Alabama, startup. By making some decisions that were expensive at first—but which bore long-term fruit—this three-time Inc. 5000 honoree brought in $4.7 million in revenue in 2014. Holt explains how his company has thrived.

DOING THE RIGHT THING IS SMART BUSINESS

When Holt created Two Maids & a Mop, he was inexperienced in business building. He visited five noncompeting cleaning businesses to learn their secrets. He found that the majority of home-cleaning companies employed independent contractors. It would have been cheaper for him to hire cleaners this way too. But since owners can’t

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from Inc.

Inc.3 min readCorporate Finance
The Burn of Slow Churn
✕ THE PROBLEM “After 38 years in the business, I bragged that I'd never had a single officer quit my company. I liked the people who worked for me. We were a very tight-knit group of friends. I traveled and went on family outings with them and knew t
Inc.4 min read
The Business of Building a Better Future
Rohit Bhargava | INC.'S NON-OBVIOUS BUSINESS BOOKS The founder of the Non-Obvious Company, Rohit Bhargava is a trend curator and best-selling author of nine books. What vibe do people most want from their place of work? Answer: coffee shop cozy. This
Inc.26 min read
How They Stay On Top
Karen Robinovitz & Sara Schiller Stirring Up Hope in Unexpected Places Co-founders of the Sloomoo Institute TWO things helped Karen Robinovitz, 52 (near right), and Sara Schiller, 53, overcome the most devastating periods in their lives: friends and

Related Books & Audiobooks