16/02/2026
One of the reasons I started making cleaning videos in the first place is because I got tired of people undermining what professional cleaners actually do.
People expect incredible results…
but then think a 2,000+ square foot deep clean can be done in four hours.
How?
Deep cleaning is not a quick wipe down.
It’s baseboards.
It’s doors and trim.
It’s light switches and vents.
It’s buildup removal.
It’s grout lines and edges.
It’s inside appliances.
It’s blinds.
It’s windows sometimes.
It’s under furniture.
It’s behind appliances.
It’s the details most people don’t even see but would absolutely notice if they weren’t done.
I’ve had new clients initially question the time frame for a deep clean. Not clients I continued with but inquiries. And once I explained what a true deep clean actually includes, and they saw me in action, their tune completely changed.
Sometimes people truly just don’t know. They’ve never cleaned at that level. They don’t understand what goes into it.
But other times… it’s simply undermining the profession.
And when cleaners are rushed or told it “shouldn’t take that long,” it diminishes the labor, skill, and physical effort that goes into this work.
I get messages from cleaners all the time saying they’re expected to perform miracles in unrealistic time frames. And that makes me sad because most cleaners are working their butts off every single day.
This is skilled labor.
This is physical work.
This is experience and trained eyes.
To clients:
If you want quality, allow time for quality. Respect the process.
To my fellow cleaners:
Set boundaries.
Communicate realistic expectations.
Don’t shrink your standards to fit someone else’s impatience.
If someone expects a full deep clean of a large home in four hours, they’re valuing speed over quality.
And speed and thoroughness rarely live in the same room.
Respect cleaners.
And cleaners respect yourselves enough to walk away when necessary.