Most businesses approach the procurement of commercial cleaning services with less rigour than they’d apply to almost any other supplier decision of equivalent financial significance. A cleaning contract for a mid-sized Dublin office runs to tens of thousands of euros annually over its term. That’s a meaningful budget line, with direct effects on employee experience, client impression, and regulatory compliance. Yet the evaluation process that precedes it is often a brief quote comparison followed by a decision based primarily on price.
The businesses that make good decisions about commercial cleaning services consistently apply a more systematic evaluation. Not more complicated, just more deliberate. The criteria that distinguish good providers from mediocre ones aren’t hidden. They just require asking the right questions and knowing what a satisfying answer looks like.
Start With the Specification, Not the Quote
The evaluation process shouldn’t begin with reaching out to providers. It should begin with defining what you actually need.
A commercial cleaning specification documents the scope of service required: the areas to be cleaned, the tasks involved in each area, the frequency of each task, the standard each task needs to meet, and any compliance or regulatory requirements that apply to your premises or sector. Without a specification, quotes from different providers are based on their assumptions about what you need, and those assumptions vary enough to make the quotes incomparable.
When you send a brief to multiple cleaning companies and ask for a quote based on their interpretation of your needs, you receive quotes that reflect different scopes, different assumptions about frequency, different inclusions and exclusions. The cheapest quote may be cheap because it’s covering significantly less than the others. You won’t know that from the numbers alone.
Investing time in developing a proper specification before approaching the market produces several benefits. You get quotes that are genuinely comparable because they’re all responding to the same brief. You identify your own requirements more clearly, which often surfaces needs you hadn’t consciously acknowledged. And you arrive at the evaluation conversation with a document that lets you test how well each provider understands and responds to a defined scope.
Management Systems: The Questions Worth Asking
The quality of commercial cleaning services over the duration of a contract depends less on what happens during the sales process and more on the management systems behind the delivery. These are harder to assess than price but more predictive of outcome.
Start with how operatives are recruited, trained, and supervised. Cleaning is a high-turnover sector, and how a company manages that turnover affects the consistency of service your premises receives. A company that thoroughly trains new starters and has a supervision structure that catches performance issues before they become problems will outperform one that relies on assumed competence and infrequent oversight. Ask specifically: what’s the training process for someone new to a site, and who is responsible for supervising the cleaning team at your premises?
The quality assurance process is the other management system worth understanding in detail. How does the company know whether its teams are meeting the standard? Is there a documented inspection process? How often do inspections happen, who conducts them, and what do they measure? A company that can show you its inspection records and explain how they’re used to manage performance has a management system. A company that talks about how committed it is to quality without being able to describe a specific process doesn’t.
Ask about what happens when something goes wrong. Every cleaning company has service failures. The question isn’t whether they happen; it’s how they’re managed. A clear escalation process, a defined response time, and a track record of resolving issues promptly are what you’re looking for. A vague commitment to making it right is not.
Site Visits and Direct Observation
A commercial cleaning services evaluation that doesn’t include a site visit, either you visiting their operation or their management visiting your premises, is missing important information.
When their management visits your premises, observe how they conduct the walkthrough. Are they asking detailed questions about how the space is used, at what intensity, with what specific requirements? Are they noting things about the space that would affect the cleaning approach, access challenges, specific surfaces, high-traffic areas? Or are they walking through quickly, measuring square footage, and preparing to quote on a standard package?
The quality of the site assessment tells you something about the quality of the service that follows. A manager who engages seriously with the detail of your premises at the quote stage is more likely to produce a specification that actually fits your needs. One who is visibly treating it as a routine process before getting to the price conversation is showing you how they’ll treat the contract once they have it.
If possible, visiting reference sites that the company cleans is informative in ways that no presentation can replicate. Seeing what their work looks like in a live environment, at the service level you’d be purchasing, gives you direct evidence of output quality rather than claims about it.
References: How to Get Useful Information
Every commercial cleaning services provider will supply references. The references they supply are going to be the clients they’re most confident about, so the process of speaking to them needs to extract genuine information rather than endorsements.
The questions that produce useful information from references are specific rather than general. How do they handle problems when they occur? Has there ever been a period when the service declined and how did the company respond? If you were specifying the contract again, what would you include that wasn’t in the original contract? What would you do differently in the procurement process?
These questions are harder to answer with a generic positive response. They invite specifics, and specifics reveal how the relationship actually functions rather than whether the reference is broadly satisfied. A reference who says everything has been fine and they’d recommend them unreservedly is giving you very little. A reference who describes a service failure, how it was handled, and why they chose to renew the contract anyway is giving you genuinely useful information.
Don’t limit yourself to the references provided. If you can identify other clients in similar industries or premises types, reaching out directly to ask about their experience produces more candid responses than references who know they’ve been put forward.
Contract Terms and What They Should Cover
The contract is where evaluation conclusions become binding, and reviewing it carefully before signing is not the same as reading to confirm it matches the quote.
The specification should be incorporated into the contract as a schedule or exhibit, not summarised. What’s cleaned, at what frequency, to what standard: the detail matters and needs to be legally part of the agreement rather than understood to be.
Performance standards should be defined and measurable rather than aspirational. “High standards of cleanliness” means nothing enforceable. A defined inspection scoring system with a minimum acceptable score, or specific parameters for particular tasks, means something you can hold the provider to.
The remedies for underperformance, and the process for invoking them, should be explicit. What’s the notice period for raising a performance concern? What’s the required response time? What happens if underperformance continues? These provisions protect both parties and create a framework for managing performance problems constructively rather than through an escalating dispute.
Notice periods and contract exit provisions matter more than they seem at the signing stage. The question of how long you’re committed to the provider if the service doesn’t meet expectations, and what that exit costs, is worth understanding before the contract is signed.
Price in Proper Context
Price matters, and dismissing it as secondary to other considerations is neither realistic nor practical. But a price evaluated in isolation produces worse decisions than a price evaluated in context.
The context is the specification you’ve defined, the management system you’ve assessed, the references you’ve checked, and the contract terms you’ve reviewed. A higher price from a provider whose management systems and references give you genuine confidence in consistent delivery may represent better value over a three-year contract than a lower price from a provider whose evaluation raised questions that weren’t satisfactorily answered.
The total cost of a commercial cleaning contract includes the contract price and the costs associated with underperformance: the management time spent chasing issues, the additional cleaning or remediation that poor standard necessitates, and the eventual cost of going through another procurement process if the contract needs to be terminated and replaced.
Commercial cleaning services bought well produce a return on the investment that becomes visible in reduced absence, improved employee experience, better client impressions, and consistent regulatory compliance. Those returns are real, and they’re available from providers that have the systems to deliver them consistently. Finding those providers is what a proper evaluation is for.