QJS Services

The Janitorial Closet Cringe: 15 Signs You’re Working with a True Professional Cleaning Company

When you hire a janitorial company, you’re trusting them with more than just mops and buckets, you’re trusting them with your health, safety, and reputation.

But here’s the truth:
If you want to know whether you’re dealing with a professional janitorial service, don’t start in the lobby. Start in the closet.

Your janitorial closet tells a powerful story.

Here’s a practical checklist you can use to spot the difference between a true professional and a “good enough” cleaner.

 

15 Things to Look for in Your Janitorial Closet

  1. SDS Binder Is Clearly Available

A professional company always has a Safety Data Sheet (SDS) binder readily accessible.
Whether it’s mounted near the supplies or stored where the client requests (especially at smaller sites), it should be easy to find.

  1. SDS Sheets Are Up to Date

Even though SDS sheets no longer “expire,” they must reflect current products in use.
If chemicals change, the documentation should too.

  1. Eyewash Station Is Easily Accessible

If chemicals are stored onsite, an eyewash station should be available and accessible in case of emergency.

  1. All Bottles Are Properly Labeled

No mystery spray bottles. Ever.
Every container should clearly state what’s inside — diluted properly and labeled professionally.

  1. Mops Are Never Left in Dirty Water

A mop sitting in dirty water is breeding bacteria.
Professional cleaners rinse, wring, and hang mops to dry properly after use.

  1. Mop Buckets Are Emptied and Washed Out

Buckets should never contain old solution. They must be emptied, rinsed, and cleaned after each shift.

  1. More Than One Mop Is Present

There should always be separate mops for:

  • Washrooms
  • General areas

Cross-contamination is not acceptable.

  1. Quality Microfiber Cloths Are Used

High-quality microfiber cloths can capture up to 99% of bacteria with water alone when used properly.

That’s modern cleaning science, not guesswork.

  1. Cloths Are Clean and Properly Laundered

Used cloths should never be sitting dirty in the closet.
A rotation system should be obvious.

  1. Clear Colour Coding Is in Place

You should immediately know:

  • Which cloth is used for toilets and urinals
  • Which cloth is used for desks, telephones, or touchpoints

No guessing. No crossover.

  1. The Closet Itself Is Clean and Organized

A messy closet reflects messy standards.

A professional company keeps the closet tidy at all times, even when no one is watching.

  1. Commercial-Grade Cleaning Solutions Are Used

Products should be:

  • Commercial-grade
  • Properly diluted
  • Appropriate for the surface

You should not see harsh, outdated chemicals like straight bleach unless specifically required. Modern disinfectants are safer and highly effective.

  1. Proper Dilution Systems Are in Place

Manual guesswork is risky.
Professional operations use measured dilution systems to ensure:

  • Safety
  • Cost control
  • Consistent performance
  1. Sufficient Wet Floor Signs Are Available

There should always be enough wet floor signs onsite or cleaners should bring them with them.

Safety first. Always.

  1. Signs of a Managed Operation

Professional companies leave evidence of oversight and communication, such as:

  • Regular inspection reports (ROVs)
  • Communication binder
  • Emergency response contact sticker
  • Monitoring of client consumables

A closet shouldn’t feel abandoned. It should feel managed.

 

The Bigger Picture

A professional janitorial company doesn’t just clean what you see.
They manage what you don’t.

The janitorial closet is where standards live.
If it makes you cringe, that’s a red flag.

If it makes you confident, you’ve likely hired the right team.

 

If you’re ever unsure, just remember:

Great cleaning leaves clues. So does poor cleaning.

Start in the closet.