Before you think about how to start your own house cleaning business, consider why this could be a good move for you. There is money in it for a reason that will never change: very few people actually like to clean their houses. Most people enjoy a freshly cleaned house but they don't care for the work.
But as everyone knows, houses need cleaning on a regular basis. They just get dirtier each day till something is done. So despite economic woes or crazy schedules, people need to do something about the house, at least sometimes!
Since they aren't keen on cleaning house, many people will be interested in hiring you. Start your own housekeeping business, do the work of getting started, and you can gradually get pretty much all the work you can handle. Some clients may be weekly, while others could be biweekly or just now and then. You can tell everyone what days you are willing to work also.
Now for some tips on how to get going:
1. What cleaning supplies do you have and what else will you need? Keep your expenditures to a minimum at this point. Let your first income provide the cash for whatever else is important.
2. Do a few house cleaning jobs for friends, in exchange for written testimonials they will give you, with permission to use their names or at least their first names. This step has two purposes: the testimonials will be good for advertising, but even more important, you will have a chance to be sure that you do in fact want to start your own house cleaning business.
Let me expand a little on that, because it's important. Notice how you feel cleaning other people's bathrooms and so on, and also notice how producing the results of nice clean houses makes you feel. If you find you really have to grit your teeth to get through the jobs, then this is not the ideal job for you and you will probably not have the emotional energy to make a success of it. Of course, you don't have to love every moment of the cleaning process, but be sure you do feel some satisfaction in a job well done.
3. Make some flyers on a computer. You can just use a word processing program. Give your name and phone number, maybe your email, the kinds of cleaning you do, those testimonials (edited to use the best parts), and your rates. By the way, before deciding what to charge, find out what is normal in your community. Print the flyers, on colored paper preferably, and post them around town on bulletin boards.
4. Find out if you need a business license or other legal requirements and take care of them. This is not usually all that difficult.
5. Keep good records of what you earn and what your expenses are. You do need this for taxes, but you also want to know how well your business is coming along.
These tips only scratch the surface of what could be said about starting your own house cleaning business. For more, do come visit my website!