Most cleaning operations don't fail because of effort. They fail because the system can't scale.
When you're responsible for 100,000 m² of academic space — 2,500 students, 600 staff, every single day — there's no room for a process that depends on individual heroics.
The team at the Faculty of Sciences and Technologies of Nancy learned this firsthand. Their old system worked. Until it didn't.
Constant rinsing. Repeated bending. Manual wringing. Fringes handled bare-handed. Every inefficiency that feels minor at small scale becomes a serious operational liability when it's multiplied across an entire facility, every day, by every member of your team.
The shift wasn't just about finding a better mop.
It was about building a system their whole team could execute consistently — without physical strain, without hygiene risk, without losing time to avoidable back-and-forth.
Here's what scale actually demands from a cleaning operation:
- Processes that any team member can replicate, every time.
- Equipment that protects your people, not just your floors.
- Standards that don't slip when the pressure is highest.