Today, I just closed a cleaning contract with a major company at a value of $100k a month.
Of course, I don’t clean anymore now.
I most certainly do not intend to brag about myself. But I just find many of the entries I have seen have shown a ‘feel sorry for myself’ and ‘the whole world owes me a living’ attitude.
http://www.transitioning.org/2016/0...ecame-a-home-cleaner-but-with-a-happy-ending/
Gentlemen, this is likely to be fake masturbating article
my friend ClementiDK helps in his family's cleaning business so I know about this trade. It is not as easy as what "sam" from the article claims. First of all, it is very difficult to get the license from NEA. ClementiDK need to attend a lot of courses for compliance reasons to get NEA licensing. You noticed that he claims:-
- to be just 30 now,
- 3-years ago, his cleaning business bought over by a bigger company.
Sold his business at 27 (30-3=27 years old)
- Finish NS after his poly + Uni
should be at least 25 years old
- He started to do cleaning after he was jobless twice and longest jobless period was a year. (so after uni,
he spent at least two years doing other jobs or jobless before he embarked on cleaning business).
27 - 25 -2 = 0
This superboy succeeded within ZERO years. You need some months or years to obtain the NEA license and he might have used malaysian or foreign workers, which needs another period of time to recruit your manpower so that he can develop his "successful" cleaning business.
He also claimed to run a One Man Operation and soon enough cleaning companies wanting to invest in his business. This does not happen in cleaning industry. Buy-outs happened when you have manpower or a lot of large cleaning contracts that cannot be managed by one-person.
Do your maths, I suspect this chee hong is smoking us.