Start a Search

Cleaning

Platforms fail on labour, not acquisitions.

Learn More
Cleaning
Cleaning platforms are not failing on bad acquisitions. They are failing on the labor problem nobody built a plan for.

In April 2025, ICE fined three Denver janitorial companies over $8 million for employing unauthorised workers. One company had a hundred percent violation rate. This was not an isolated incident - it was a warning. Cleaning employs more undocumented workers than almost any other sector in the US economy. The workforce model that built most platforms is structurally exposed, and the operators who haven't already built a compliant, scalable recruitment infrastructure are sitting on a liability.

$117BUS commercial cleaning market, 2025
52%of M&A activity from PE buyers
4.2xrevenue EBITDA multiple on recurring commercial contract books

The misclassification picture is worse. Jan-Pro's $30 million settlement. Coverall's federal judgment. CleanNet's class action. The franchise model that allowed cleaning companies to scale rapidly by treating workers as independent contractors has cost the sector over $40 million in settled litigation - and more cases are active now than at any point in the last decade.

The platforms that retain commercial accounts at scale are built by operators who understand that cleaning is not a commodity - it is a compliance and trust relationship.

Then there is the turnover. Between 200 and 400 percent annually - three to six times the national average across all industries. One in ten new hires does not survive their first week. The operators who have brought this to 28-40 percent have done something genuinely difficult. They built workforce infrastructure from the ground up. They exist. They are not on the standard databases. They are exactly who we place.

Why this matters for the hire

The COO or People Director walking into a PE-backed cleaning platform today needs to have already solved these problems - not be introduced to them. Compliant workforce pipelines. Retention architecture that survives at scale. An understanding of where the misclassification liability sits and how to restructure around it. These are not skills you find in a generalist ops leader. They belong to a specific group of people who have operated specifically in this sector. We know who they are. That is the service.

THE LABOR PROBLEM
200-400%
Annual workforce turnover. 3-6x the national average.

Turnover this severe means dispatch quality, training pipelines and supervisor density become the operational moat. Platforms that solve scheduling stability before they scale acquire the advantage everyone else is paying to acquire.

THE LEGAL EXPOSURE
$40M+
Settled misclassification liability across Jan-Pro, Coverall & CleanNet

The franchise model that built this category is the same model creating the exposure. Portco leadership weighing acquisitions in this space need to underwrite worker classification posture from day one of diligence.

THE ENFORCEMENT TRIGGER
$8M
ICE fines on Denver janitorial companies. April 2025.

I-9 audits land without warning and freeze workforce capacity overnight. The platforms that survive this enforcement cycle are the ones that built E-Verify discipline into hiring before they had to.

The wrong hire does not just cost the search fee. It costs the hold period.

Cleaning is not a sector where an executive can learn on the job. A VP Ops seat open for six months on a 25-location platform does not just slow integration - it actively unwinds it. Field teams drift. Client relationships thin. The acquired businesses that were supposed to be absorbing back-office overhead start replicating it instead. By the time the wrong hire is replaced, the value creation plan has lost a year.

The leaders who know this sector are not advertising themselves. They are running operations - managing dispatch boards, holding founder relationships, building the workforce pipelines that turn 200% turnover into 40%. They are not on the standard databases. They are in our network, and we have been having the right conversations with them before you needed them.

The seats that determine the outcome
  • Chief Operating Officer. Labor model architecture, route optimization, scheduling systems at scale. In cleaning, this is not a generalist ops role. This is the hire that holds the thesis together across every tuck-in.
  • People & Workforce Director. The most consequential - and most overlooked - hire in cleaning M&A. Best-in-class platforms run 28-40% annual turnover. Industry average is above 200%. The person who closes that gap moves EBITDA directly.
  • Chief Financial Officer. Labor at 50-70% of revenue requires CFO experience that most generalists simply do not have. Multi-entity consolidation, P&L normalisation across acquired businesses, WIP accounting. Not a standard brief.
What we already know
  • Which sub-segment each candidate has actually operated in - and whether that sub-segment maps to your platform's stage and revenue model
  • The difference between a $40 million commercial platform in year two of a buy-and-build and a $250 million multi-segment business preparing for secondary - and the exec profile each demands
  • Where the founder dependency risk sits post-acquisition - and which operational leaders have built the systems that replace it with scalable infrastructure
  • Who is ready to move, who is moveable, and who is three years away. We do not start the search when you call. We already know the answer.

Hiring in Cleaning?

Start this search

Leading in Cleaning?

Join our operator network
Roles We Place
The gap between operators and PE-calibre operators is widest in cleaning. Most candidates have run crews. Few have built the systems that hold margin at scale.
Chief Executive Officer
PE-experienced platform operators who can run a buy-and-build, hold sponsor relationships, and stay credible with the field. Not a corporate appointment. An operational one.
Chief Operating Officer
The critical seat. Labor model architecture, route density, scheduling systems, quality control across acquired businesses. This hire determines whether the hold period works.
Chief Financial Officer
Multi-entity consolidation, labor-heavy P&L normalisation, M&A integration accounting. Requires direct experience with cleaning-specific financials - not a standard CFO brief.
General Manager
Branch or regional P&L owner. $8M-$40M revenue. Owns route density, crew retention, and commercial contract renewal across multi-site operations. The hardest part of this seat is holding quality standards at scale while managing high turnover and keeping commercial accounts sticky year after year.
VP Operations
Multi-geography field leadership across acquired businesses. The layer that connects the exec team to the frontline. On a 20-location platform, this role determines whether the strategy reaches the ground.
People & Workforce Director
Recruitment infrastructure. Retention architecture. Career pathways at volume. The hire that takes a platform from 200% annual turnover to 40%. It moves the margin line directly.
Commercial Director
B2B enterprise contract growth and residential subscription scaling are different disciplines with different talent pools. We match the leader to the revenue model - not the job title.

A sample of the senior leadership positions we place across this vertical. Not an exhaustive list - if the role you need is not shown, reach out.

Other Verticals
Let's
Talk.
You have a commercial cleaning platform. 200 percent annual workforce turnover is not a people problem. It is a systems problem. You need a systems operator.