How to find a mentor for your foreclosure cleanup business

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How to Find a Mentor For Your Foreclosure Cleanup Business

The foreclosure cleanup industry has been around for a long time, but it has been cloaked under more formal labels of larger companies. Familiar titles for this burgeoning, seemingly new, industry are "risk management," "property preservation," "mortgage field services," etc.


While these larger, more formalized companies (such as property preservation companies) tend to handle everything from assisting banks and mortgage companies with the formal foreclosure process, to conveying properties back to HUD after a loan has gone into default, a foreclosure maintenance and cleaning business handles the frontline of property maintenance and cleanup. A foreclosure maintenance and cleanup business handles everything from debris removal, to yard maintenance, to lock changing and window boarding, to gutter cleaning and pressure washing, cleaning, carpet removal and installation, to minor repairs and painting.


Networking with Like Industries for Growth

Though the phenomena of this business has really been around for a long time as divisions of larger companies, this new term, "foreclosure cleanup," may leave new business owners feeling like there is no outlet for formal networking with businesses like theirs. And history has proven new businesses need hub-type environments in which they can network comfortably and learn from each other; networking environments with like colleagues, where they won't always feel they have to be "on" and poised to pitch their services to clients in the audience.


Where to Swamp Industry Ideas

Formal gatherings like chamber of commerce meetings are ideal for pitching services. But for new foreclosure cleanup businesses, ideal places to swap industry ideas about growth and challenges lie in industry gatherings that house small businesses similar to theirs. For example, joining a carpet association, or a hauling or landscaping association, can provide a perfect outlet to learn from professionals who are targeting the same client base cleanup businesses are targeting.


Cleaning Associations

Formal organizations like cleaning associations are another such outlet for education and learned networking for cleanup business owners. New business owners should visit organizations like the ISSA Worldwide Cleaning Industry Association or the International Janitorial Cleaning Services Association to check into membership options. Business owners can join these organizations as associate- or affiliate-type members to take advantage of the meetings, networking, mentoring and business training events.


Best Business Allies

--Cleaning and Janitorial Associations

--Painting Contractor Associations

--Builder Associations

--Plumbing Associations --Lawn Care Organizations

--Winterization Associations --Pressure Washing & Gutter Cleaning Organizations

--Handyman Associations

--Carpenter Associations


Sources:

http://www.foreclosurecash.net/

http://ezinearticles.com/?How-to-Find-a-Mentor-ForYour-Foreclosure-Cleanup-Business&id=3706691


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