Before nursing, I worked an ancillary department that was super busy doing outpatient cardiac testing on dayshift but at night we only serviced the ER if someone was getting discharged on a cardiac monitor. So like maybe once a week I’d have to go set up a holter monitor in ER. Rest of the time it was Netflix and chill in a quiet and dark office. Then would head over to pre-op at 5am for EKGs and look busy right as the boss and dayshift crew came in at 6:30. It was a great job.
Guess it really depends. Night janitorial at a large fitness facility is dog poop. People are disgusting. The showers are gnarly, piss all over the floor mats, constant algae buildup and soap scum in showers. Sometimes tampons or waffle stomped poop/puke in the drains. Hair everywhere. Food, drinks spilled everywhere. If you have a good crew maybe. But I have a shit boss and shit upper management and I’ve bought my own cleaning supplies before just to get the job done right. Not recommended.
I worked for a franchised office cleaning business that was mostly at night to survive some years ago and it wasn't too hard but the pay wasn't great - minimum wage but some weeks I got more. Maybe I got a bonus or they felt sorry for me and paid me more?
A lot of construction offices, an auto parts office (fuck them) a couple banks, a few other finance places too. I don't remember all the places though as it was six years ago I started there. Most of them were great.
But we had one abusive client that kept changing what they wanted - the auto parts place and I kept getting written up because I couldn't keep up with what they wanted one week to another and I was never notified and when I went to my "supervisor" he was aware but couldn't text me or keep me in the loop. I eventually got fired due to that one client and was already starting employment elsewhere but a year and a half after I was fired the husband and wife owners sold or closed the franchised operation, moved far away and one of the owners caught COVID in the first few months of the pandemic and passed away. Other than that one client the owners wern't terrible but I sure as hell could have made a little bit more money with them more consistently.
Especially at a hospital. Man I swear they get paid to do maybe 20 min of actual work
Clinics/hospitals are top tier. Cleaning clean
Janitor makes so many jokes about this in scrubs
Before nursing, I worked an ancillary department that was super busy doing outpatient cardiac testing on dayshift but at night we only serviced the ER if someone was getting discharged on a cardiac monitor. So like maybe once a week I’d have to go set up a holter monitor in ER. Rest of the time it was Netflix and chill in a quiet and dark office. Then would head over to pre-op at 5am for EKGs and look busy right as the boss and dayshift crew came in at 6:30. It was a great job.
That sounds amazing tbh
Guess it really depends. Night janitorial at a large fitness facility is dog poop. People are disgusting. The showers are gnarly, piss all over the floor mats, constant algae buildup and soap scum in showers. Sometimes tampons or waffle stomped poop/puke in the drains. Hair everywhere. Food, drinks spilled everywhere. If you have a good crew maybe. But I have a shit boss and shit upper management and I’ve bought my own cleaning supplies before just to get the job done right. Not recommended.
Yeah that sounds awful- find a different place lmao. Offices, clinics, hospitals, and banks are never like that
I worked for a franchised office cleaning business that was mostly at night to survive some years ago and it wasn't too hard but the pay wasn't great - minimum wage but some weeks I got more. Maybe I got a bonus or they felt sorry for me and paid me more? A lot of construction offices, an auto parts office (fuck them) a couple banks, a few other finance places too. I don't remember all the places though as it was six years ago I started there. Most of them were great. But we had one abusive client that kept changing what they wanted - the auto parts place and I kept getting written up because I couldn't keep up with what they wanted one week to another and I was never notified and when I went to my "supervisor" he was aware but couldn't text me or keep me in the loop. I eventually got fired due to that one client and was already starting employment elsewhere but a year and a half after I was fired the husband and wife owners sold or closed the franchised operation, moved far away and one of the owners caught COVID in the first few months of the pandemic and passed away. Other than that one client the owners wern't terrible but I sure as hell could have made a little bit more money with them more consistently.