Advertisement

Enhancing Restroom Maintenance with Smart Technology

How connectivity can improve cleaning efforts

Enhancing Restroom Maintenance with Smart Technology

While restrooms aren’t always top-of-mind for the average person, typically they are the most-used facility in any building. Everyone from the CEO of a company to a visiting guest will use a building’s restroom at some point, and the experience that people have in this space influences their overall impression of the building and the business itself. By creating a premium, clean, and well-managed restroom environment, building managers can help improve users’ experiences and make a lasting impression.

The condition of restrooms should be a top priority for facility managers and cleaning service providers. Of all building spaces, the quality of these facilities typically generate the most complaints—particularly if they are unclean or inadequately stocked—and can even lead to departures from tenants who expect a comfortable restroom experience. Restrooms reflect on the entire business, and every impression counts.

Facility maintenance staff typically completes tasks such as restocking bath tissue, replenishing soap dispensers, and managing supply orders through manual checks—stall by stall and floor by floor. However, the growing trend of leveraging the connectivity of technology, which includes the use of sensors embedded in objects to collect and exchange data around the clock, enables facility managers to reduce common restroom problems and improve the way they handle restroom maintenance.

High-quality service is intricately linked to resolving issues immediately after—if not before—they arise. That’s why smart restroom solutions, which employ web-enabled sensors embedded in hand-towel, bath-tissue, and soap dispensers to wirelessly transmit refill needs to a web application, can be invaluable. By capturing this data and displaying it on an online dashboard, intelligent restroom systems can help facility managers handle everyday responsibilities, reduce the amount of laborious tasks, and better allocate their staff’s efforts on critical cleaning tasks.

How can building managers utilize this technology to enhance their cleaning staff’s effectiveness without creating extra work for themselves or their teams? Here are six advantages to incorporating smart technology into a facility’s business model:

  • Eliminating issues before they arise: Intelligent restroom systems can help facility managers become better informed of restroom traffic and alert them exactly when and where issues arise. Because facility staff maintains responsibility for a wide array of tasks, many of which take priority over resolving customer complaints regarding product refill needs, it is imperative to eliminate the latter before they arise. After all, building managers take great care in creating premium restroom experiences and don’t want complaints over an empty toilet paper dispenser to taint that impression.
  • Better staff utilization: Smart dispensers that generate actionable data can help managers in their staffing decisions. Insights that managers derive from this information can shift cleaning staff from a schedule-based cleaning approach to a need-based method. Even when unexpected cleaning needs arise, managers can quickly deploy tasks to the cleaning staff. Once cleaning staff receives and addresses the tasks, they can mark the tasks “complete” so managers are aware. With this information in hand, facility managers can better manage staff and anticipate needs.
  • Efficient supply ordering: Data that building managers capture from smart restrooms helps them gain a better idea of product consumption patterns that ultimately dictate the bulk and rate at which they must place new orders. Because facilities often have limited storage space, awareness of the product usage rates helps staff avoid ordering more product than their storage areas can accommodate.
  • Opportunity to impress: Fully stocked and consistently clean restrooms can make a great impression on building tenants and guests. When tenants and visitors have seamless experiences in a building, it can generate positive word of mouth for that venue, improving overall reputation as well as increasing tenant referrals. When tenants experience consistently high standards in the restroom, it creates a comfortable environment that can ensure guests feel valued. Not only can technology improve the efficiency of maintaining building washrooms, it can also wow first-time visitors and longtime tenants alike.
  • Discovering traffic patterns: Technology in intelligent restrooms can help staff uncover trends within the facility, such as identifying individual restrooms with the most traffic. By correlating these patterns to specific offices, regularly scheduled events, and popular break times, building managers can anticipate and dictate which areas of the building need the most attention to meet occupants’ needs.
  • Letting technology do the heavy lifting: Facility maintenance staff often manages the upkeep of entire buildings, so having access to accurate data on restroom stock and supply needs on hand can greatly ease the demands on their time. Emerging technology can serve as the backbone to improving building performance, benefitting washroom users and building management alike. By understanding this and identifying areas where smart technology can improve processes and reputation, building managers and maintenance staff can work smarter, not harder.

There are numerous ways in which connectivity technology can benefit facility managers and staff.

By understanding the advantages of smart technology and identifying areas where real-time data can improve processes, building managers can ensure every guest has a clean, fully stocked and comfortable restroom experience—every time.

 

           
Posted On November 21, 2016

Jimy Baynum

Director of Market Development at SCA AfH

Jimy Baynum is the director of market development at SCA AfH professional hygiene business.

Topics Tags
 

Also in Technology and Trends

Leveraging Email Marketing to Propel Commercial Cleaning Business Sales
December 18, 2024 Erik Bunaes

Leveraging Email Marketing to Propel Commercial Cleaning Business Sales

December 2, 2024 Raymond Fyler

Embrace the Rise of Autonomous Cleaning

November 1, 2024 Erik Bunaes

Drive B2B Sales by Leading People to Your Door

October 21, 2024 Nickie Dwyer

Real-Life Training With Virtual Reality

Sponsored in Technology and Trends

White Cup's Kristen Thom
October 7, 2024 Sponsored by White Cup

The White Cup Solution for Distribution: Software Tools to Transform Sales and Drive Revenue

October 7, 2024 Sponsored by Spartan

Transforming Clean: An Inside Look at the Healthy Green Schools & Colleges Program

October 1, 2024 Sponsored by Advantive

Operation Headache: How to Overcome Supply Chain Inefficiencies

September 13, 2024 Sponsored by Nilfisk

How Nilfisk Helped Jani-King Unlock New Revenue Streams

Recent News

Reducing the Number of Hand Hygiene Observations Won’t Affect the Spread of Infections

Reducing the Number of Hand Hygiene Observations Won’t Affect the Spread of Infections

EPA Studying Technology-based PFAS Limits

Minimum Wage to Rise in 23 States in 2025

Louisiana Reports First Bird-flu Infected Human to Need Hospitalization in the U.S.

Enhancing Restroom Maintenance with Smart Technology
Share Article
Subscribe to CMM