What Happens When We Get It Wrong
Accountability, transparency, and why client feedback matters
We’re not perfect.
We don’t claim to be.
And when we fall short, we believe it matters what happens next.
Recently, a client let us know that a clean hadn’t met the standard they expected. The feedback was fair, specific, and important – and it showed us clearly that we’d missed the mark.
We’re not sharing the details here because the point isn’t the mistake itself. What matters is how feedback is handled, and how it shapes what we do going forward.
This is what that process looks like at The Clean Life.

From time to time, a clean doesn’t meet our client’s standards. When that happens, we want clients to know that their feedback is taken seriously – and acted on.

We see feedback as a tool for improvement, not criticism to be brushed aside. It helps us understand where something hasn’t landed as it should, even when intentions were good.

When feedback comes in, our approach is consistent:
✓ We listen without defensiveness
✓ We acknowledge where we’ve fallen short
✓ We act quickly to make things right
✓ We use the feedback to strengthen our people, systems, and standards
In this case, the work was rectified and the client was contacted directly to confirm next steps. Internally, we reviewed what went wrong, supported the team involved with additional guidance and training, and reinforced our quality checks moving forward.
Feedback like this plays a huge role in how our cleaners and team leaders learn, improve, and grow over time.

This is the part most people never see – but it’s where the real work happens.
When feedback comes in, we follow a clear process:
1. Immediate Action
- The issue is addressed promptly and practically
- The client is contacted to confirm the plan forward
2. Internal Review
- We meet with the team involved
- We look closely at where the breakdown occurred – whether that’s technique, time management, or quality checks
3. Training and Support
- Targeted retraining is provided where needed
- Quality standards and end-of-job checks are reinforced
- Expectations around leftover time are clarified (finishing early means reviewing work, not leaving)
4. System Review
Feedback doesn’t just stay at an individual level. We also use it to review our broader systems, including:
- How quality checks are carried out
- How expectations are communicated
- How we balance rotating teams with client preferences for consistency
This is how one piece of feedback helps improve the experience for many clients – not just one.
Recent Example: Our Team Leaders Meeting
We gathered our team leaders for exactly this kind of work – not to talk about numbers, but to talk about growth and accountability.

We covered OARBED (above the line vs below the line thinking), extreme ownership, and breaking drama cycles. The question we kept coming back to: What can we do next time? What’s the solution?
This is what continuous improvement looks like in practice. Not just reacting to feedback, but building a culture where our team is equipped to think critically, take ownership, and grow from every experience.
This meeting wasn’t prompted by one specific issue – it’s part of how we operate. But it’s exactly the kind of foundation that helps us respond well when feedback does come in.

A few important reminders came out of this experience:
1. Finishing early isn’t always a good thing
If there’s time left, it should be used to double-check the work. We’ve reinforced this across the team.
2. Rotating teams has trade-offs
Rotation helps maintain consistency and avoid complacency, but we also recognise that client preferences matter. We’re continuing to work on balancing both.
3. Feedback is a gift
This client shared that they’d “sucked it up” before raising the issue. That’s something we never want. If something isn’t right, we want to know straight away – not after it’s happened multiple times.

Because transparency matters.
When you invite someone into your home, you deserve to know:
- What standards they actually hold
- How they respond when those standards aren’t met
- Whether they’re committed to improving, not just looking good
We don’t believe in hiding mistakes. We believe in owning them, learning from them, and doing better next time.



We’re not perfect. We will make mistakes.
But here’s what we promise:
✅ We’ll own it – no excuses, no defensiveness
✅ We’ll fix it – quickly and without you having to chase us
✅ We’ll learn from it – every piece of feedback helps us improve
✅ We’ll be transparent – you’ll know what we’re doing about it


Please don’t “suck it up.”
If something doesn’t feel right:
- Call us: (03) 8765 2312
- Email: admin@thecleanlife.com.au
- Message us on social media
- Tell us on the day if you’re home
We genuinely want to know – and we genuinely want to make it right. That’s how we get better.

To the client who shared their feedback: thank you for your honesty and your willingness to let us learn from it.
And to everyone who trusts us with their homes: thank you. We don’t take that lightly.
We’ll keep showing up, keep learning, and keep working to earn that trust every single day.
💚 The Clean Life Team
P.S. If you’ve had an issue with us in the past and didn’t say anything – it’s not too late. We’d still love to hear from you.
Recent Posts
- You Don’t Need to Declutter Everything – Just Enough to Breathe
- What Happens When We Get It Wrong
- Behind the Scenes of The Clean Life: Team Culture, Accountability & Care
- Survival Cleaning Strategies: How to Keep Your Home Functional When You’re Running on Empty
- You Can’t Pour From an Empty Cup: Why Asking for Cleaning Help Isn’t Failing
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