How to Use ChatGPT for a Cleaning Business
How to Use ChatGPT for Your Cleaning Business
(Without Any Tech Skills)
You spend your days making other people’s spaces spotless. Then you go home and spend your evenings doing the admin that keeps the business running — writing quotes, chasing clients, posting on Facebook, and trying to find reliable staff. Here are five prompts that handle all of that in minutes. Free. No tech skills needed.
Running a cleaning business is physical, relentless work.
You manage schedules, deal with last-minute cancellations, keep clients happy, maintain supplies, and somehow stay on top of the constant stream of enquiries. The work itself is never done — and when it is done for the day, there is always something else waiting.
Writing a professional quote. Messaging a new client with everything they need to know. Posting something on social media. Writing a job ad that attracts someone you can actually trust in a client’s home. Sending that review request you keep forgetting.
None of that is why you started your business. And all of it can now be handled in minutes by a free AI tool called ChatGPT.
The catch — and there is one — is that most people who try ChatGPT type something vague, get something generic back, and give up. The fix is knowing how to brief it properly. That is exactly what the five prompts below do.
The Admin Nobody Talks About
When people start a cleaning business, they think about the work — the schedules, the products, the clients. What surprises most owners is how much of the job is actually writing.
Every new enquiry needs a quote. Every new client needs a welcome message. Every potential cleaner needs a job ad. Every happy client should be getting a review request. And the Facebook page that could be bringing in new bookings every week? It sits untouched because by the time you’ve done everything else, you have nothing left.
ChatGPT won’t clean a single room. But it will handle every piece of writing your business produces — in your voice, professionally, in minutes.
The 5 Prompts Cleaning Business Owners Use Most
Copy these exactly, fill in the brackets, and paste into ChatGPT at chat.openai.com. Free to use. No account required to try.
1. The Professional Quote
You are a professional cleaning business consultant who specialises in writing clear, persuasive quotes that win new clients. Write a quote for a potential client enquiring about cleaning services. My business name: [YOUR BUSINESS NAME]. Location: [TOWN/CITY]. Client name: [FIRST NAME or FULL NAME]. Property type: [e.g. 3-bed semi-detached house / 2-bed flat / office premises]. Type of clean requested: [e.g. regular weekly clean / one-off deep clean / end-of-tenancy clean / post-build clean]. Frequency (if regular): [e.g. weekly / fortnightly / monthly]. Estimated time required: [e.g. 2.5 hours per visit]. Price quoted: [£/$ AMOUNT per visit or total]. What is included in this service: [list 4–6 specific tasks — e.g. vacuuming all floors, cleaning bathrooms, wiping surfaces, mopping kitchen, cleaning hob and oven exterior, emptying bins]. Anything NOT included (if relevant): [e.g. laundry, interior oven deep clean, exterior windows]. Any specific details or reassurances to include: [e.g. fully insured, DBS-checked staff, eco-friendly products available, satisfaction guarantee]. Format: A short, professional quote message. Opening line, brief breakdown of what’s included, the price clearly stated, and a warm closing with a clear next step (how to confirm the booking). Under 200 words. Tone: Professional, warm, and trustworthy — like a business you’d feel comfortable letting into your home. Not salesy, not corporate.
2. The New Client Welcome & Onboarding Message
You are a client experience specialist for a professional cleaning company. Write a welcome and onboarding message to send to a new client before their first clean. My business: [YOUR BUSINESS NAME]. Location: [TOWN/CITY]. Client name: [FIRST NAME]. First clean date and time: [DATE and TIME]. Who will be cleaning: [e.g. I will be cleaning personally / a team of 2 from my company]. Access arrangements: [e.g. client will be home / key will be left under mat / client leaving a spare key with us]. What to expect during the clean: [briefly describe your process — e.g. we always start top-to-bottom, room by room, and lock up securely if given a key]. Any important policies to mention: [e.g. please put away any valuables / we ask that pets are kept out of rooms being cleaned / cancellation policy: 48 hours notice required]. How to contact you: [phone / WhatsApp / email]. Format: Friendly welcome message — either an email (with subject line) or a WhatsApp message (under 150 words). Write both so I can choose. Tone: Warm, reassuring, and professional — like a message that makes a new client feel they’ve made the right choice. Not robotic, not over-formal.
3. The Cleaner Job Ad
You are a recruitment copywriter who specialises in the cleaning and home services industry. Write a job advertisement for a cleaning role at my business. My business: [YOUR BUSINESS NAME]. Location: [TOWN/CITY — and whether transport is needed]. Role title: [e.g. Part-Time Domestic Cleaner / Cleaning Operative / Senior Cleaner / Team Leader]. Hours available: [e.g. Monday to Friday, 9am–2pm / flexible hours to suit / X hours per week]. Pay: [£/$ per hour or annual salary]. What the role involves: [list 3–4 duties — e.g. domestic cleaning of private homes, following a checklist, using our supplied products, locking up properties when clients are absent]. Three traits you’re looking for in the right person: [e.g. reliable and punctual / takes genuine pride in their work / trustworthy enough to be in clients’ homes / experience preferred but not essential]. What makes working for you good: [e.g. regular hours and steady pay / always pay on time / supportive small team / no weekend work / mileage paid]. How to apply: [e.g. WhatsApp me on [NUMBER] / email with your name and a bit about yourself]. Format: Job ad — suitable for Facebook, Indeed, or a local notice board. Under 280 words. Clear, human, and direct. Tone: Straight-talking and genuine — like a message from a real business owner who knows what they want and treats their staff well. Not corporate. Not desperate.
4. The Google Review Request
You are a customer experience specialist for a cleaning business. Write a short, warm message asking a happy regular client to leave a Google review. My business: [YOUR BUSINESS NAME]. Location: [TOWN/CITY]. Client name: [FIRST NAME]. How long they’ve been a client: [e.g. 6 months / over 2 years / since January]. One thing that’s gone particularly well: [e.g. they always comment on how fresh the bathroom smells / we helped them out last minute when their regular cleaner was sick / we haven’t missed a single appointment in 18 months]. My Google review link: [PASTE LINK HERE]. Format: Write two versions — (1) a WhatsApp or text message under 75 words, and (2) a short email with subject line under 90 words body. I will choose which to send. Tone: Genuine and personal — like a message from someone who values the relationship and is asking as a trusted person, not running a campaign. Include the phrase “it only takes 60 seconds.” It should never sound like a template.
5. The Social Media Post Pack
You are a social media manager for an independent cleaning business. Write a pack of social media posts I can use this week. My business: [YOUR BUSINESS NAME]. Location: [TOWN/CITY]. My clients are: [describe who typically uses your services — e.g. busy families in 3–4 bed homes / professional landlords with multiple properties / office managers in small commercial premises]. Services I offer: [e.g. regular domestic cleaning / end-of-tenancy cleans / office cleaning / one-off deep cleans]. Anything worth mentioning this week: [optional — e.g. a before-and-after clean I’m proud of / a new service I’m offering / availability for new clients / a seasonal tip]. My availability for new clients right now: [e.g. taking new bookings from next month / fully booked but taking a waiting list / spaces available immediately]. Format: 4 separate posts for Facebook and Instagram. Mix: (1) a trust-building post about why clients choose you / what makes you different, (2) a practical tip for keeping a home clean between professional visits, (3) a human or behind-the-scenes post, (4) a gentle promotional post mentioning availability. Each under 120 words. Include a CTA in each. Tone: Real, warm, and professional — like a message from a local business owner who takes genuine pride in their work. Not corporate. Never use the phrase “we pride ourselves.”
The Secret That Makes Every Prompt Work
Every prompt above follows the same five-part structure. It’s called the CRAFT Method — and it’s the reason these prompts produce something specific and professional rather than something generic you’d be embarrassed to send.
Miss any one of the five and you get something vague. Use all five and you get something that sounds like you wrote it yourself. Read the full CRAFT Method guide here ›
Your Next Step
You have an enquiry sitting in your inbox that needs a proper quote. Or a new client starting next week who deserves a professional welcome message. Or a Facebook page that hasn’t been posted on in three weeks.
Pick the prompt that matches what’s on your list right now. Open ChatGPT at chat.openai.com. Fill in the brackets with your details. Paste. Read what comes back.
Every cleaning business owner I’ve shown this to has the same reaction. It’s not amazement at the technology. It’s something simpler and more useful than that.
“I’ve been doing that the hard way for years. Why did nobody tell me about this sooner?”
If you want the complete system — the full CRAFT Method, 20 done-for-you AI specialist personas, and prompt templates for every piece of writing your business needs — it’s all inside the AI Frustrated to Fluent ebook. One read. Works the same day.