Restaurants in Dickinson run hard. Between the lunch rush and dinner service, floors collect fryer grease, spilled drinks, and whatever snow and salt customers track in from the parking lot. Dirty floors make a bad impression. Slick floors put staff at risk. Either way, floor care eats up time and money.
Archive for year: 2025
North Dakota warehouses deal with the same floor hazards every shift: melted snow puddles, dusty concrete, oil drips from forklifts. OSHA doesn’t care how busy you are. They care whether your floors are clean, dry, and safe enough that workers won’t slip.
Hygiene isn’t negotiable in healthcare. What you use to clean your floors matters just as much as how often you clean them. A dirty mop can spread more germs than it removes, and most facility managers don’t realize their cleaning tools are part of the problem.
If you run a small office in Bismarck or Dickinson, you’ve probably stood at your entrance on a sloppy March afternoon and wondered if those rugs were really doing their job. Muddy boots, salt stains, and tracked-in dirt have a way of making that decision feel urgent.
Your entrance mats do more than you think. They catch dirt, stop slips, and honestly, they’re part of your first impression. So here’s the question every ND business owner hits eventually: buy mats or rent them? Read more
If you run a business in North Dakota, you know winter isn’t just cold, it’s relentless. Between the snowstorms, freezing rain, and salt-covered sidewalks, every person who walks through your door brings half the parking lot with them. Read more
Most facility managers think a rug looks fine if it passes the “quick glance test.” But here’s what we’ve learned after years in the cleaning business: rugs are master disguisers. They’ll hide dirt, bacteria, and moisture for weeks before you notice the damage.
Keeping your floors clean takes more than a good mop. In a high-traffic facility, it takes the right mop, the right schedule, and the right backup. Let’s be honest, dust and moisture collect quickly. And, if your mops aren’t in top shape, the mess gets pushed around rather than picked up.
Walk into any business in Bismarck during February, and the signs are abundantly clear. Soaked mats pile near the door, staff repeatedly mop up puddles, and customers step cautiously to avoid slipping. Most local business owners know this scene well, and it happens year after year. Read more
If you’ve ever managed a business, you know that keeping floors clean is harder than it looks. No matter how much you mop at closing time, by 10 AM the next day, your entrance looks like a small tornado hit it. Muddy footprints from the morning rain or salt residue from winter boots, that mysterious grit that somehow appears even on the driest days.











