What Planning is Involved in Tackling a Complex Cleanout Project?

Creating a Plan Is the First Step to cost efficiency

Planning is essential for any complex project.  For Cleanups or Cleanouts it is essential to have a game plan from the beginning to ensure the project is tackled with maximized efficiency and minimized cost.  With a solid game plan you can dispose of your waste without wasting money! 

Step 1: Assess the Volume

The first impression when walking into a residential or commercial space which needs to be cleaned out can be overwhelming.  To assess the volume, you need to go Room-to-Room or into each space to determine volume. 

Volume drives every other consideration;

To assess the volume, you can;

Step 2: Identify Any Items That Require Separate or Special Disposal

There are certain items which have to be recycled by government mandate – often at an additional cost, hazmat items which have to be disposed of carefully and can not be placed in a dumpster, items which should be sold rather than disposed of, and items which have other special considerations.  While doing a Walk-Through of the residential or commercial space to be cleaned out, you should note these items.

Examples of Special Disposal Items Include (but are not limited to);

Surcharge/ Mandatory Recycling

Hazmat/ Prohibited Items

Items to Sell or Donate

Special Consideration

Step 3: Acknowledge the Time or Cost Restraints of the Cleanout Project

There is an amusing adage in the service industry; “You can do a project Fast, Inexpensive, or Done Right.  Pick two.” 

If you need a removal project done quickly, limit the amount of items to donate or sell. The cost will go up because you will have to pay for more items being disposed of in the landfill and less items will be reused. But pulling items out to donate or sell always bogs down the process.  Another way to accomplish the project more quickly could be to add more people to do the labor.

Conversely, if you want to lower the cost of the project and time is not a constraint, you can try to sell or donate more items and do as much of the labor yourself as possible.  Since dumpsters are priced by volume, if you reuse, donate, or sell items, you pay for less Cubic Yards of Waste disposal into a landfill. 

These are decisions you, as the project manager, have to consider before committing resources to the project.  Whether you determine speed or cost to be the benchmark for efficiency for the clean-out project will influence how you will plan on tackling it.

Step 4: Identify Resources Needed to Handle the Project

Related to Step 3, once you have determined your benchmark for efficiency and weather speed or cost is more important to your project, you need to allocate resources;

Time

Determine your deadline to get the project completed. Most people do not consciously realize time is a resource. Do you need it completed in a weekend? Before a closing date? Have a contractual limit to when the project is completed? Or have labor or help for a limited period of time?

Labor

It takes at least two people to carry a large piece of furniture. The more people you throw at a project, the quicker it will get completed. But, if you are paying for labor, the more people you throw at a project, the more expensive it will be. How many people do you need to help haul the debris into a dumpster to get the project completed within your budget and under your time constraints?

Special Consideration

Do you need a tow truck to remove a car? A clean-fill dumpster for concrete removal? A Hazmat hauler to remove an oil tank?  Maybe you don’t know what will require special consideration and you should talk to an Industry Leader in the waste removal industry with your list of items to know what extra steps are needed to complete your project.

Roll-off Dumpster

What size container or containers do you need? Flex Dumpster offers 12-yard, 15-yard, and 20-yard roll-off dumpsters for residential or commercial dumpster service. We will be happy to assist you if you’re not sure what size dumpster you need.

Step 5: Removal of the Trash, Junk, or Debris

You are up to the physical process of carrying the junk from the clean-up site into the dumpster and having your special consideration items hauled away from you.  Whether friends and family are doing the labor with you, or you have hired labor or employees carrying the debris away from your job site, you should be aware of safety precautions. Moving items could be physically demanding, you want to avoid injury and fatigue.

Steps to avoid injury or fatigue include;

Step 6: Clean the Job Site

After the bulky trash and items have been disposed of, the project is never complete until it has been broom swept. Take this opportunity to walk Room-to-Room and revisit every area of the project to make sure no items were inadvertently left behind.  Look for items to be disposed of, or tools and equipment you may have brought.  After doing clean-outs for decades, we can confidently say we often find a wayward piece of junk or removal tool that experienced haulers accidently leave behind after a long day of strenuous physical labor.  So doing a final walk-through or broom-sweep will tie up any loose ends.

Step 7: Analysis of Your Cleanout Project’s Success

Review your completed project.  You should know how well you succeeded in finishing your goals based on the benchmarks you established earlier;

Reflect on your success and consider what you could have done better, quicker, or less expensively to make the project more efficient.  What will you do differently for your next project?

How to Rent a Dumpster for a Cleanup or Cleanout Project

Steps to Rent a Dumpster for Lawn Debris

Renting a dumpster makes a clean-up or clean-out efficient and stress-free.