This interview is with Marcos De Andrade, Founder & Owner, Green Planet Cleaning Services.
What path led you to launch Green Planet Cleaning Services and shape a career at the intersection of health, sustainability, and premium cleaning results?
I came to the U.S. from Brazil, and like many immigrants, I started with what was available—cleaning houses. However, I quickly noticed something that bothered me. The products we were using gave me headaches, made my eyes water, and left chemical residue everywhere. I thought, if this is what it does to me after a few hours, what’s it doing to the families living in these homes 24/7? That question stuck with me.
I started researching plant-based alternatives and commercial-grade equipment, and I realized there was a huge gap in the market. Nobody was combining truly eco-safe products with premium, detail-oriented service. Most “green” cleaners at the time were using watered-down natural products that didn’t clean well, or they were conventional cleaners just slapping a green label on the same chemicals.
I wanted to prove you could do both—deliver a spotless, luxury-level result without compromising anyone’s health. That’s what drove me to launch Green Planet in the SF Bay Area back in 2010, and honestly, that same frustration still drives everything we do today.
When selecting plant‑based, biodegradable products and tools, how do you vet and field‑test them to balance verified sustainability with the luxury‑level finish your clients expect?
Every product has to pass what I call the “three-room test” before it makes our approved list. First, I personally use it in three different types of spaces: a kitchen with heavy grease, a bathroom with hard water buildup, and hardwood floors. If it can’t perform across all three, it’s out regardless of how great the sustainability claims are.
Second, I check the actual ingredient list, not just the marketing label. A lot of brands throw around words like “natural” and “eco-friendly” that mean nothing legally. I look for specific certifications and I read the safety data sheets.
Third, and this is the most important one, I ask my cleaning teams. They’re the ones using these products eight hours a day. If a product gives them any respiratory irritation or skin sensitivity, it doesn’t matter how well it cleans. That process is how we landed on our current lineup:
- Bona for wood and tile because it leaves zero residue and is safe for long-term surface integrity.
- Method and Mrs. Meyer’s for general surfaces because they’re low toxicity and respiratory safe.
- Seventh Generation for glass and kitchen sanitization because it’s ammonia-free and plant-based.
- Miele vacuums with true HEPA filtration, which was a significant investment but is non-negotiable for air quality.
The truth is, the best sustainable products actually perform better long-term because they don’t degrade surfaces with harsh chemicals.
In your operation, what does a Greentified™ home cleaning look like from arrival to final walkthrough?
It starts before we even arrive. Our team reviews the client’s profile and any specific notes—pet areas, sensitive surfaces, preferences from previous visits.
When our team gets to the door, they are in uniform with all supplies organized in our branded kits. We never use anything from the client’s home. The clean follows a top-down, room-by-room system. We always start high—ceiling fans, light fixtures, tops of cabinets—and work down to baseboards and floors.
Our ColoredClean microfiber system is color-coded:
- Blue for bathrooms
- Green for kitchens
- Yellow for general surfaces
- Red for floors
This prevents cross-contamination, which is something most cleaning companies never even think about. Bathrooms get the most intensive treatment—every surface sanitized with Seventh Generation’s plant-based formula, grout lines addressed, fixtures polished. Kitchens are similar: appliance exteriors, countertops, sink descaling.
For floors, it depends on the material—Bona for hardwood, appropriate treatment for tile. Throughout the entire clean, the Miele HEPA vacuum is filtering the air, capturing 99.97% of particles.
The final step is a walkthrough where the team lead checks every room against our internal checklist. If anything doesn’t meet the Greentified Standard, it gets redone before we leave. If the client finds anything after we’ve gone, our 24-hour guarantee means we come back at no charge.
From your hands‑on experience, what has proven essential in achieving true HEPA‑grade air filtration and dust control in client homes?
The biggest lesson I’ve learned is that most people drastically underestimate how much dust a standard vacuum recirculates back into the air. A conventional vacuum without true HEPA filtration is essentially picking up dust from the floor and blowing the finest, most harmful particles right back into the room.
That’s why we invested in Miele commercial-grade vacuums with sealed HEPA filtration systems. The key word there is “sealed” — a lot of vacuums claim HEPA filters, but if the body of the vacuum isn’t sealed, air leaks around the filter and you lose most of the benefit. Our Miele units capture 99.97% of particles down to 0.3 microns, which includes dust mite allergens, pet dander, pollen, and mold spores.
Beyond the vacuum, technique matters enormously. We always vacuum last, after all dusting and surface work is complete, so we’re capturing everything that’s been disturbed during the clean. We use damp microfiber cloths for dusting rather than dry ones or feather dusters, which just scatter particles into the air. We also pay special attention to areas most cleaners skip — the tops of door frames, ceiling fan blades, HVAC vents, and under furniture.
For clients with allergies or asthma, which is common in the Bay Area, proper HEPA filtration isn’t a luxury. It’s the difference between a clean that looks good and a clean that actually improves the air they breathe every day.
For households with kids, pets, or chemical sensitivities, what specific service adjustments or product choices have consistently protected indoor air quality without sacrificing results?
This is where our approach really differentiates us because we don’t actually make major adjustments for these households — our standard service is already built for them.
Every product in our lineup is selected with the assumption that the most sensitive person in the home will be affected. That said, we do customize in a few specific ways:
- For homes with young children, we pay extra attention to floor-level surfaces — baseboards, carpet edges, and any surface below three feet where toddlers spend their time. We also extend our damp-wipe approach to include items like toy storage areas and play mats.
- For pet households, we add an extra HEPA vacuum pass on upholstered furniture and any pet bedding areas. Pet dander is incredibly fine and settles into fabrics in ways that regular cleaning misses. We also use enzyme-based spot treatments for any pet accident areas because they break down organic compounds rather than just masking odors with fragrance.
- For clients with diagnosed chemical sensitivities — and we have several — we go even further. We perform a fragrance-free clean using only unscented versions of our products, and we ventilate the home during and after cleaning to ensure there’s no residual scent.
The point is that our baseline already exceeds what most companies consider their “premium” tier for sensitive homes. When your standard is plant-based, ammonia-free, and HEPA-filtered, you don’t need to upcharge families for wanting a safe environment.
Operationally, how have online booking, scheduling, and route clustering changed your client experience while reducing your environmental footprint day to day?
Route clustering was one of the most impactful changes we made operationally. In the early years, our schedule was scattered—we’d drive from one side of San Francisco to another between appointments, burning gas and losing productive time. Now, we cluster clients by neighborhood and day of the week. Monday might be the Sunset and Richmond districts, while Tuesday is Nob Hill and Pacific Heights. This has reduced our total driving by roughly 30%, which is significant when you’re running two cleaning teams across the Bay Area five days a week.
For our clients, the biggest change has been online booking and real-time communication. They can book or reschedule without phone tag, receive arrival notifications, and leave specific instructions that our team sees before they walk in the door. It sounds basic, but in this industry, most companies still operate on phone calls and paper schedules.
The environmental impact of these operational changes compounds over time. Less driving means fewer emissions. Digital scheduling means no paper waste. Concentrated product refills mean less plastic packaging. None of these are flashy, but sustainability isn’t about one big gesture; it’s about designing your entire operation so that the default choice is the responsible one. When you build efficiency into your systems, the environmental benefit happens automatically instead of requiring extra effort every day.
As a founder leading W‑2 teams, what training framework and KPIs do you rely on to deliver consistent, sustainable cleans at scale?
Choosing the W-2 model over 1099 contractors was the single most important decision I made for quality control. When your team members are employees, you can actually train them, hold them accountable, and invest in their growth. With contractors, you’re basically hoping they show up and do it right.
Our training framework has three phases. First, new hires shadow an experienced team lead for a minimum of two weeks. They learn our products, our techniques, our ColoredClean microfiber system, and the specific order in which we approach each room. Second, they perform supervised cleans where the team lead is present, but the new person is doing the work. Third, they receive independent assignments with spot-check quality inspections.
For KPIs, we track a few things closely. Client retention rate is the big one — if clients keep rebooking, we’re doing something right. We also monitor our callback rate, which indicates how often someone requests a re-clean under our 24-hour guarantee. Right now, that’s under 2%, which I’m proud of. We track online reviews and ratings as a lagging indicator — we’re at 5.0 on Google and 4.5 on Yelp. Internally, we track product usage per clean to ensure teams are following protocol and not cutting corners or overusing products.
The W-2 model costs more upfront, absolutely. We pay $21 per hour for cleaning time and $16.50 for travel, plus benefits and payroll taxes. However, the consistency it creates is what allows us to charge premium rates and keep clients for years instead of months.
For a cleaning founder or facility manager who wants to transition to truly eco‑friendly operations in the next 90 days, what first steps would you recommend based on what worked for you?
I’d break it into three 30-day phases. Days 1 through 30, focus on products only. Audit everything you currently use and replace the worst offenders first — typically, that’s glass cleaners with ammonia and heavy-duty degreasers with harsh solvents. Swap them for plant-based alternatives and test them in real cleaning conditions, not just in a lab. You’ll find that 80% of what you use can be replaced immediately with no drop in quality. The remaining 20% may need some experimentation to find the right eco alternative.
Days 31 through 60, upgrade your equipment. The single highest-impact purchase is a true HEPA vacuum. Not a vacuum that claims HEPA-like filtration — an actual sealed HEPA system. Yes, it costs more upfront. But it immediately elevates your service and gives you a concrete differentiator when marketing to health-conscious clients. This is also when you should implement a microfiber system with color coding to prevent cross-contamination.
Days 61 through 90, train your team and tell your clients. The products and equipment mean nothing if your people don’t know why they matter. Train your team on proper dilution ratios, application techniques, and the health benefits of what they’re using. Then update your marketing — your website, your booking page, your social media — to reflect the change. The biggest mistake I see people make is trying to switch everything overnight or waiting for the “perfect” eco product. Start with what’s available today, replace as you find better options, and be transparent with clients about the transition. Most people are incredibly supportive when you tell them you’re making the shift to protect their health and the environment.