Father’s Day in the U.S. has been a national holiday since 1972. For many family businesses, it is less about the date. It is more about a quiet truth. Someone started this, often a parent. They often had no guarantee it would work. At Blue Chip Building Maintenance, that someone was our founder, who started the company in 1991 with a small crew and a simple promise. This Father’s Day, it felt right to tell that story.
Mark Twain wrote one of the most-quoted lines ever put on a page about fathers:
“When I was a boy of fourteen, my father was so ignorant I could hardly stand to have the old man around. But when I got to be twenty-one, I was astonished at how much he had learned in seven years.” – Mark Twain

When our founder started Blue Chip in 1991, the plan wasn’t complicated: show up, do the work right, and stand behind it. More than three decades later, the company is still family-owned and operated. A second generation now helps run it. They still hold the same standard set on day one.
Family ownership isn’t a tagline for us. It’s why a client who signed in the 1990s is often still a client today. It’s also why the people who run your account answer the phone themselves.
Here’s the part that matters to a facility manager, not just to us. A lot of cleaning companies will tell you they’re family-owned. The real question is whether it changes anything about the service. For us, it does – because it’s why we made a deliberate choice most of the industry didn’t: we don’t subcontract.
Howard Schultz built Starbucks into a global brand by treating people as the product. He said it plainly:
“We built the Starbucks brand first with our people, not with consumers.” – Howard Schultz, founder of Starbucks
Every person in your building is a Blue Chip W-2 employee – hired, trained, vetted, and supervised by us. That’s harder, and it costs more, than brokering the work out to whoever’s cheapest this month. But when your name is on the company, you don’t hand strangers the keys to your clients’ buildings. That decision shows our approach to the work. It guides everything from nightly commercial janitorial service to specialized floor care.

A few lessons hold up – the kind a founder passes to the next generation:
Your people are the business. You can’t fake consistency. The crews that stay, that know a building’s quirks, that take pride in a stripped-and-waxed floor – they’re the entire product. Treating them like employees instead of disposable labor isn’t charity; it’s how you keep the standard.
Showing up is most of the job. The unglamorous truth of facility services is that reliability beats brilliance. Being there – every night, on time – is what earns a 20-year client. Booker T. Washington built Tuskegee from almost nothing. He made it one of the nation’s most respected schools. He said it in a line that fits this work better than anything written since:
“Excellence is to do a common thing in an uncommon way.” – Booker T. Washington
Showing up is most of the job. The unglamorous truth of facility services is that reliability beats brilliance. Being there – every night, on time – is what earns a 20-year client.
The story is worth telling. For most of our history we let the work speak for itself. But a family business that has served clients well for three decades has something worth saying. So this year, we’re saying it out loud. We are not alone. Many other family-run and independent facility operators we respect are telling their stories too.
If you’re a father reading this, or you have one to thank, we hope you get a real day off. Ideally, it’s in a building that someone else keeps clean. And if you’re a facility manager, you may be tired of vendors who keep changing crews. They may also disappear when problems come up. We’d be happy to show you how a family-owned team works in real life.
Request a free estimate from Blue Chip – we’ll walk your facility. We’ll document a scope. We’ll also introduce you to the people who will do the work.
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