COMING SPRING 2026
Beyond Cleaning
The Professional Housekeeper's Guide
Do not let the title fool you. This has nothing to do with cleaning.
Nearly 175 pages. Almost 40 years of lessons.
Everything I wish someone had handed me on day one.
_______________
This book does not aim to make every household nor each individual the same. Each property
is different. Each principal is unique. What it provides is a core foundation and a shared
language, so that when a professional moves from one household to another, the transition
feels a little more familiar.
_______________
Written for:
Housekeepers, nannies, housemen, chefs, and every member of household staff
ready to elevate to the next level
Estate Managers and House Managers seeking a real training resource
Principals who want to understand what excellence looks like
_______________
Inside:
Foundation • Household Operations • Service Skills • Household Support
Care Responsibilities • Formal Dinner Service • Guest Relations • Security
Technical Skills • Professional Development • Leadership • Family Dynamics
_______________
This industry gave me everything. It is time to give something back.
What's Inside
I wrote this Guide because the same questions kept coming. Managers asking what the key items were to train, how to train them, and how to develop staff who had never worked in a home like this. Principals asking why their household didn't run the way they imagined it could. And over the last couple of years, countless housekeepers and former nannies asking what they needed to know to become a manager.
That last group is where this Guide really started. I would ask them what they had performed in their recent positions. The answer was almost always the same. I cleaned. Or I watched the children. But as we drilled down into what they actually did day to day, I discovered two things. First, they had no clue how much they actually performed. Second, and this is why this Guide exists, they had no way of explaining it. No common language. No framework. No way to position themselves for the next step.
So I created an eight page discussion guide to help them articulate their experience, use the right terms, and explain how they delivered service and systems. But as I was building that guide, I kept seeing another training outline underneath it. Boundaries. Service standards. Checklists. Leadership. Over a few weeks, the discussion guide became something bigger. It became this manual.
Nearly 175 pages. Almost 40 years of lessons.
This is not theory from a textbook. These are real situations, real mistakes, and real lessons from positions that went well and positions that didn't. I share what went wrong and why, so you don't have to learn the hard way like I did. You'll learn how to walk into a new environment, read the landscape, and build your own plan before you step on a landmine you didn't see coming.
And for principals willing to read with honest eyes, you may recognize your own household in some of these pages. What's working. What isn't. And how to better support the people trying to serve you.
What follows is a look at what's inside. Each section builds on the one before it, but you can also jump to whatever you need most right now. Whether you're a housekeeper ready to elevate, a nanny or houseman looking to expand your skills, a manager looking for a real resource to train your team, or a principal who wants to understand what excellence actually looks like in private service, this is what you can expect to find.
PART ONE: FOUNDATION
Forget everything you think you know about housekeeping. This section tears down the myth that your job is to clean and rebuilds it from the ground up. Your real mission? Relationships. The family, the staff, the vendors. Get those right and everything else falls into place. Get them wrong and no amount of polish on the silver will save you. You'll learn the mindset that separates career professionals from people who just happen to clean houses for a living. The Three Groups. The Spoke. Why "it's not my job" doesn't exist in this profession. This is where you decide if you're serious about building something that lasts.
PART TWO: CORE HOUSEKEEPING
Yes, we cover cleaning. But not the way you've seen it before. This isn't a product guide or a checklist of surfaces. This is the judgment that keeps you from destroying a $30,000 antique table with the wrong polish. The technique that protects Oriental rugs worth more than your annual salary. The room cleaning process that ensures you never miss a detail, never backtrack, and never waste motion. You'll learn why daily cleaning and deep cleaning are two entirely different disciplines, and how the power of checklists protects both the household and your reputation. Master this section and you'll handle any surface, any fabric, any priceless item with confidence.
PART THREE: HOUSEHOLD OPERATIONS
This is where housekeeping becomes household management. Communication that builds trust instead of creating noise. Documentation that proves your value and protects your position. Working with chefs, managers, and staff who all have their own pressures and priorities. You'll learn how to read household rhythms without being told, prepare for arrivals before anyone asks, and handle property transitions across multiple residences. The section on working with your manager alone could save your career. Or set you up for the promotion you've been waiting for. Everything here is designed to make you indispensable.
PART FOUR: FORMAL DINNER SERVICE
This is my favorite section, and it shows. Formal entertaining is where everything comes together. The preparation, the precision, the teamwork. I call it our Broadway. When guests arrive, the curtain goes up, and whatever chaos exists behind that kitchen door stays behind that door. You'll learn service flow, table settings, wine service, and how to read the table through utensil positions most people don't even know exist. The sample Run of Show included here was created for an actual training dinner with real stakes. Study it. Practice it. Because the housekeeper who can serve is the one who never gets stuck, never tells a principal something can't be done, and never watches an evening fall apart.
PART FIVE: SERVICE SKILLS
Guest services. Caviar and champagne. Tray service done right. Event setup from planning through breakdown. Holiday preparation that doesn't bury you. Gift wrapping that represents the family before the box is even opened. And entertaining at the highest level. Foreign dignitaries, government officials, guests who expect formal protocol and leave no room for error. I've planned dinners for heads of state and served presidents and first ladies. The standards are the same whether you're in a military residence or a private estate. This section shows you exactly what that looks like and how to deliver it.
PART SIX: CARE RESPONSIBILITIES
Children. Pets. Emergencies. The care responsibilities that fall to housekeepers go far beyond cleaning, and getting them wrong carries real consequences. You'll learn age appropriate approaches for toddlers through teenagers, how to work with nannies without stepping on toes, and what to report versus what to handle yourself. Pet care covers feeding, cleaning considerations, and why a properly stocked pet first aid kit matters more than you think. I once made a three hour round trip through a snowstorm in Aspen because we had nothing on hand for a dog with hotspots. That trip was dangerous and completely avoidable. The emergency response section walks you through utility shutoffs, fire procedures, and why every staff member needs to know the property address cold. When something goes wrong, you won't have time to figure it out. You need to already know.
PART SEVEN: HOUSEHOLD SUPPORT
Culinary support when the chef needs backup. Laundry that protects garments worth more than your car. Linen care, flower arranging, closet organization, and seasonal rotation done right. The stain removal guide alone is worth the price of this book. Blood, wine, ink, candle wax, all of it with specific treatments and clear warnings about what never to do. Shoe care, handbag care, fur storage. I ruined a cashmere sweater early in my career. Threw it in a regular wash without checking the label. It came out two sizes smaller and felted beyond repair. That sweater cost more than I made in a week. I never made that mistake again. These aren't glamorous topics. But they're where one careless afternoon destroys what took years to collect.
PART EIGHT: TECHNICAL AND ADMINISTRATIVE
Computer skills matter more than most housekeepers realize. The higher you want to advance, the more you'll need them. This section covers everything from basic IT and smart home systems to vendor coordination, delivery management, and Certificate of Insurance tracking that protects the estate from liability. I interviewed a housekeeper once for a Head Housekeeper position who was excellent in every way except one. She couldn't use a computer beyond checking email. She had avoided it her entire career. The family wanted someone who could manage inventory systems, communicate with vendors electronically, and maintain digital records. Twenty years of experience passed over because she never learned to use Excel. The administrative side of this profession isn't optional anymore. It's the door that opens or stays closed.
PART NINE: SECURITY
You are not a security guard. But you see who comes and goes. You notice when something looks wrong. You control access points and answer doors. If you're not paying attention, you're a gap in the security system. This section covers exterior lights, locks, alarms, gates, and the discipline of waiting until that gate closes completely behind you. Working with protection teams. Watching for problems inside and outside the property. Photography policies. Media and paparazzi. NDAs and what they actually mean. Schedule information is security information. You'll learn exactly why that matters.
PART TEN: LEADERSHIP
Technical excellence got you here. Leadership determines whether you stay. Taking over a new position, whether promoted from within or arriving fresh, sets the tone for everything that follows. This section walks you through my system. Understanding expectations, learning standards, identifying legacy staff, keeping comments close to your vest until you understand the landscape. Then managing your team. Policy and procedure, job descriptions, organizational charts, reviews, delegation, training, and building team culture. The transition from doing the work yourself to being responsible for everyone's work is harder than people expect. This section makes it possible.
PART ELEVEN: PROFESSIONAL DEVELOPMENT
A career, not a job. That's what this profession can be if you treat it that way. Formal training, certifications, professional organizations, and staying current in an industry that keeps evolving. The Housekeeper Skill Levels chart shows exactly what progression looks like from entry level through Executive Housekeeper. The experience, skills, and responsibilities expected at each stage. Communication and language skills that open doors. And self care that keeps you in this profession for decades instead of burning out in years. Your body is a tool. Maintain it. Respect it. It's the only one you get.
PART TWELVE: NAVIGATING FAMILY DYNAMICS
This is the section no other training manual includes. Because it's uncomfortable. Family offices with expectations that don't match household realities. Family members beyond the principal, each requiring equal professionalism regardless of how they treat you. Multigenerational households where you're caught between a principal's concerns and a grandparent's dignity. Blended families carrying histories you'll never fully understand. Staff who turn out to be relatives no one told you about. Former spouses. Protected positions. Situations where there is no clear right answer. This section comes from decades of experience, my own mistakes, and lessons I wish someone had taught me before I learned them the hard way. It is not a warning. It is preparation.
EVERYONE ON THE SAME PAGE
This Guide exists because the industry needed it. Because the people in it deserved better resources. Because talented professionals were struggling with problems that had solutions if someone would just write them down.
If you're staff ready to stop guessing and start building a career that lasts, this is your roadmap. If you're a manager looking for a real training resource instead of another generic checklist, this is your tool. If you're a principal wondering what your household could be, this is your benchmark.
Nearly 175 pages. Almost 40 years of lessons. Written down so the path is clear, the training is consistent, and the standard is visible to everyone.
The industry needs more professionals. Be one of them.