Get Excited — and Organized
The most effective housecleaning is the cleaning you do every day. Create a daily checklist to keep smaller tasks from piling up. Separate tasks by daily, weekly and monthly needs that have to be handled around the home, and stick to the list. Let the image of a sparkling kitchen floor or clear, sunny windows motivate you to stay focused on your cleaning goals.Give These Forgotten Nooks and Crannies a Cleaning
Think about more than just the obvious when planning a DIY deep clean. Focus on the hard-to-reach areas and nooks and crannies that you tend to always put off. Here are some of the areas that are easily overlooked or ignored over the long term and tend to gather dirt and debris:Don’t Burn Yourself Out
When you plan your cleaning activities, be honest with yourself. Your schedule should be realistic and something you can devote yourself to so you set yourself up for spring-cleaning success. Get your tools and whatever backup team you’ve got (time for the kids to earn their allowance) organized and ready to go, then get to it.When engaging in any kind of cleaning, consider the housecleaner’s mantra: “Front to back, top to bottom.” Start at the back of your house and work your way to the front. Then, within each room, start with cleaning at the ceiling and work down. This helps on an organizational front; you’re less likely to miss a step if you do everything in the same order. But it also serves a practical purpose. You avoid backtracking over areas you’ve already cleaned by working back to front. And working top-to-bottom is most vital of all. Every phase of cleaning stirs up dust and debris and tends to push it downward. By starting with the ceiling and ending with the sweep, mopping or vacuuming of the floor, you'll catch everything — even the pollen from those beautiful spring blooms outside.