It is the thing people say when they feel exposed by the state of their home: forgive the mess. For us, it is also a Christ-centered way to build work around grace, dignity, and service.
Come as you are.
Jesus did not wait for people to be cleaned up before calling them. He met them in the middle of their real lives. The company carries that same invitation into the way we serve homes and the way we hire people: come as you are, then build something steadier from there.
The mark in the logo matters.
The blemish in the letter E in MESS is intentional. It represents the imperfection we all carry, the part we would rather hide, and the grace that lets us face it, move forward, and serve anyway.
We are called to be stewards of grace.
Serve people without shame
Love the neighbor in front of us
Create steady, stable careers
Reward work mentally, emotionally, and financially
Invite people to get on their feet and stay there
Embrace imperfection and keep moving forward
The home side.
When someone says that phrase, they are usually asking not to be judged. We take that seriously. Our work is practical cleaning and groundskeeping, but the posture behind it is mercy: restore order, protect dignity, and make the place feel livable again.
The employment side.
This company exists to help people from all walks of life step into steady work that can become a stable career. We want the job to be rewarding financially, but also mentally and emotionally, because work should help a person stand taller, not just survive another week.
Grace has to show up in the operating model.
Field employees start at $18.50/hr and are cross-trained across interior and exterior work. Service revenue goes first to employees, then business expenses, then investors. Excess revenue goes toward CapEx savings and cash reserves. If those targets are hit, profit-sharing distributions are paid to qualifying tenured employees. If excess funds remain, the owner may be retroactively compensated up to an average of $576.93 per pay period. Stewardship is not a slogan here; it is the order of operations.
Ready for a steadier plan?
Get a practical retainer built around the property, the season, and the work that actually needs doing.