International Men’s Day gives us space to talk honestly about men’s wellbeing in the workplace, at home and in the communities we’re part of.
At NJC, it’s also a moment to pause and look at how the men in our business are really doing. Many of our colleagues are frontline cleaners, supervisors, managers and leaders working across our cleaning and facilities management services. Many are also dads, sons, partners, brothers and friends, juggling shifts, family life and the pressure to “hold it all together”.
As a female-founded business, it matters to us that we shine a light on men’s experiences in the industry too, especially around mental health, identity and feeling supported at work.
This year, we marked International Men’s Day with a special episode of the Not Just Cleaning podcast, which explores people, wellbeing and culture within the cleaning industry. Our People & Culture Director, Kieran Soar, sat down with Co-CEO Reuben Heppelthwaite and Operations Director Peter Joyce to talk about men’s wellbeing and the realities they see at home, on site and across NJC.
International Men’s Day sits within a wider People & Culture approach at NJC, supporting employee wellbeing across our cleaning and facilities management teams. We care about the wellbeing of all our colleagues, whatever their gender or role. Days like this are a useful prompt to check how we’re doing and whether people know what support is there for them, including the men who don’t always find it easy to ask.
Support available includes:
None of this replaces professional help where it’s needed, but it does make it easier for colleagues to take that first step and know they won’t be judged for doing so.
Gender equality is essential to us at NJC. We aim to offer the same opportunities and care to all our colleagues, no matter how they identify. At the same time, we can see that many of the men in our business face particular pressures.
A large portion of our workforce is male, especially in cleaning and operational roles. Many work unsocial hours, hold more than one job, or care for family members alongside their shifts. It’s easy for that load to be missed if we only look at rotas, tasks and KPIs.
International Men’s Day helped us bring some of these realities into focus, including:
For us as an employer, the message is simple: many men in our teams carry a lot, quietly. Making room to talk about that is part of our duty of care.
NJC is a people business. The way our colleagues feel will always show up in the work in both the good ways and in the difficult ones.
If the people looking after your buildings are exhausted, worried or struggling in silence, over time that will affect:
When colleagues feel supported, seen and able to speak up, everything else becomes easier. It’s better for them, for our customers and for the relationships between everyone involved.
Supporting men’s wellbeing, and everyone’s wellbeing, is part of how we deliver reliable, high-quality cleaning and facilities management services, not an add-on that sits to one side.
As part of our International Men’s Day work, we also spent time talking about masculinity and how it shows up in everyday life.
At NJC, we see the value in many traits people often associate with “being a good man”: reliability, graft, looking after your family, contributing to your community. We also see how important it is to pair those qualities with openness – being able to say “I’m not OK” without feeling that it cancels out strength or dependability.
For us, that reinforces a few core beliefs:
We want NJC to be somewhere men can bring the best of who they are to work, without feeling they have to hide the parts that are struggling.
One of the most important ideas behind our International Men’s Day activity is how far a simple, genuine conversation can go.
Most of us have had the quick “I’m fine” exchange. It’s easy. It’s also where a lot of things get left.
Across NJC, we’re encouraging colleagues and managers to go a step further by:
We don’t expect anyone to have all the answers. But we do believe:
As a family-run business, this is part of what “people first” means in practice.
Alongside the emotional side of wellbeing, there’s the practical reality of how work and home fit together.
In our industry, many roles are time- and task-dependent. Buildings need to be cleaned at certain times; some shifts can’t simply be moved. Within that, we’re looking for ways to make life–work balance more realistic – for men and for everyone else.
That includes:
We know we can’t change national paternity policy on our own. But we can listen, be honest about constraints, and work creatively where there is room. That’s part of being a responsible employer in a sector that relies so heavily on its people.
This approach reflects our commitment to being a responsible employer within the UK cleaning industry.
International Men’s Day happens once a year. The issues it highlights are present every day.
At NJC, our focus now is on:
For our customers, it means working with a partner that understands the link between people’s wellbeing and the quality of service delivered on site, and treats that link as part of core business, not a side project.
Thank you to Reuben Heppelthwaite, Kieran Soar and Peter Joyce for speaking so openly, and to everyone across NJC who continues to look out for one another – on site, in offices and behind the scenes.
You can watch or listen to the full International Men’s Day Not Just Cleaning podcast episode with Reuben, Peter and Kieran on YouTube.
If the conversation raises thoughts or experiences you’d like to share, we’d be glad to hear from you. The more we talk, the more we can support one another.
Let’s keep looking out for our colleagues, friends and families – on International Men’s Day and every day.