Disaster Recovery With SERVPRO
3/19/2019 (Permalink)
Disaster Recovery
Have you ever wondered about the green SERVPRO trucks you probably see driving through Chagrin Falls, OH? You may know the service teams clean up after water emergencies for homeowners, but you probably didn’t know the teams also provide nationwide disaster recovery help in the following three ways.
1. Here to Help
No matter where the flood, tornado, temperature drop, or hurricane is located, there are over 1,600 SERVPRO local franchises that are ready to help when the corporate office calls. Furthermore, the corporate office can aid any type of disaster with crucial equipment that the individual companies may not have after a disaster strikes. SERVPRO’s corporate officers did just that after the storm damage of 2017 hurricane Irma and the recent California wildfires. The motto Here to Help has certainly been proven true.
2. Faster to Any Disaster
No matter what type of storm strikes, or whether the disaster is citywide or covers part of an entire state, the SERVPRO disaster recovery teams try to follow their slogan of being Faster to Any Disaster. Both the corporate personnel and franchise employees have proven time and again that they are ready to help at a moment’s notice; so, no matter where the floodwater, fires, or other disasters make strike, the team members are there to provide a quick storm response.
3. “Like it never even happened.”
Not only is SERVPRO’s corporate office able to rally the individual franchises to a disaster, but they can also use their many years of experience to direct the teams about where to go and how best to provide aid in the disaster scenarios. The goal of any of the specially IICRC trained franchise employees is to create a disaster scene that is “Like it never even happened.”
Whether the disaster is local or on the other side of the state, SERVPRO franchises and their corporate officers are both there to help. No wonder most insurance companies call SERVPRO to help their insured clients at the first sign a disaster recovery is needed.