Write a Spring Cleaning Checklist for Your Business
Why This Matters
The first day of spring is a natural time to clean up what has gotten dusty.
Your business has dusty corners too.
Old links. Old bios. Old offers. Old photos. Old pages.
What This Does for Your Business
A spring cleaning checklist gives you content and gives your own business a useful reset.
What Your Customer Sees
Your customer sees a timely, helpful post that may inspire them to take action too.
The 10–12 Minute Fix
Write a short business spring cleaning checklist.
Use 5–7 items.
Make it useful for your audience.
Simple Example
Spring Cleaning Checklist for Your Small Business
- Update your contact info
- Refresh your homepage headline
- Check your Google Business Profile
- Ask for one review
- Update one old photo
- Follow up with one old lead
- Remove one confusing offer
Virtual High Five
Good. You created seasonal content and a useful reset tool.
That is a strong combo.
Momentum Pep Talk
Spring cleaning is not just for closets.
Sometimes your business needs a little fresh air too.
Let’s fix one thing today.
Do Not Let This Be Another Good Idea You Forget
You just read one small business move. Good. Now give your business a few honest minutes and actually use it.
12 Minutes A Day is built for solo business owners, local service providers, freelancers, and side-hustlers who are tired of feeling behind but do not have time for another giant course, complicated system, or fake business guru speech.
Small enough to start. Useful enough to count.
Get One Small Business Task Per Day
Enter your email to get the free 12 Minutes A Day Small Business Challenge — 30 tiny moves to improve your website, follow-up, local visibility, reviews, content, offers, and confidence.
No spam. No daily yelling. Just practical small business help you can actually use.
Build a Better Small Business in 12 Minutes a Day
12 Minutes A Day gives small business owners practical marketing tasks, website fixes, follow-up ideas, local visibility tips, review requests, content prompts, and offer clarity exercises that can be done in short, focused sessions. The goal is not perfection. The goal is motion.
One finished task is not small. It is evidence. Evidence that your business is still alive, that you are still moving, and that the mess can get smaller one piece at a time. Set the timer. Do the useful thing. Let’s fix one thing today.

