1. Working on an unattended schedule
One of the most common problems is cleaning "by eye." People forget, get tired, do it poorly. That's not the case with Waybot:
cleaning starts automatically at the right time;
schedules by zone and by day of the week;
the robot doesn't forget, isn't late, and doesn't go on vacation;
eliminates gaps in room sanitization.
Result: even if there is no supervising staff, cleanliness is maintained on schedule, daily and without deviation.
2. Precise adherence to sanitation routes
Waybot cleans according to a defined map, covering all key areas:
corridors, halls, passageways;
sanitary areas, cafeterias, offices;
storage areas, production halls.
Route planning algorithms take into account:
level of passability;
degree of pollution;
priority of zones.
The result - no important zone will be missed, as it happens with manual cleaning.
3. Reporting and quality control
Waybot records:
total area cleaned;
cleaning start and finish times;
problem areas (if something is interfering with the work);
pollution level (some models have a system for assessing pavement pollution);
travel routes.
This data can be:
uploaded to a report;
forwarded to the responsible employee;
used in inspections or internal audits.
Control of the standard of cleanliness becomes measurable rather than subjective.
4. Support for industry standards (medical, HoReCa, warehouses)
Waybot adapts to the specifics of:
- medical standards (regular wet cleaning, minimization of hand