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The DKI Network: What Members Need to Know to Maximize the Relationship

May 1, 2026

DKI (Disaster Kleenup International) is a North American network of independently owned restoration companies that operate under the DKI brand and share access to national accounts, program work, training, and peer resources. DKI members are franchise-like affiliates who retain ownership of their businesses while participating in the network’s brand and referral infrastructure.

What DKI Actually Provides

DKI provides brand recognition (particularly in the commercial and institutional space), national accounts access with insurance carriers and commercial clients, a peer network connecting operators across North America, training resources, and marketing support. I spent nearly two decades as a DKI franchise operator, grew to the highest-revenue office in North America, and served as National Operations Manager. Here’s what the membership actually delivers.

What DKI Does Not Provide

DKI does not mandate specific operational SOPs — members develop their own systems. National account access doesn’t mean guaranteed job flow; it means an introduction that members must activate locally. Management development is the member’s responsibility. The freedom from franchise operational control is both an opportunity and a burden — there is no DKI playbook that produces a strong business on its own.

Maximizing Your DKI Membership

National Accounts: Activate Them or They Don’t Work

The most common complaint from DKI members is that national account work doesn’t materialize. The most common reason: they haven’t done the local relationship development work. DKI’s national accounts provide an introduction — the local relationship still needs to be built. Contact national account regional facilities representatives in your territory directly. Introduce yourself. Ask to be added to their emergency response protocol. Follow up consistently.

Use the Peer Network and Know Your Economics

The most underutilized resource in any network is the peer network. Members who participate actively at conferences and regional meetings get dramatically more from DKI than those who treat attendance as optional. Also: review your membership agreement annually. Understand exactly what you’re paying in fees, what you’re receiving, and how that ratio changes as your revenue grows.

FAQ: The DKI Network

Is DKI a franchise?

DKI occupies a space between franchise and independent affiliation. Members are independently owned businesses that license the DKI brand and participate in the network infrastructure. The relationship has franchise-like elements without the full operational control structure of a traditional franchise.

How does DKI compare to Servpro, PuroClean, and Paul Davis?

DKI operates as more of an affiliate network — members retain more operational independence than typical franchisees. Servpro, PuroClean, and Paul Davis are traditional franchise systems with stronger brand standards and operational requirements. Each model has different economics, volume opportunities, and operational constraints.

Can I leave the DKI network?

DKI member agreements include specific exit terms: notice requirements, territory restrictions, and brand licensing termination procedures. Review your specific agreement for exit provisions and any territory restrictions that apply to operating a restoration business after leaving.

Mike McCabe is The Profit Detective — a former DKI franchise operator who grew his location to the network’s highest revenue office in North America and later served as National Operations Manager. He now advises restoration operators independently.

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