For landscaping providers serving large educational institutions, maintaining well-kept grounds across many properties requires more than manpower alone. It requires operational efficiency, thoughtful deployment and the ability to keep crews focused on the work that matters most. For SSC Servicesfor Education, a national provider of groundskeeping services, custodial services and facilitiesmaintenance for K-12 schools, universities and district offices, investing in autonomy has become an important part of delivering consistent, high-quality grounds maintenance at scale.
SSC provides comprehensive mowing, edging, trimming and blowing services for schools across the
country. One of its most extensive operations is with the Charleston County School District in South
Carolina, where the company manages landscaping and lawn maintenance for 51 campuses and 54
acres of athletic fields. During peak season, from March through the end of October, those campuses
are serviced weekly. Maintaining that footprint requires attention to detail and disciplined execution in
order to meet the high expectations of students, parents and administrators.
More than three years ago, SSC adopted Greenzie Powered Autonomy™ on Wright Autonomous
Stander ZK™ mowers as part of its broader commitment to innovation and continuous improvement in
the field.
“At SSC, we take pride in being an industry leader,” said Mark Elingburg of SSC Charleston. “We’re
always looking for ways to deliver better results for our clients, and that mindset is what led us to
Greenzie.”
Before choosing Greenzie, SSC explored other autonomous mowing technologies, including smaller
robotic units, but found they were not suitable for the environments the company serves.
“In a K-12 setting, safety is the primary goal,” Elingburg said. “We needed a solution that was powerful
enough to handle large areas effectively while also offering a safer, more controlled operation.”
SSC wanted a high-powered unit that could handle large open areas in K-12 settings. Among the
options available at the time, Greenzie stood out as the most advanced. The Wright Autonomous
Stander ZK™ with Greenzie Powered Autonomy™ provided the combination of commercial-grade
mowing capability and advanced autonomy SSC was looking for. The platform proved especially effective in spaces such as middle and high school practice fields, athletic complexes and roadsides, where it could stay productive while crews focused on more detailed work elsewhere on the property.
Since adopting Greenzie Powered Autonomy™, SSC has seen meaningful operational improvements
across multiple areas of the business.
One of the biggest advantages has been added mowing capacity on large, open areas. The additional capacity has allowed SSC to deploy labor more effectively across busy school properties while keeping crews focused on the broader scope of work each site requires.
SSC does not view autonomy as a replacement for people. Instead, the company sees it as a way to
add mowing power, improve flexibility and free up crews to spend more time on higher-value tasks
across the property.
The additional mowing power has created more opportunities for crews to focus on the work that
directly impacts perceived quality. Rather than spending the majority of the day on repetitive wide-
area mowing, crews can dedicate more time to edging, trimming and maintaining intricate areas
throughout campuses, the work that clients notice most.
“We now have the time and bandwidth to focus on those little flourishes that really stand out,”
Elingburg said. “Parking lots, islands and peripheral areas that might not have received as much
attention before are now consistently maintained at a higher level.”
That shift has not only improved overall property appearance, but also employee satisfaction. Crews
enjoy their work more because they can spend less time on repetitive tasks and more time refining
their craft.
“Our crew members take pride in their work and want to be able to accommodate client requests with the highest level of precision,” Elingburg said. “They enjoy being able to focus more time on skilled work and finer details.”
The improvements have been noticed by clients as well. For SSC, one of the clearest signs of success is that clients have less to bring up.
“There are far fewer ‘you missed a spot’ conversations now,” Elingburg said. “The consistency has
improved dramatically.”
For school administrators, the benefits go beyond aesthetics. Reliable groundskeeping means fewer
maintenance concerns competing for attention and less day-to-day oversight required from district
personnel. In a K-12 environment, SSC’s goal is simple: the properties should always look right
without becoming a distraction for staff or students.
The team at SSC believes autonomous mowing will continue to play an increasingly important role in
commercial landscaping operations. For companies considering autonomy, SSC encourages
contractors to carefully evaluate available solutions, match the technology to the right properties and commit to the implementation process.
SSC also found that not every property is the right fit. Areas such as practice fields and other large
open spaces have been among the strongest early applications. Elementary sites, by contrast, proved to be a weaker fit because unpredictable student movement made those environments harder to manage consistently.
“Do your research and find the best autonomous product,” Elingburg said. “There will be trial and error at first, and you have to be willing to make adjustments. But ultimately, our advice is simple: just do it.”
That approach has helped SSC turn autonomy into a useful operating tool that supports more
consistent results for clients and greater confidence among SSC staff.