Is It Time?
How to tell if it’s time for your Homeowner/Condominium Association to change Property Managers.
Your association’s board meetings have been going well for a long time, but recently there is a new tension in the room. You notice body language around the table after your management company reports that all is good, but lacks data. Board members start asking questions searching for more detail and answers are vague. Perhaps you are surprised by the lack of funds to pay for recent capital expenses and wonder – why aren’t we better prepared for this? So, you return to historic Board Minutes to refresh your memory on earlier decisions and notice a lack of information. Subsequently, you notice homeowner complaints are on the rise about vendor performance, and you all start to wonder what’s happening.
While no property management team or association board is perfect, these are telltale signs that something’s up and further investigation is necessary. Hopefully, if both teams are willing to be transparent and trust for each other is intact, the above issues can be worked out and the business relationship will be better for it. However, if distrust, vagueness and dissatisfaction are not resolved, you would be wise to interview other management companies and get perspective, because changing property managers is not something that should be taken lightly. At the same time, don’t be tempted by inertia simply to avoid the work involved in making a change when it’s necessary. Once you find the right property management company for this season in your association’s history, you will make great strides in achieving today’s priorities and protecting homeowner values in the future.
How to Evaluate – The Scorecard
One approach to determining if the time has come to replace your current property manager is “the scorecard”. Upon entering into an agreement with your current management company there was a proposal and a contract. Create a list of the services your board required of the property manager in the contract and have each board member rate how well these services have been met. You can use a numeric value or pass/fail. Either way, it focuses your team on the issues rather than an emotional rational that’s been brewing or a personal agenda that doesn’t have the association’s best interest in mind. Be sure to identify real situations and not just opinions.
In addition, be sure you are not requiring effort from your property manager that was never part of the contract. Undefined expectations will never be met and can ruin any relationship, so be wise in your evaluation. If there is clear, consistent failure found in your assessment that was appropriately addressed yet left uncorrected by the property manager, you have your answer – move on. But if there were a few one-time failures that were amended, keep evaluating the criteria objectively while paying attention to the other stakeholders’ level of trust. If the trust has eroded to the point where the board and homeowners fear risking more failure and have lost confidence and respect for your management team, it’s probably time to move on.
Remember, as a board, you have the fiduciary responsibility to oversee and make decisions for the association. Partnering with the right management company for your association is critical to your community’s success.
What to Evaluate – Non-negotiables in Property Management Services
In many cases, associations grow dissatisfied with their management firm because the original set of requirements and expectations were ill-defined from the beginning. As we meet with board members in search of finding a new Property Management partner, we learn the history of how their current management company was secured. Often times it was many years ago with different board members who lacked understanding and experience on association management. This is a very common trend, which is why New Star Properties offers seminars discussing the financial, legal and practical work required of homeowner and condo association board members. The results are more confident and effective leaders who lead and serve their community.
Listed below are the non-negotiable services of an association property manager. If you’ve already included this criterion in your current contract, your evaluation process should be straightforward. However, if any of these critical components are missing it would behoove your association to update your current contract if possible, or start interviewing other candidates.
•Financial Expertise: Your Property Manager should have a clear and proven record of leading and supporting the board in Budgeting and Reserve planning. Oftentimes, associations struggle with significant deferred maintenance with looming capital projects while Reserve Funding may be grossly insufficient. It is a financially savvy Property Manager that can offer your association rectifying options, and make recommendations when securing funds is a necessity. Young communities must plan appropriately for the future to avoid these costly situations.
•Reserve Studies: Is there an updated Reserve Study (within 3-5 years) that gives guidance to the Board relative to funding levels and replacement timetables? Your management team should frequently reference Reserve plans and advise on potential shortfalls and strategies for stabilization. In addition, a knowledgeable management team will speak easily to the mechanics and necessity of a Reserve Study.
•Board Actions/Minutes: Your property manager must capture and create consistent accessibility to monthly board “action items” by clearly noting them on the Board Minutes. The Board should not have to “dog” the management team for follow up, nor should the discussion outcomes be too vague when referenced in the future.
•Transparency: Does the management team consistently convey an attitude of transparency? Is bid management handled professionally? Wanting to keep the Board as well as the community informed on progress of major projects, plans and budgets is what builds trust and accountability.
•Maintenance Work Orders: are they being addressed on a timely manner and meeting Board and community expectations? Some management teams have their own maintenance crews while others may contract with vendors. Either way, your property manager is responsible for the quality and delivery of those services.
•Routine Guidance: Is your property management team conversant with governance issues, have they even read your Covenants, Conditions and Restrictions and do they adhere to best practices? Experience in managing your type of association is what opens the doors to creative solutions, minimizes Board research and saves your community money.
•Collaboration: If your manager or the Board has an “us vs. them” attitude all team work will dissolve and everyone will dread monthly meetings. The board has clearly defined legal responsibilities and your Property Manager should have ample experience working with other associations thereby sparing you from making typical and costly mistakes – so engage in collaborative teamwork. Everyone will win!
Evaluating your property management situation objectively and making necessary changes will help to develop and keep your community financially healthy, build confidence among the ownership, protect property values and make the place you call home a pleasant community.
In 2015, New Star Properties introduced a new paradigm in property management that includes a broader view of association ownership than most companies. Today, New Star Properties provides complete services to meet the community’s shared property management needs, New Star RE which is a full-service brokerage is uniquely qualified to position and sell your home/condo when the time comes, and New Star Handyman is always ready to support owners when tackling those home projects not covered in the property management contract. Working with more than 30 communities in New England, representing over 3000 units, The New Star team is well versed in association living and a collaborative team on a mission to satisfy our valued communities.
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