BEST PRACTICES: How to Best Utilize Your Property Manager
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Property Management Is Secondary to Property Selection — But Still Critical
Choosing the right property manager is foundational.
They are your eyes and ears — especially if you invest at a distance.
A great property manager impacts:
- Tenant quality
- Leasing efficiency
- Maintenance costs
- Turnover management
- Eviction handling
- Long-term property condition
But even with a great manager…
Ownership still requires engagement.
Best Practice #1: Build a Relationship With the Boots on the Ground
If you're a DFY client working with Specialized Property Management (SPM), you have direct access to a dedicated asset manager.
Don’t wait for problems to connect.
- Call.
- Introduce yourself.
- Build rapport.
- Set expectations.
When you’re engaged, service improves.
Property managers perform better when they know the owner is paying attention.
Best Practice #2: Log Into Your Owner Portal
Every professional property manager has software that gives you access to:
- Income statements
- Expense registers
- Repair invoices
- Lease agreements
- Maintenance details
- Property management contracts
If you’ve never logged in, do it.
Technology can feel intimidating — but clarity creates confidence.
Best Practice #3: Perform a Quarterly Audit
This might be the highest ROI 15 minutes you’ll ever spend.
Steve shared how he once found a $289 plumbing charge that should have been billed to the tenant — not him.
That single oversight equaled an entire month of cash flow.
The lesson?
Mistakes happen.
Good companies fix them quickly.
But only if you catch them.
A simple quarterly review:
- Reinforces accountability
- Improves systems
- Strengthens relationships
- Protects your returns
Maintenance Isn’t a Problem — It’s Protection
Here’s a mindset shift:
Seeing maintenance activity means your property is being cared for.
No maintenance activity for long stretches?
That can mean deferred maintenance — which becomes expensive later.
Water damage. HVAC neglect. Small issues turning into major repairs.
A well-maintained property:
- Attracts better tenants
- Retains tenants longer
- Sells for more
- Preserves asset value
Maintenance is not the enemy. Neglect is.
Schedule Routine Property Inspections
At least annually — ideally every 6 months.
Inspection reports with photos provide:
- Peace of mind
- Visibility
- Tenant condition updates
- Early problem detection
No news is not automatically good news.
Radio silence can sometimes mean nobody is checking.
Perspective Is Everything
Two investors see the same repair invoice.
One thinks:
“Why did I buy this headache?”
The other thinks:
“My property is being protected. My tenant is being taken care of. My asset is being preserved.”
The difference isn’t math.
It’s mindset.
Real estate rewards long-term perspective and engaged ownership.
Key Takeaways
- Being hands-off doesn’t mean being disengaged.
- Trust your property manager — but verify.
- Quarterly audits can dramatically improve returns.
- Maintenance equals protection.
- Engagement strengthens your entire investment ecosystem.
Let’s keep stacking singles. ⚾
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