Archive for the ‘Selecting A Manager’ Category

Family Dinner Time, Your Phone Rings..Do You Take The Call?

Friday, July 23rd, 2010

After months of getting your investment property prepared, the first call comes right as you sit down with your family for dinner.  You are not sure who is calling, but from now on every unrecognized number may be a tenant…a source of revenue to offset the payment and expenses you have incurred.

You ask your family to excuse you as you slip off into another room.  Sure enough, it is somebody calling to find out about the three bedroom home for rent.  As your heart skips a beat, you describe all the personal touches, along with the not so personal touches.  All the fresh paint, and efficient windows, and the extra storage.  The caller sounds nice enough and now they ask if they can see the property!

“This is going to be easy” that little voice in your head tells you.  The caller says they are free after work tomorrow.  You say great, forgetting for the moment that tomorrow is Jimmy’s playoff soccer game.  Remember, you need to get this home rented.   After confirming the time, you hang up and realize that you do not have the caller’s number.  Maybe it is on caller ID…but no…they must have used a blocked number.  You return to dinner as the table is being cleared.

That night your wife reminds you about Jimmy’s soccer game tomorrow night.  Immediately, you realize the conflict and wonder how you can find these callers to reschedule.  That fails, so you hope your best buddy can show it to them tomorrow.  He has plans.  So, you are stuck.  Maybe a quick showing and race across town and still catch the second half.  

The thought hits you, maybe you really should have budgeted for help with this hobby.

The showing time arrives.  You bring two rental applications found on line..just in case.  Not sure how you will get the background checks or credit pulled but you  will figure that out once you have the applications completed. 

 At the agreed time…no prospective tenant.  Fifteen minutes late, they pull up in a 20 year old van falling apart and very dirty.  It is exhuming exhaust.  The prospects both grind out their cigarettes on the driveway as they get out.   Both possible tenants begin to unload children from the rear.  First one, then two, then three and finally four and five.  Lets see, 7 occupants in a 3 bedroom 1000 square foot home.   Your heart sinks a little.

You show off your pride and joy and learn that there are some mysterious circumstances about where these people currently live.  A reference to how nice it will be to actually live in a home instead of the van by one of the kids catches your attention.  At that moment, you decide to ask what they do for a living.   One is unemployed..the other just got a job after months of unemployment.  The job involves selling magazines and appears to not really be as an employee but as a contractor.

Of course, they love the house and request the applications.  You hand them out and ask them to fax or email them back as you really need to run.  They do not have fax or email and want to fill them out now.  You are screwed.  Jimmy scores the winning goal..you miss it.  You waste an hour with a family that you are not even sure how to screen to officially reject.

Why is it again that you are doing this yourself?

Mistakes you learn by and the next time you will be smarter.  No answering the phone during dinner…but what if?  More pre-screening on the phone…but what if they call during dinner and you are in a hurry?  At least get a phone number…that one you can do every time!  How many more summer evenings meeting tenants before you find one?  Then, won’t it be fun to increase the return on this hobby by being there to service the leaky faucets and the oven that does not work on Thanksgiving?  Oh, and collect late fees when rent is late.

Leasing and property management sure sounds like fun when you have a life and a career..doesn’t it?  Most people actually have to enjoy experiences like this to decide that they understand why management and leasing companies exist. 

Save yourself the headaches.

When Is The Right Time To Change Property Managers?

Monday, May 17th, 2010

This is a post about time.  Not the “how do you know your existing property manager is just not going to cut it anymore” time.  But, literally what time of the month is best to cut off one property manager and contract to start with a new manager.

Until a couple of years ago I would answer this question that the end of the month is a great time to terminate and start a new manager.  This actually works pretty well but sometimes can cause some problems.  At the end of the month an owner is about to receive a new rental payment.  There is very little time to let a tenant know to change where and how to make payment.  If payments are automated electronically, it is impossible to get that change made in time.  So, an owner has their freshly terminated manager collecting rent and still settling out accounts while the new owner takes over. 

In a cooperative, professional world…this transition can be accomplished without too may headaches.  Most of the time, it worked but the confusion due to the rent payments being collected often caused issues with tenants as well as the owners.   In addition, most property management contracts are based on rental payments so the collection by the old manager meant the new manager did not have payment for services in the first full month of transition..unless special arrangements are agreed to. 

We had an owner who wanted to terminate their existing manager and bring us on board at month’s end.  Normal logic as to this timing but I made a suggestion.  What would happen if we transition after the date the rent is due?  We will handle the management for the balance of the month with no charge and expect the terminated manager to assist us in the transition based on the collection of their management fee for that month. This included the receipt of keys and termination of their contract.   Most importantly, it provided us time to provide the tenant new payment instructions prior to the following months rent being due.  In particular, with electronic rent payments, banks often need a week to implement a change in payment receipient.

The owner agreed.  We tried the mid-month transfer (this lease had a 10th of the month late date) and the transition was the smoothest ever.  Since then, unless there is an emergency or other extenuating circumstances, we always suggest the change over of property managers after the late rent date in the month and prior to the last week of the month.   If you have other experiences, I would be interested to hear about them.

Issues To Consider When Hiring A Property Management Company

Saturday, April 17th, 2010

This week I was contacted by Chris Thorman , Senior Marketing Manager at Softwareadvice.com.  Chirs has written a helpful, comprehensive post on “What To Consider When Hiring A Property Management Company.”   After reviewing it I thought it was valuable enough to pass along to the readers of this blog.  I like that he has written addressing both the pros and cons of this decision. 

I suggest you take a few minutes to read this if you are struggling with this decision.  I will continue to post on many of the issues Thorman covers in the weeks to come.

So Your Home Won’t Sell?

Monday, December 21st, 2009

It is now starting to be really cold…the depressing time of the year in the Midwest where people don’t spend a lot of time outdoors.  They also don’t look for a place to move to unless they have to.

If the home you have been trying to sell is still sitting on the market, empty, it is costing you money in maintenance and risk.  You know about maintenance (electricity, heat, leaves, snow shoveling) but what about risk?  Risk is what you are exposed to because nobody is living in this home.  I can make a case that you have more risk with your empty home than one with a tenant.

Risk is a function of decisions made by a responsible party and the likelihood there could be a resulting cost.  A vacant home is an accident waiting to happen..particularly in the harshness of winter.  For example, lets say during an ice storm a branch falls across some electrical wires that service your home.  Who knows the electricity is not arriving to the home?  Who knows that the heat is no longer functioning?  Have you ever seen the damage a frozen, then burst, water pipe inside a home can cause?  Who knows you probably should of spent $200 and had the home winterized just to prevent this type of event?

Who knows?  A professional property manager.  It is likely that no matter how much you know about your property, if you are not living within a fifteen minute drive, you need somebody who is lowering the risk of the fact your home is vacant.  Property managers, due to the experience gained from managing all types of risk events, are able to help an owner prevent and if necessary, mitigate risk.

The best way to prevent this risk exposure if your home is not selling?  Rent it.  Get somebody who has been properly screened living and enjoying your home.  The facts are not many homeowners who decide to rent make a profit on the collection of rent due to the economics that most have a mortgage payment that is high compared to the value of the home.  Yet, cash flow from a tenant helps to offset the expenditures associated with continuing to own the property.  More importantly, a tenant can help lower risk factors associated with a vacant home. 

Homeowners who choose to rent ultimately enjoy lower risk, while having a source of funds that pays the mortgage and creates equity over time.  There are also tax benefits available.  A professional property manager makes this process easy for an owner. 

If your home won’t sell, now maybe is the time to consider other options.  The best one is to hire a manager to rent and make sure your risk is lowered while continuing to hold this asset.