How Property Managers Can Deal with Rising Costs and Labor Shortages in Maintenance with Ray Hespen – Part 2
Update: 2023-11-16
Description
In typical fashion, we ended up covering so much ground with Ray Hespen of Property Meld that we had to split our full conversation into two episodes. In Part 1, we discussed what maintenance analytics is, why it’s important, and what it can do for a property management business.
This is Part 2 of our chat on The Property Management Show, where we’ll talk about the current shortage we’re having on tradespeople, its effect on net operating income (NOI), and what property managers can do about it.
Maintenance Analytics Surprises
Some data around owner and investor retention was surprising, according to Ray.
While looking at landlords and investor/owners who had one to four units, it turned out that owners who renew their property management agreements for a year or two or three had a higher maintenance rate per unit annually. More maintenance was performed. The number of actions were about 20 percent higher than in the cohort of owners who churned and left their property management company.
The actual maintenance spend was lower, but the number of maintenance touches was higher.
This seemed impossible until the team dug a little deeper and realized there were more preventative repairs, on average. So, it ties back into that big correlation we discussed during Part 1. Drive spend per unit down and resident satisfaction up. That behavior is triggered by more preventative programs.
Maintenance is getting more expensive and it’s harder to find people to do repairs. There’s a high demand for tradespeople and vendors, and no one is running out of jobs. It’s supply and demand. Given that, how can property managers invite more maintenance but lower maintenance costs?
Ray doesn’t know.
He points to a report released by Invitation Homes and American Homes for Rent that forecasts an increase in costs that have dropped their NOI from 11 percent to five percent.
It’s an industry-wide challenge.
What’s becoming more important is keeping renters in a unit. Someone Ray recently talked to said that they could get a price increase on a lease renewal, but not by putting that same property on the market for a new tenant. That’s where rents are right now.
Renewals are an important part of revenue generation and they also keep your expenses down by avoiding turnover costs.
On the maintenance side of things, you have to find ways to get work done during the shoulder months. Schedule your inspections, your work, and your preventative services before summer and after summer.
The Case of the Disappearing Tradespeople
The trick in keeping up with the necessary speed of repairs is ensuring vendors WANT to work with you. If vendors are avoiding you, maintenance suffers and so does tenant satisfaction.
Three or four years ago, property managers could set forth a list of demands before agreeing to work with a vendor. Maybe you had legal and insurance requirements that had to be met. Maybe you wanted your vendor to accept your work request within an hour.
All of that has evaporated. The balance of power has shifted, and you have to find a way to make it easier to work with you.
Ray has over 40,000 vendors working within the Property Meld platform. The want some of the requirements taken away before they’ll work with a management company. Scheduling and communication has to be easier on them.
His recommendation to you? Grease the skids so you can attract vendors and tradespeople. They don’t need your work, and they’re going to be selective about who they’ll work with.
Non-monetary incentives are important. Vendors are willing to negotiate better rates with property managers, and you’ll always pay less than an independent consumer. It’s part of relationship building. They’re going to choose the work they want to do. Don’t leave yourself on the retail side of a vendor relationship.
In typical fashion, we ended up covering so much ground with Ray Hespen of Property Meld that we had to split our full conversation into two episodes. In Part 1, we discussed what maintenance analytics is, why it’s important, and what it can do for a property management business.
This is Part 2 of our chat on The Property Management Show, where we’ll talk about the current shortage we’re having on tradespeople, its effect on net operating income (NOI), and what property managers can do about it.
Maintenance Analytics Surprises
Some data around owner and investor retention was surprising, according to Ray.
While looking at landlords and investor/owners who had one to four units, it turned out that owners who renew their property management agreements for a year or two or three had a higher maintenance rate per unit annually. More maintenance was performed. The number of actions were about 20 percent higher than in the cohort of owners who churned and left their property management company.
The actual maintenance spend was lower, but the number of maintenance touches was higher.
This seemed impossible until the team dug a little deeper and realized there were more preventative repairs, on average. So, it ties back into that big correlation we discussed during Part 1. Drive spend per unit down and resident satisfaction up. That behavior is triggered by more preventative programs.
Maintenance is getting more expensive and it’s harder to find people to do repairs. There’s a high demand for tradespeople and vendors, and no one is running out of jobs. It’s supply and demand. Given that, how can property managers invite more maintenance but lower maintenance costs?
Ray doesn’t know.
He points to a report released by Invitation Homes and American Homes for Rent that forecasts an increase in costs that have dropped their NOI from 11 percent to five percent.
It’s an industry-wide challenge.
What’s becoming more important is keeping renters in a unit. Someone Ray recently talked to said that they could get a price increase on a lease renewal, but not by putting that same property on the market for a new tenant. That’s where rents are right now.
Renewals are an important part of revenue generation and they also keep your expenses down by avoiding turnover costs.
On the maintenance side of things, you have to find ways to get work done during the shoulder months. Schedule your inspections, your work, and your preventative services before summer and after summer.
The Case of the Disappearing Tradespeople
The trick in keeping up with the necessary speed of repairs is ensuring vendors WANT to work with you. If vendors are avoiding you, maintenance suffers and so does tenant satisfaction.
Three or four years ago, property managers could set forth a list of demands before agreeing to work with a vendor. Maybe you had legal and insurance requirements that had to be met. Maybe you wanted your vendor to accept your work request within an hour.
All of that has evaporated. The balance of power has shifted, and you have to find a way to make it easier to work with you.
Ray has over 40,000 vendors working within the Property Meld platform. The want some of the requirements taken away before they’ll work with a management company. Scheduling and communication has to be easier on them.
His recommendation to you? Grease the skids so you can attract vendors and tradespeople. They don’t need your work, and they’re going to be selective about who they’ll work with.
Non-monetary incentives are important. Vendors are willing to negotiate better rates with property managers, and you’ll always pay less than an independent consumer. It’s part of relationship building. They’re going to choose the work they want to do. Don’t leave yourself on the retail side of a vendor relationship.
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