Quick Article Summary
This article explores how community management companies can achieve greater operational efficiency and growth by implementing structured business systems and tracking meaningful performance metrics. We cover selecting the right business operating framework, identifying key performance indicators, balancing predictive and historical measurements, and using data to drive decision-making.
Are you struggling to keep up with the growing demands of your community management business? You're not alone. Many owners of management companies find themselves drowning in day-to-day operations while trying to scale their businesses.
The solution isn't working harder—it's working smarter through effective systems and meaningful metrics.
Think of a Business Operating System (BOS) as the backbone of your company. It's not just fancy corporate jargon—it's a practical framework that helps everyone understand what they're doing and why it matters.
Popular systems like EOS (Entrepreneurial Operating System), Pinnacle, and Scaling Up help management companies in several concrete ways:
Here’s a great example of why operating systems matter: A management company I worked with implemented EOS and reduced their onboarding time for new properties by 40%. Why? Because everyone knew their role and followed consistent processes instead of reinventing the wheel each time.
"I just know when things are going well" might have worked when you managed a handful of communities, but it falls short as you scale. This is where Key Performance Indicators (KPIs) become essential. Here are some metrics that successful community management companies track:
For Customer Experience:
For Operations:
For Financial Health:
Think of metrics as having two different jobs: some tell you what's happened, while others help predict what's coming. You need both.
Forward-Looking Metrics (Leading Indicators): These help you spot trends before they impact your bottom line:
Results Metrics (Lagging Indicators): These tell you how you've performed:
A community management company in Florida noticed their homeowner portal logins dropping in one community. By addressing this early warning sign through improved communication, they prevented what could have become a board decision not to renew their contract.
Having data is only useful if you act on it. Here's how to turn metrics into improvements:
Not everyone in your company needs to track the same things. Tailoring metrics to specific roles creates better focus and accountability:
For Your Community Managers:
Service request completion rate
Board meeting preparation time
Community satisfaction scores
For Your Sales Team:
Lead conversion rates
Average contract value
Renewal success rate
For Your Finance Team:
Collection rates
Budget accuracy
Reporting timeliness
The thought of tracking all these metrics might seem daunting, but it doesn't have to be complicated:
One mid-sized management company began by simply tracking weekly service request volumes and resolution times. This alone helped them identify staffing needs and improve customer satisfaction before expanding to more complex metrics.
Today's community management software can automate much of your data collection and reporting:
Watch our recent webinar, "Mastering Growth: Build a Stronger, More Efficient Community Management Business," where we dive deeper into these strategies with real-world examples and implementation guidance.