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Dalton Mongold
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What Separates a “Good” Multifamily Operator From a Great One?

Dalton Mongold
Posted

The more I study multifamily investing, the more I realize finding a deal is only one part of the business.

Seems like the operators who consistently perform well are usually better at:
• underwriting discipline
• property management
• renovations/execution
• tenant retention
• financing structure
• building strong teams
• staying patient on acquisitions

For those with experience in the space:
What do you think actually separates average operators from the ones who scale successfully long term?

  • Dalton Mongold
  • Most Popular Reply

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    Evan Polaski#5 Multi-Family and Apartment Investing Contributor
    • Cincinnati, OH
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    Evan Polaski#5 Multi-Family and Apartment Investing Contributor
    • Cincinnati, OH
    Replied

    @Dalton Mongold: I am first going to contest your use of the term operators.

    There is a difference between an operator and an asset manager.  Or an operator and an investment manager.  Or an operator and a sponsor.  You get the idea.

    Operators, in my mind, oversee ALL aspects of a deal.  I am more apt to call a property management company an operator more than a syndicator who outsources the front line work.

    Beyond the semantics, a great operator/sponsor/syndicator is someone that assess risks in all areas of the deal.  Market risks, financing risks, tenant risks, reputation risk, renovation risk, etc.

    But the single biggest one is: the best operators are those that are not fee dependent.  Not to say they shouldn't charge fees, but you see the groups out there doing deals, not because they found a great deal, but rather because they need to acquisition fee, marketing fee, due diligence fee, loan guarantee fee (for non-recourse debt, nonetheless), all the keep their marginal deals from days of yore afloat.

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