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The one system every small landlord needs before their second property — not software
Angle: The system is a documented process — what happens when you get a maintenance call, when rent is late, and when a lease expires.
Software without a process is just a fancier way to be disorganized.
Walk through how you documented your own workflows before scaling:
- Maintenance request received → triage → vendor assignment → follow-up.
- Rent late → reminder → late fee → notice timeline.
- Lease approaching expiration → review → rent increase decision → renewal notice.
The thesis: the landlords who successfully scale aren't necessarily more organized people — they just stop relying on memory. The process comes first. The software simply enforces it.
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What is a process? It has a clear beginning, and a definite "output", which often just means it is passed to the next department or person. Each process may have alternative sub-processes, or may be one series of repeatable procedures to accomplish.
Tenant Screening is a process that usually starts with an application and assembly of documents for verification, and ends with either an approval, or a denial and adverse action letter.
An approval triggers a "Security Deposit" and a "contract" preparation and signing process. At some point, depending on how you operate, there needs to be a "move in" process. "Tenant management" starts at move in, and is in play until an eventual "move out" process. Tenant management includes all the things that occur during occupancy. Rules and enforcement, late fees, Tenant substitution, interim inspections, etc., each of which is a separate sub-process.
"Rental Prep" encompasses a number of sub-processes, from "cleanout" to "plumbing", "electrical", "painting", "carpentry", etc., each with it's own set of "standards" that can be easily communicated to staff or vendors. This major process ends when unit is ready to rent and keys are handed off to Rental Agent.
Some processes can overlap, for example Marketing often overlaps somewhat with the final stages of Rental Prep.
Think each process through, document your standards sufficiently for your particular needs and resources (this may be a Mil Spec, or a simple one or two sentence description).
These processes need to be clear enough to remove ambiguity when communicated to others.
If you ask three people to "inspect" a unit, you absolutely will get three very different "reports". But if you establish some clear, basic, standards which the inspection must examine for, you will get much more consistent reports. What elements are to be inspected; how is condition judged; how are exceptional issues documented?
Consistency is critical, but using a common language is also critical. "Good" has different meanings to different people. You need to establish clear standards.



