Apartment budget
Apartment Budgeting: Storage Income
One in Ten Americans Has a Self-Storage Unit
“Human laziness has always been a big friend of self-storage operators,” Derek Naylor, president of the consultant group Storage Marketing Solutions – New York Times article. I would say to my apartment friends – we/you need to get a piece of that action. Build garages not for parking cars but rather storing junk. Do some dual marketing – call it storage and or garage. It’s a place to put stuff and things.
Storage is such an epidemic that we now have Storage Wars (reality TV show) aimed at celebrating the agonies and lamenting the defeats of would be bidders. It also doubles as a back door way of marketing the self-storage business – a post for another day.
Storage Income Defined
Simply put – this is income that comes from those dusty old basement storage spaces that everyone tends to forget about.
Storage Income is a way to drive revenue to your bottom line. If your property has the space (basements are great for this) – consider the option of building out some simple caged space that people can use to store stuff. Or, if you already have it, just remember to market it. Price it to sell, create scarcity and urgency. Heck, give it away (for short stints) just to get people hooked on having it. Trust me, once they move their stuff in – as suggested above – they will be too lazy to move it out. Boom – you chance to get an extra $5 or so a month.
Budgeting Strategy
No real strategy here. Look at your trend lines over the trailing 24 months and get yourself an average. Use that average to straight line your storage income account and think about adding some inflation for the coming 12 months.
Any Other Thoughts On Storage Income?
Your having an amazing and over the top day multifamily maniac,
M
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Apartment Budgeting: Lease/Short Term Premium
Back for another week of budget talk. Hope this past week has been over the top and amazing for all of you. If not, you have a whole life of potential in front of you so don’t fret too much. Last week we talked about Month to Month Premiums and this week are moving on to Apartment Budgeting: Lease/Short Term Premium.
Lease/Short Term Premium Defined
Lease/Short Term Premium is a fee that is added to any lease that is less than the desired six, nine or twelve month lease that most of us non-revenue management practitioners desire. Call is a fee of convenience if you will. It allows a resident to have flexibility in the way of getting out of the lease contract without any lease break penalties. It is a simple month to month premium that you tack on at the initiation of the lease term.
I have seen this fee applied in the way of a flat fee ranging from $50 to $100/mo. And, I have seen it applied as a percentage of the lease rate ranging from 5% to 10%/mo.
Lease/Short Term Premium Budgeting Strategy
I typically consult a twelve month trailing report to determine what my forward-looking twelve month budget number should be. This is again one of those fees that is very hard to budget for given the fact that is simply random in nature. Unless you are located in a somewhat urban area with a propensity to attract corporate type clientele, you will rarely book income to this line item.
Marketing Short Term Leases
Don’t forget that everything is marketing. And, this line item should prompt you to look for marketing opportunities. Use Short Term Leases as a bullet point on your website. But, don’t get too crazy as you don’t want to create unwanted exposure. But, it would not be a bad idea to let two to three percent of your unit count produce some extra revenue.
Your looking for opportunity in every line item multifamily maniac,
M
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Insufficient Notice Fee
What is an insufficient notice-fee? Simply put, it’s an acceleration of rent due to giving a notice that does not meet the necessary lease protocol.
I am back for the weekly (save last week – vacation) budget installment. I took some time off last week and ultimately (save a pic post here and there) unplugged. All I can say is – DO THIS. Give yourself three to five days off every quarter and get away from everything. It’s good therapy. So – this week, we are talking about the Insufficient Notice Fee.
Insufficient Notice Fee Defined
What is an insufficient notice-fee? Simply put, it’s an acceleration of rent due to giving a notice that does not meet the necessary lease protocol. For example, Mills Properties requires a 60-day notice before move-out.
Budget Strategy
The Insufficient Notice Fee is a line item that you can budget based on T-12 (Trailing 12 months) information. The frequency is random, so there is a real chance that you could estimate for four based on your trailing information and end up with two or six. You will likely never be precise with this number. In the same respect, you will probably never be too far off.
It’s short and sweet this week. And it’s hot in #STL.
Your trying to keep cool in the 100+ temps multifamily manic,
M
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Apartment Lease Termination Fees
It’s time for another installment of our series on apartment budgeting. Today we are tackling the top of apartment lease termination fees.
Lease Termination Fees Defined
What are lease termination fees? The fee is applied if a current resident decides to break their existing lease contract prior to the lease end date. I have seen the fee vary in amounts – some as low as one months rent and others as high and two and one half times the amount of the monthly rent.
Budget Strategy
The apartment lease termination fee is a line item that you can simply use history to forecast forward. If you collected three of these fees last year, it is fair to say that you might do the same in the coming year. Or, if you have more history to pull from then do so. If you have three to five years of history, go back and consider the number of fees you collected over that time and simply average it out.
Once you have determined the number you have collected, space them out over the course of the year. Feel free to pick your months at random as there is no absolute way to predict when someone might need to break their lease.
Charge and Beware
This is likely the second most contested apartment related fee standing close behind late fees. A quick search yielded more than a few Q&A sites that advised everything from – pay it to challenge it.
The fee is perfect legal and it is agreed to at the time of the lease signing so feel compelled to stand your ground.
Your lovin’ other income multifamily manic,
M
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Simple Timeline
I heard a story this week (it was really a rant) about a broken system. The system existed between a project management team and an accounting team. As I listened (from a third-party removed perspective), it became clear to me that there was a fair amount of pre-work to include simple timelines did not exist.
Timelines
Simple maps that memorialize the steps between inception and conclusion. Simple steps put down on paper that capture the essence of letting out a contract for work to be done and the follow through to completion and payment for that work.
In the absence of a simple timeline you get chaos. You get the finger-pointing. You get he said and she said and they said and we all said – time-sucks. It’s exhausting and it usually involves the highest of pay grades to solve.
Creating an Apartment Project Timeline
1. Budget
2. Bid work (even though you have a budget, do the bid work)
3. Make sure the money is there (remember your apartment community budget was written months ago – in some cases many months ago). If the property is not performing to budget – the project may need to be put on a shelf.
*Item of note – don’t skip #3, it is where 99% of the problems can be traced back to
4. Put together a simple vendor list – who is working on the job, telephone number, lead (accounting contact), roughly what they are to be paid and when
5. Host a project launch meeting (in person if possible, by phone if not). Invite the property manager, maintenance supervisor, every vendor involved and your accountant
6. Give a weekly check-in update (via email or by phone whereby the above team calls in)
7. Wrap it up – tie up the loose ends and deliver the product
8. Host a post-mortem for every project no matter the scope. This is where you create excellence. Set the stage for an unadulterated conversation and tear apart the good the bad and the ugly of the project. Have your simple timeline laying in front of everyone and up on a computer screen for all to see. Have it set in an edit mode and change it (for the good) right there on the spot.
No system is perfect but every system should be evolving at all times.
Your counting on simple timelines all the time multifamily manic,
M