The 5 P's of Property Management book cover

The Book

The 5 P's of Property Management

A Practical Primer for Managing Residential Properties

Ken Doble & Courtney Winters · 176 pages · 4.8 ★ on Amazon

The playbook I wish I'd had when I first started buying and running properties of my own. It is written for owners and investors, the people whose capital is in the deal, who need to know what is actually happening at a property instead of what the monthly report claims.

Why read it

Close the gap between the office and the property

Courtney Winters and I wrote this after a combined forty years of managing multifamily apartments, because the same thing kept happening. What the corporate office believes is happening at a property and what is actually happening on site are two different things, and the gap between them is where the money leaks.

The book adapts the 4 P's of marketing into a five-part framework for property management, People, Pricing, Product, Promotion, and Process, and turns it into an inspection process you can run. Armed with the checklists inside, you can walk any property and quickly tell what is working, what needs improvement, who needs help, and who deserves congratulations. It is written first for the owner and the investor who want the truth about an asset they are responsible for, and it hands the on-site team the same standard to be measured against.

The framework

The five P's

People
The on-site team and how it presents, responds, and performs. Nine out of ten problems on a property trace back here first.
Pricing
Capturing and protecting revenue. The leasing, renewal, and concession math that decides what the asset actually earns.
Product
The physical asset a prospect and resident actually see and use, from the curb to the model to the vacant unit.
Promotion
Marketing, leasing, and the reputation that keeps the building full.
Process
The systems and controls that keep all of it running when no one is watching.
Resources

The 5 P's Operational Audit

The single most important habit in this business is the audit, and its importance cannot be overstated. This is the working template my team uses to do exactly what the book describes: walk a property every quarter and surface the gap between what we were told and what is real.

It walks every vacant unit, pulls the last five move-ins and five renewals, reconciles rent, deposit, and concessions to the system of record, and grades each item Pass, Needs Attention, or Unacceptable. A scorecard rolls it all up into an overall competency percentage. The rule is simple: show me, do not tell me.

Open it, make your own copy, and adapt it to your standard in Google Sheets or Excel. The five P's are the spine. The items are yours to own.