Apartment Manager Salary |
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CUNFUCIUS I AM in SAN FRANCISCO, California 38 months ago |
HEY 1936, 56 UNITS IS ALOT OF WORK. MAKE SURE YOUR VACANT UNITS ARE READY TO GO AND SHOW YOUR BEST ONES FIRST. |
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CUNFUCIUS I AM in SAN FRANCISCO, California 38 months ago |
1936 in Los Angeles, California said: I am working 7 Days a week as Apartment Manager for 56 unit. In this economy I have vacancy THE 2BD IS GOOD BUT I COULD NOT LIVE OFF ONLY 400 IN MY OPINION I WOULD TRY MY BEST TO GET THAT 20% RENTED AND ASK FOR A RAISE I HAVE 64 UNITS A 1BD AND 2000 |
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Get outta the basement in Yorktown Heights, New York 37 months ago |
Hey- I'm a building super in Yorktown Heights, NY. I have 90 Unit and a 2 bedroom. I belong to the biggest service employee union Local 32 BJ. Maybe you guys out there should organize a union. I work 40 hrs. Overtime after 40hr. 5 weeks paid vacation after 23 years of service, 15 paid holidays and 10 sick/personal days. Plus 2 days off a week. It's time to stop living in the dark ages, organize. Louie |
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CUNFUCIUS I AM in SAN FRANCISCO, California 37 months ago |
HEY - SUPER DO YOU GET A SALARY...??? |
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CUNFUCIUS I AM in SAN FRANCISCO, California 37 months ago |
Get outta the basement in Yorktown Heights, New York said: Hey- I'm a building super in Yorktown Heights, NY. I have 90 Unit and a 2 bedroom. I belong to the biggest service employee union Local 32 BJ. Maybe you guys out there should organize a union. I work 40 hrs. Overtime after 40hr. 5 weeks paid vacation after 23 years of service, 15 paid holidays and 10 sick/personal days. Plus 2 days off a week. It's time to stop living in the dark ages, organize. Louie HOW DO THEY WORK OUT YOUR PAY...??? SOUNDS LIKE YOU ARE HOURLY IF OVERTIME IS ADDED. |
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slave 2newowner in Hayward, California 30 months ago |
I finally found an excellent attorney that is an expert in this field..go to mossmgrlaw.com/index.htm tell him Karen sent you :-) |
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boojulimick in San Diego, California 30 months ago |
Hi there everybody,
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boojulimick in San Diego, California 30 months ago |
CUNFUCIUS I AM in SAN FRANCISCO, California said: THE 2BD IS GOOD BUT I COULD NOT LIVE OFF ONLY 400 IN MY OPINION I WOULD TRY MY BEST TO GET THAT 20% RENTED AND ASK FOR A RAISE I HAVE 64 UNITS A 1BD AND 2000 do you have to clean property, vacant apts and Maintenance, too?
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T in Modesto, California 30 months ago |
It all depends on the contract that the owner has with their manager. If I get fired, I'm supposed to vacate in 3 days.... You can only do what you can do tho, just like when you evict a tenant, some times it takes more time than you want it too. Working where you live is hard... if you lose your job, you lose your home, so you have to stay on your toes. |
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T in Modesto, California 30 months ago |
You are supposed to be available 24/7, but you can make that work for you. Your tenants will get used to what hours you want to keep and will learn to respect your wknds if you train them to do that. But if there is an emergency maintenance thing.... well, yep, you need to be available to do it. There's a big difference in opinion as to what a maintenance emergency is tho, so school your tenants. If it's something that can wait till Monday, then so be it. A clogged sink is not an emergency, a sparking light switch is. |
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boojulimick in San Diego, California 30 months ago |
oh wow 3 days? that's not cool at all! but I suppose it's a job , if you get fired from your office job you have to leave that same day! |
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boojulimick in San Diego, California 30 months ago |
great advise , this will be my first Onsite manager position. Thank you very much. |
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A.R in Scottsdale, Arizona 29 months ago |
CUNFUCIUS I AM in SAN FRANCISCO, California said: HEY 1936, 56 UNITS IS ALOT OF WORK. MAKE SURE YOUR VACANT UNITS ARE READY TO GO AND SHOW YOUR BEST ONES FIRST. I have been in the industry for 13 years. My first community was 36 units. I also had to put in long hours, sometimes I had to turn and maintenance apartments. I had a free apartment and a $500.00 monthly salary. It sounds you need to put your pay increase in writing. The more documentation you have to show your dedication, the better your chances are. There are many reasons as to why apartments sit vacant. Here are some tips. 1. A sparkling bucket is good to have. Walk your vacants on a regular basis and make sure they smell inviting.
Lastly, I'm not saying your not doing your job. However, that many hours for a small property seems like there's more missing. Could it be organization or could it be priorities from all parties. I would recommend that you give yourself a daily checklist and start with your vacants. This will help you shine and it will also work in your defense if you document all traffic and what you have done so they don't think you're not working. If you get the community at 95% which is the NOI (Net Operating Income) you are more than likely to get a yes for your raise. Wish you all the best and good luck. |
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jacob in Lawrenceville, Georgia 29 months ago |
Hey there everyone. I'm looking into getting to something more stable like apartment property management. I obtain a real estate license but is it a necessary requirement for such a position? How do the work hours look? Is it possible to aslo complete college at night with such a job? What is the starting salary in today's market for biginners? and how does training work? Any help is appreciated, thanks |
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Charlie in Mountain View, California 29 months ago |
What exactly are you asking, Jacob? Becoming an live-in apartment manager or getting into running a property management company? |
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Charlie Wade in Bay Area, California 29 months ago |
T in Modesto, California said: You are supposed to be available 24/7, but you can make that work for you. Your tenants will get used to what hours you want to keep and will learn to respect your wknds if you train them to do that. But if there is an emergency maintenance thing.... well, yep, you need to be available to do it. There's a big difference in opinion as to what a maintenance emergency is tho, so school your tenants. If it's something that can wait till Monday, then so be it. A clogged sink is not an emergency, a sparking light switch is. Exactly. Not everything is an emergency or needs to be attended to immediately. Don't be afraid to tell tenants 'no' when it is appropriate. Also, learn to screen your calls. |
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Charlie Wade in Bay Area, California 29 months ago |
I have found that screening calls from tenants works wonders. If their call warrants an immediate return call, then I do it. But if not, then I call them back when it is convenient for me. I absolutely do not allow tenants to call my cell phone or text message me since they are told to call only one other number for all issues (including emergencies) or to email me. Limiting the number of ways tenants can communicate with you to just one phone number and one email address will help keep your sanity. (Tip: Google Voice will allow you to listen in on voicemails being left as they are being left. You can also jump in on voicemails as they are being left and talk with the caller, which is convenient when you realize that it is an urgent call.) I return non-urgent tenant calls at only two times a day: just before lunch and in the evening after dinner and that's it. It's a lot more efficient to do this than to be making calls all day long. Same goes for all tenant emails (since they by definition are not urgent, otherwise they'd be calling). |
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ron in Flint, Michigan 11 months ago |
boojulimick in San Diego, California said: Hi there everybody, how much are they paying u to run that |
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Amelia in Saint Louis, Missouri 8 months ago |
if you are an apartment manager -- and you are fired do you have 7 days to vacate? if you quite, do they let you stay on and pay the normal rent? |
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kimscharms55 in Sonora, California 16 days ago |
I am up for a position as a live in manager for an apartment complex in Tracy,Ca . What is the salary one makes for this position?.The duties as I understand it is light maintenance an collecting rent . The complex is quite large . |
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CUNFUCIUS I AM in Foster City, California 14 days ago |
if its a large complex, and you will be there full time you should make as much as any other person with a regular job does or better! |
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