Los Angeles

  HOA Management    

J & N REALTY, INC.

Time-Honored Quality & Commitment Since 1993

- Primus Inter Pares -  

 

           ~ first among equals 

 

 

Every HOA should have strategic planning. What does that mean, and what will be happening? Simply stated, strategic planning is a process Boards use to determine where the association is going and how it is going to get there. It includes these steps:

Assessing your current position. You will identify your strengths, weaknesses, opportunities, and threats. Knowing where you are now will help get you where you want to be in the future.

Identifying your purpose. This will become your “mission statement.” For example, “Our association exists to ensure the highest possible quality of life for all residents.”

Setting goals that identify what you need to achieve the mission. Your goals will be specific and measurable, and will provide an indication of how you are doing as you progress.

Deciding how to meet your goals. You may have to allocate resources, create committees, or undertake other tasks to achieve your goals.

Developing an action plan. Each step will require a specific action plan. For example, if a committee is needed, who will serve, exactly what tasks will be assigned, and when will the results be needed?

Monitoring and updating our plan. You will review the strategic plan regularly. . If you learn that your earlier ideas and goals were shortsighted or uninformed, you will update accordingly.

J & N Realty, Inc. -- real estate, property, planned unit development (PUD), townhouse, townhome, hoa, condo, condominium, homeowner association, common interest development (CID)management in Los Angeles

● PROPERTY MANAGEMENT
● CONDOMINIUM ADMINISTRATION
● HOA MANAGEMENT PROGRAM
● HOMEOWNERS ASSOCIATION SERVICES
● HOA FINANCIAL OPERATIONS
● PLANNED UNIT DEVELOPMENTS
● COMMON INTEREST DEVELOPMENTS
● HOA MAINTENANCE OPERATIONS
● HOA QUALITY OF SERVICE
● - Clarifying the Manager’s Role
● - Checklist for Identifying Deficient Management
● - Small Claims Court Actions
● - Compare Your Rent
● - Model Code of Ethics for Homeowners Association Board Members

It is the fate of the Property Manager to toil at the lower employments of life; to be rather driven by the fear of evil than attracted by the prospect of good; to be exposed to censure without hope of praise; to be disgraced by miscarriage or punished by neglect, where success would have been without applause and diligence without reward. While others may aspire to praise, the Property Manager can only hope to escape reproach, and even this negative recompense has yet been granted to very few.





 

 

 

 

HOA Board Members may request log-in information to our Members Only area, which is packed with lots of very unseful information cannot be found anywhere else on the web
 

As Property Managers, we all have learned primarily

through our mistakes and pursuits of false assumptions

rather than by our exposure to fountains of wisdom and 

knowledge.