Triple Win Property Management Blog | Second Nature

My Ideal Meeting Cadence for Property Management Companies

Written by Tony Cline | Apr 1, 2025 1:30:00 PM

Tony Cline has over 20 years of experience in property management. After purchasing a real estate and property management brokerage in Denver, Colorado, he spent more than two decades as managing broker. Today he's focused full time on his work as a Property Management Success Coach. Tony is a Second Nature Triple Win Mentor.

One of the most popular frameworks in property management right now is EOS, the Entrepreneurial Operating System. EOS is a system that helps organizations increase discipline and accountability through several tools, including a very specific meeting cadence.

Now, to officially implement EOS, you have to be a licensed implementor and go through specific training. What I’m advocating is something of an EOS-light approach. I’m not a licensed implementor, and the meeting cadence I’m going to outline for property managers has been adapted, but it does have some roots in EOS.

I’m also not a purist. I don’t believe that you have to do everything exactly by the book to be successful. I’d advocate looking at this framework critically, putting it into practice, seeing what works for your organization and what doesn’t, and adapting.

Setting yourself up for success

The first thing to know about implementing a new property management meeting cadence is that, without a clear mission, vision, and values, this all means nothing. I’ve written before about how policy should follow your mission and values, and this is no different. So if you don’t have those things nailed down in your organization, that’s a better place to start.

The second thing to know is that this is going to be a little bit uncomfortable. There will be awkward moments along the way as your team gets used to a new way of doing things. You’ll need to get comfortable being uncomfortable. In my mind, the number one determination of whether this plan will be successful is whether the owner of the company has the discipline to see implementation through, even when things get weird. And they will get a little weird.

Now, let’s walk through the meeting cadence that I recommend to my clients at Property Management Success, and what each meeting consists of.

Daily huddle meeting

The first big piece of the meeting cadence is the daily huddle, which you may also know as a standup. The daily meeting, which I recommend scheduling at the beginning of each day, is intended to be short and to the point. We’re not all going to get comfy in a meeting room for 30 or 60 minutes with our laptops and our breakfast.

Daily huddles should hit a couple of key points:

  1. What do we need to know right now to execute today? This might include items that are blocked by other teammates, things that are holding up other people’s work, or anticipated challenges.
  2. What are the urgent items that need to be addressed? Are there fires that need to be put out? What needs to be done by the end of the day to keep everything on track?

I find daily huddles valuable not just for the work that gets addressed, but also the team building element. It brings the team together everyday and gets them in the mindset of working as one. This is especially important when you have remote team members who may not see the rest of the team all day.

Finally, I always wrap up the meeting with one question, and this is where things can start to get uncomfortable. Ask the team, “What’s one example of our core values in action that you’ve seen since we last met?”

This can be awkward to answer, but you just have to embrace the process and wait it out. Eventually someone will share an honest, vulnerable story, which will continue building up the importance of core values to the team. And I promise, once you get into a routine, this gets easier.

Weekly meeting

Next up is the weekly team meeting. In the official EOS workbook, this is known as the L10. Weekly meetings should typically be sixty to ninety minutes, and focused on the overall performance and progress of the team.

KPIs and scorecards

One of the most important elements of your weekly meeting is going through your key performance indicators and metrics. Everyone on the team should take their turn to report out their numbers and whether they’ve hit them. This gives leadership and opportunity to flag metrics that are consistently being missed, or KPIs that might need to be altered.

Something to keep in mind is that KPIs need to be actionable. That means that if your team didn’t hit it this week, you can develop a clear plan on how to hit it next week. Those actions should be decided in the weekly meeting.

Quarterly rocks

Your quarterly rocks are the bigger projects that you have going on, which may take anywhere from a few of weeks up to a whole quarter.

Rocks are important because they keep your team focused. The importance isn’t just what’s on them, but also what’s not on them. If you have too many rocks, nothing will get done, and if you don’t have enough, you’ll start picking up additional projects and stretching yourself too thin.

As the name suggests, rocks are set quarterly during planning meetings.

Here are some examples of what rocks might look like for a mid-sized property management company:

  • Implementing a new software tool
  • Instituting a new pricing structure
  • Building out a knowledge base
  • Setting up a Resident Benefits Package
  • Testing out a new marketing strategy
  • Hiring for a new role on the team
  • Rolling out a new management agreement
  • Realigning team responsibilities or structure

These are all projects that are going to take more than just a week, but are important long-term goals for the company and need to be checked in on regularly. Each week, you should be looking at whether your rocks are on track or off track. If things are off track, add them to the issues list and make sure to address it before the end of the meeting.

Finally, have another quick share on your company’s mission and vision. Ask the team, “what did we do that’s in alignment with these?” This is essential to building culture, because it helps build on wins. It gets the team used to winning together and inspires them to keep up the good work.

Quarterly planning meeting

One level up from your weekly meeting is quarterly planning. This one is pretty self-explanatory. Basically, your team should meet each quarter to evaluate the progress that’s been made, along with the work that needs to be done in the upcoming quarter.

Depending on how large your team is, you may or may not have all members attend. If your team is on the smaller side, everyone should be there. If the team is bigger, you may need to focus on leadership and management.

The first major part of quarterly planning is reviewing the previous quarter. This is an opportunity to remind the team of the good progress that’s already been made before turning to new projects. By focusing on the positive outcomes first, you can increase engagement from the team and build that continued sense of winning together. Look at your rocks from the past quarter and evaluate where you were most successful, as well as what adjustments you need to make.

From there, look forward. What are the next steps that you have to take? This is where you build your rocks for the next quarter. It’s helpful to have the full team present, especially team members who will directly own those rocks, because it helps get buy-in. People will be more invested in projects that they helped select and scope than if you just assign something to them.

Annual review

The last major meeting I recommend property managers add to their cadence is the annual review. This should include everything that you’d normally do in a quarterly planning meeting, plus some extras.

In addition to planning new rocks, you’re also planning the overall goals for the year. These can include new KPIs, growth metrics, and other performance indicators for the year.

This is also a great opportunity to reinforce your mission and vision. Focus on reminding people why they’re doing the work they’re doing and where the company aspires to get to. Reinforce the service—and quality of service—that you want to deliver.

Beware the pitfalls

Implementing a whole new meeting cadence like this isn’t easy. It can be especially difficult in an industry where everyone already has a lot going on and their schedules are stretched thin.

Focus on delivering value

One of my biggest pieces of advice is to make sure that you’re actually providing value in these meetings, and that you’re not meeting just to meet. If a meeting isn’t serving you, find out why and adjust accordingly. On top of that, think about the opportunity cost and wage cost of having everyone in a meeting. That time is expensive. If it’s not creating value, it shouldn’t be happening.

Get your KPIs right

A lot of companies I’ve seen have set up KPIs to say that they’re tracking KPIs. But in reality, they’re tracking the wrong things, or they’re tracking the right things the wrong way. If you’re meeting every week and reviewing KPIs, and you consistently find that you’re hitting them every time and blowing them out of the water, that may be a hint that you’re either setting your goals too low or you’re tracking busywork. On the flip side, if you’re consistently missing your KPIs, you may be setting sights too high.

Utilize milestones to stay on track

When you meet weekly to check the status of your quarterly rocks, make sure that you’re actually looking at whether things are on track or not. I’ve consistently seen teams say, week-in and week-out, that their rocks are on track. But then when the end of the quarter comes, suddenly the rock isn’t complete.

When you build your rocks in your quarterly planning sessions, build in milestones. Milestones help define what “on track” actually means, and will help give team members a sense of where they stand with major projects.

Final thoughts

I really like this meeting cadence. I’ve seen it work for a lot of property management companies. But there’s a reason I started out this article by saying that I’m not a purist.

A meeting for meeting’s sake is horrible. You shouldn’t be meeting just because it’s part of a framework. You can absolutely adjust this cadence to make sure that you’re using your time well.

And even if you do stick to this cadence, don’t feel like a 60 minute meeting has to be 60 minutes every week. If you finish early, great! Don’t keep people there for the full time if you’re not making progress. Don’t waste people’s time.

 

Interested in learning more about how to optimize your company processes? Join me and Melissa Gillispie for a Triple Win Live session on optimizing your company's KPIs.

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