Tenant/Resident Polls & Surveys
There are a lot of reasons why surveying your tenants or residents is a great idea. The end dollar value of tapping their minds, sentiment and opinions could be in the tens of thousands of dollars to your company.
Spending time on a plan for leveraging your new surveying solution in ManageCasa is a good investment. Regardless of how many doors or residents you manage, surveys are a key tenant management technique. Like anything worthwhile, it takes a little skill.
Surveys or polls are an excellent way to discover attitudes and opinions about their rental unit, building, community and neighborhood, and lifestyle, and get feedback to help you adjust plans and ready for the future. Remember the adage — you manage people, not real estate.
Getting Your Survey Set Up Properly
Yes, it’s called a tenant satisfaction survey, yet you’ll learn more than just their level of satisfaction (which you probably already know). Alternatively, you might call it a property management improvement report, or a tenant experience survey to avoid polarizing their emotions and tainting the results.
Your stated purpose and word usage will affect how they feel about it and whether they’ll participate.
A Great Business Intelligence Tool
The survey can be a key business intelligence tool if it’s thought through thoroughly. It can help identify units that need immediate inspection or potential revenue-eating future vacancies.
Your Poll/Survey Strategy
The survey strategy should ensure you do reach them because after all they’re busy and perhaps disinterested. The right email subject, at the right time of day, and ready and easy to click is important. Otherwise, you’ll have few respondents.
Also, you’ll need to quickly get them relaxed and motivated to answer. This necessitates publishing blog posts and sending messages to them before you try to poll them. Choose topics calmly and allude to emotional topics/matters that will get them emotionally primed but not agitated. After reading, they’ll visualize these events/issues and this will generate emotions. Those unresolved emotions are what will drive their participation in your poll later.
You’ll want to publish and message in a way that re-establishes a sense of trust. Speak of projects you completed, actions taken and goodwill achieved. Do it without boasting or promoting. Talk about it as a note about something that happened so that it fits and doesn’t look contrived.
It’ll be easier if they trust you and feel valued. If there’s some alienation between your management office and them, you’ll need to ensure your request gives them hope of a better relationship — „please share your thoughts on your rental and how we’re doing to make it as good as possible.“
Your questions should make them feel at ease and that you sincerely want to hear their real thoughts.
When you’re taking on a new landlord portfolio or multifamily building, you’ll need to build trust anew.
The tough part of creating tenant satisfaction surveys is knowing what information you need to collect. And then to write questions that capture that info.
Let’s start with this list of info goals:
- their level of contentment during the full year (don’t ask for their current mood)
- generally, what they don’t like and what’s wrong with their rental unit
- their thoughts on the community, rules, bylaws, architectural hindrances
- what facilities or mechanical features need maintenance
- how they feel about their neighbors and any trouble experienced
- what they do like and what they hope for in their rental or community
- do they like using your software’s tenant portal and your responsiveness?
- what are their disappointments from first rental ad awareness to current time?
- how they felt about the leasing manager?
- was the rental process okay?
- do they feel their rental unit is worth the money and where would they rather live?
- what new amenities or services might be desirable to them?
- do they feel safe and what would they like to see improved?
- how can the online service platform be better?
Designing Great Questions
Professional surveyors hire psychologists to ask indirect type questions so the subject doesn’t know what’s really being asked. Kind of a sneaky approach you may not need to follow. As long as the tenant knows you’re sincere and are doing the best with what you have, they won’t feel resentment. Some will resent manipulative questions.
Your questions however, must get the answers you’re looking for. That’s why direct questions are often more effective.
Multiple Choice Questions:
Multiple-choice questions can create very precise answers. For example:
Question: Were maintenance requests and work orders completed in a timely manner?
- Strongly Agree
- Agree
- Neutral
- Disagree
- Strongly Disagree
Open Ended Questions:
Open Ended questions allow the tenant to freely discuss important issues and events and provide more info about their feelings and attitudes (how they express themselves). Only use these sparingly, because most tenants will not spend the time to answer them.
Question: Please explain any issues before and after your last maintenance was completed.
Yes or No Questions:
These force the tenant to make a decision one way or the other about an issue or group.
Question: Do you feel the property management team are doing a good job?
Post Survey Analysis
After you’ve determined what your property management pain points are, and what to ask your tenants, you can set your list of top questions. You’ll need to read and edit many times for coherence and tone. And if it sounds too obvious, nitpicking, or not useful enough for the tenant, they may not participate.
You may be able to conduct your survey via your online property management software. If not, do the survey via email or SurveyMonkey. or Sogosurvey. Very neat and tidy and users can answer them directly on their smartphones.
You’re asking your tenants for their valuable time, so an incentive can ensure more of them are motivated to make the effort. Offering a coffee gift card upon completing the full survey is a great, immediate inducement. The memory of the gift carries on to later polls and requests for compliance.
Each year you conduct the survey, you’ll see any important changes in tenant sentiment and issues. These macro figures tell a lot about your management success and their changing preferences. The details will help you pinpoint issues and resolve them. That should push your tenant sentiment index much higher.
Surveys are tools to get more done. Try one and see what you learn. The outcome might be far better than your realize now.
Try ManageCasa and discover how property management software creates solid business value.
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