You can rule out 50 percentage of the property management software on the market if you focus first on what you ‘really’ are looking for. The two major mistakes lots of people make is (1) buying software that is overkill for their needs or (2) going for the cheapest alternative and getting software that has defects and doesn’t fit their need. Let’s look at the differences:
Overkill: do you need software to manage your properties and your office too? Let your property management software do what it does best- manage property. For your office accounting and payroll, there are plenty of inexpensive products that are perfectly that are perfectly good for both large and small businesses.
However, if you use accounting software for your office expenses, you may want your rental property software to export your bank deposits and checks to your office management software. Other features that add to cost that you not need include budgeting, double- entry accounting, asset and liability accounting, and tenant background checking. Some features, such as tenant background checking are really done by well-know internet companies, but the software vendor just buys the service first, and marks up the cost to you.
The prices for property management software can range from $100 to $10,000 (or more), so don?t buy more than you need. However, if you do buy a version that supports a smaller number of rental units, make sure that you can easily upgrade to the larger version at a reasonable cost (hopefully the different in cost between that smaller and larger version) and won?t be required to re- enter any of your precious information again.
Underkill: Anybody with some web software can make an impressive looking web locate. Nevertheless underneath may be a model of jettison software. Look at the result, make positive you can run an inclusive sample, and better yet a ‘tryout form’ that allows you to ‘try before you buy’. Make certain the software can do the basic equipment you want: (1) claim a separate ledger for each Tenant and each Owner (2) write edge checks and deposits (3) claim a vendor profile (4) automatically marker rent, management fees, and belatedly fees (4) easily revise your information.
Make sure the software will handle a mixture of single family homes, multifamily homes, condos, and commercial without having to buy extra modules. Look for the ability to purchase add-ons, such as work order modules, online rent payment modules, or tax related modules -? you may need them in the future as your business grows. Be sure to check the cost!
A few things may not be serious in your property management software, but are great to have. These are features, such as a reminder system to maintain track of appointments, log conversations and connections with your tenants, and to pop up a list of tenants and owners that owe you money. Look for the ability of the software to move your tenant detail to an inactive file, so that you can later look up your tenant info for credit references and to log back payments. Look for features such as the ability to automatically update rent amounts, automatically post amounts to every ledger, and to update your account names. Talking of account names, you might want to find software that uses ‘real’ names for your accounts like ‘Rent Received’, instead of an account number, such as ’300021 – Rent Received’.