General Landlording & Rental Properties
Market News & Data
General Info
Real Estate Strategies
![](http://bpimg.biggerpockets.com/assets/forums/sponsors/hospitable-deef083b895516ce26951b0ca48cf8f170861d742d4a4cb6cf5d19396b5eaac6.png)
Landlording & Rental Properties
Real Estate Professionals
Financial, Tax, & Legal
![](http://bpimg.biggerpockets.com/assets/forums/sponsors/equity_trust-2bcce80d03411a9e99a3cbcf4201c034562e18a3fc6eecd3fd22ecd5350c3aa5.avif)
![](http://bpimg.biggerpockets.com/assets/forums/sponsors/equity_1031_exchange-96bbcda3f8ad2d724c0ac759709c7e295979badd52e428240d6eaad5c8eff385.avif)
Real Estate Classifieds
Reviews & Feedback
Updated over 11 years ago on . Most recent reply
![Jerome Kaidor's profile image](https://bpimg.biggerpockets.com/no_overlay/uploads/social_user/user_avatar/146999/1694581213-avatar-jerryk1234.jpg?twic=v1/output=image/cover=128x128&v=2)
Putting it on Autopilot
Hi all,
Recent events in my life have caused me to want to spend less time on the day to day administration of my properties. Simply - we just gave birth to twins. A boy and a girl.
I do all the backoffice work for my 81 units. Mostly paying bills, checking prospective tenants, handling phone calls from prospectives. OH, and let's not forget the bookkeeping.
I have started putting certain things on autopay - garbage bills, insurance premiums, phone bills. These are all pretty steady bills, that don't change much. I put them on my business credit card, and pay the thing off in full every month. That way, I don't have to worry about exactly when there's money in business checking. I try not to run excessive float. It's quicker to pay one bill than to pay 10.
I have NOT put the power bills on autopay, because that can be VERY variable, and if there's a nasty surprise, I'd like to hear about it up front instead of having money just sucked out of my account.
One of the accounts wanted a $1.47 "convenience" fee for the autopay. I ponied up without hesitation. The amount of "me" time spent organizing a bill and cutting a check is worth a lot more than $1.47.
On the bookkeeping front, I have written custom web software for the tenant ledgers, and have pushed that task down to the onsite staff. That is saving me a lot of time, and they are doing a better job of it than I ever did.
One time consuming chore is doing the payroll. I elaborately divvy every dime into the Schedule E categories - repairs, maintenance, cleaning etc etc. My software generates work orders with unique numbers, staff fills them out with their hours, and what they did, and then they fax me a pile of the things and I enter everthing into the database. For tasks that are not "interesting" from a property improvement point of view, like daily sweeping of the premises, cleaning the laundry room, doing management tasks - I use timesheets. Once it's all faxed in, I enter all the workorders into my web database, and slice and dice it all with a combination of Quicken, spreadsheets, and Surepayroll. Gotta be a way I can get people to enter their own workorders and timesheets.
I may be putting too much precision into my tracking. Who really cares whether Bob's 20 hours are maintenance or repair? Not the IRS, I think. I could assign ALL of bob's hours to repair, and all of Judy's to cleaning. Save a lot of time that way. Nahhh... I'm way too OCD to get that sloppy.
One thing I probably cannot sluff off without hiring and training someone specific - is the marketing of apartments and checking out prospective tenants. Both of these are absolutely vital to my operation, and if somebody screws it up, I'm toast.
I am completing a module that will allow me to send letters to the tenants with very little work. A web form to type in the from address, to address, salutation ( all of this filled in with sensible defaults ) and body of the letter - which is fed to a program that converts it into a language called "Latex" ( a typesetting system invented by Donald Knuth for doing beautiful math books ), and a utility converts it into a PDF that gets sent to the complex. To make it even easier, I am investigating a service called postalmethods.com: these guys provide a web API that will print your letter, slap it into an envelope, and physically mail it from Texas. It costs about a buck a letter, including postage.
- JerryK