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Updated 2 months ago on . Most recent reply

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James Masotti
  • Rental Property Investor
  • Washington Township, NJ
976
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Project management software - how do you manage your projects?

James Masotti
  • Rental Property Investor
  • Washington Township, NJ
Posted

As things with real estate are starting to pick up for me I'm now getting to a position where I could feasibly have more than one project running at a time and am trying to look at options for how best to keep these straight and on top of all the deadlines. The obvious answer to me is a free web based project management tool like Asana, Trello, or Freedcamp (there are many more I'm just getting started looking). However I also acknowledge there may be other options available out there.

I'm curious how others who have scaled kept track of their time lines and contractors once they had 2 or 3 projects going at once. Did you use project management software? Excel template? Keep it in your head? When did you change from your initial project management tool for 2-3 properties to something more sophisticated for managing 4-10 projects at once.

Greatly appreciate everyone's thoughts and contributions!

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Bill Carovano
  • Tampa, FL
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Bill Carovano
  • Tampa, FL
Replied

@James Masotti - Personally I think Podio is a very robust Project Management tool--among the best I've seen and I've tried lots of them over the years.  Here's how I see the strengths of Podio:

- it does CRM, Project Management, collaboration, and communications--all in the same system.  If you use Podio as it's designed to be used, it will streamline every thing you do--from managing leads, managing projects, reducing your internal email count, to making your internal communications more efficient because conversations (which otherwise might happen in email) happen "in context" -- of the client record in your CRM, the project, or whatever it is that you are discussing.  You won't have multiple systems--one for CRM, one for PM, another for collaboration.  Podio becomes the nervous system of your business.  

- Podio has excellent automated workflows. Rather than hire a VA, you can set up an automation. Example: I worked with one real estate investor who used to pay a VA to manually look up property comps. This was replaced by an automated Podio App for Zillow.  Rather than hire as many sales people to do follow ups--set up automated text messages, emails, letters, or postcards to be sent to your best prospects.

- Podio has really good integration with other services--like RightSignature for eSignature, Google Docs/DriveDropboxTwilio for SMS, Lob for physical mail--either for marketing or other workflows like invoicing, and a ton of other services.  Podio is extremely flexible and extensible.

All that being said, here's the big challenge with Podio:  when you first sign up for Podio, there's a demo workspace with apps, but it can still look like a "blank sheet of paper."  The time & effort to set it up can deter some people.  The Podio team at Citrix can you with this, and there are lots of third-party consultants like me to can help as well.  I always suggest some "quick wins" when I am working with new Podio user.  We build something of high value, like a lead management App in Podio to replace a spreadsheet, or an automated document merge/eSignature system for contracts or propsals. Over time you can build out more and more of the system.  Personally I think the time and effort pays off in the long run.

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