Hello everyone, Im going to try and build new business in apartment painting but I wanted to know where to find leads or If I should just go to the apartment manager and sale my services. Also do you know if apartment companies usually already have an account with the painting stores? Or should I provide the paint and get reimbursed?
I do them exclusively, but under a little different circumstances than most. I have a current thread going on that now. Here is how most apartments work, don't want to bore you, but it keys the door to getting in to doing them:
Beginning there are the owners. These investors really want nothing more than a quarterly P&L and a bank deposit. The last thing they want is to ever talk to a tenant. Then comes the property management people. The property management hires a couple (if possible). The woman normally does the office, the guy does the mowing, maintenance, and painting. Sometimes, they even have a tenant living there that has nothing else to do so they do the painting. It works however way it can.
Usually the on site people get a free apartment and $7.25 an hour for whatever jobs they do.
In my case I am the property manager over more than one complex. The property manager has contracting authority. I have a special owner who wants his property in outstanding condition, so he is willing to pay professional wages. That is how I can earn lots of money doing the painting. I contract myself to do it.
Sometimes the property management cannot get a person to do painting. To them it is not just called painting, but it is called a "turn-around". This includes full cleaning and painting and make ready to rent. Most on site people make about $200.00 on one of these jobs.
Now to you: If you can come in and meet the "property manager" by also visiting the "on site manager", you could offer painting the apartments. The price would have to be attractive enough to have the property manager shift from his "whoevers" to you. Can you do them the next day? Can you do them in one day? Can you do them well and cheap at the same time? Or would you even want to?
Also depends on the complex funding. Maybe it is a Section 515 RD, RA, or Section 8 HUD. The budgets on these rental assistance properties do not allow for any kind of professional wages repaints. you might trade cheaper work for LOTS of work. You got to be available the last week of the month and the first week of the next. A good thing to know is that under HUD and some others, the landlord can slide the move in dates forward a little to give some room, and draw credit back to the first of the month. This allows for possibly another paint before the 5th of the month. All depends on how clever the management company is. Some managements have a rather cut throat attitude, while some really try hard.
I don't want to discourage you in the least. This can be good quick money. I say it just depends on who you can get to work for in the business. I really hope this long boring story will shed light.