Northwest New Jersey’s housing market is sharply divided by price point. Entry-level homes sell in less than two weeks while properties priced between $600,000 and $900,000 linger on t...
What Breaks First When a Property Management Company Scales Too Fast


OneWall Communities’ Donicia Irizarry on why operational consistency is the first casualty of rapid growth – and how to prevent it from taking the whole portfolio down.
The multifamily management industry is in a consolidation moment. Distressed assets are flooding the market as lenders lose patience with extend-and-pretend strategies, and operators with strong balance sheets and institutional-level systems are absorbing portfolios at speed. But speed comes with a cost that doesn’t show up on the P&L until it’s too late.
“When you scale rapidly, your operations are the first things to suffer,” says Donicia Irizarry, Principal and Head of Property Operations at OneWall Communities. “And when your operations suffer, your properties start to operate independently. Then it becomes very difficult to monitor performance because it becomes so unpredictable.”
The Small-Company Trap
Irizarry, who holds CAPS, CAM, and CALP designations and is a CPM candidate, has watched this pattern repeat across the industry. When a management company is small, institutional knowledge lives inside individuals. The regional manager knows every quirk of the portfolio. The senior community manager carries the playbook in their head. It works – until the portfolio doubles and those individuals can no longer hold it all together.
“All of that information is in their mind,” she explains. “They know how to do it because they fixed it before. They know the one, two, three of what needs to happen. But as you grow and scale, you need systems in place that take the thinking and the processes out of the people so it becomes part of your operational identity.”
When Each Property Becomes Its Own Island
The failure mode is predictable. Without standardized systems, each property begins operating independently. One community manager runs collections one way; another uses a completely different process. Maintenance workflows vary by site. Reporting becomes inconsistent, which means leadership is making portfolio-level decisions based on data that doesn’t compare cleanly across assets.
For investors evaluating 3rd party management partners, this is where due diligence often falls short. The question isn’t just “how many units do you manage?” It’s “how standardized are your operations across every one of those units?”
Building the System Before You Need It
OneWall Communities’ approach has been to build operational infrastructure that any new team member can step into and execute from day one. Irizarry has led the development of the firm’s learning management system and training frameworks from scratch, designed so that, as she puts it, “anyone can fall in place within the given system, and know exactly what to do.”
That includes configuring property management software to reflect standardized processes rather than leaving setup decisions to individual site teams. The software enforces the workflow; the workflow doesn’t depend on any one person remembering it.
The Investor Takeaway
Growth in 3rd party management is healthy. But the operators who will emerge from this cycle with defensible market positions are the ones who solved the consistency problem before it became a crisis. In a market full of portfolio acquisitions and management transitions, the ability to onboard a distressed asset and immediately plug it into a functioning operational system isn’t a feature. It’s the product.
Property management is complex, and the best solutions come from shared incentives. Whether you’re exploring new approaches or facing specific challenges, we’re here to talk. Visit us at onewallcommunities.com or call us at (646) 596-7068.
This article was sourced from a live expert interview.
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