Strata Groundhog Days: Wince, rinse and repeat

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Grounhog Day is a phrase made popular in a movie starring Bill Murray. But who wants to see a picture of him?

There’s a reason every new dawn in strata can seem like Groundhog Day; not a lot changes very much, very often. Friend of Flat Chat, Francesco Andreone of GoStrata asks what we can do about the endless cycle of merely wincing at predictable events, then rinsing and repeating until the next time.

THE STRATA MERRY GO ROUND

Strata building operations and management are basically a stream of repeating and predictable events and activities punctuated by the minor and major variations in those things and the occasional emergency event that needs handling.

So, why does almost everyone treat many strata building activities as if they’re happening for the first time ever: where they’re almost surprised that it happened or arose and needs to be handled?

After all, the following things are totally predictable for strata buildings.

  • That the electricity bill came in this quarter too and was for about the same amount as last quarter.
  • It’s almost guaranteed there’ll be a few reports of water leaks after a rainy weekend.
  • Strata owners have questions about their levies when they get their quarterly notices.
  • The annual general meeting happens every year [funnily enough] and usually at about the same time.
  • Some strata owners won’t pay their levies on time.
  • There are going to be day to day issues involving pets, smoke, noise, parking, etc.
  • Long term maintenance needs to be planned before it’s needed or due.

There’s also plenty more examples when you start looking.  And, if you look at a lot of strata buildings in a macro and high-level way, you’ll find many examples that apply across all or most strata buildings. 

So, it’s surprising to me that we haven’t seen much published data on repeating strata activities, research on the topic, or changes and innovations in strata operation strategies arising from this [obvious] insight about the repeating and common nature of strata activities. 

Instead, most changes and innovations in strata building operations occur as a result of strata law changes, major Court or Tribunal decisions [like Cooper’s Case], or crises [like combustible cladding, Covid 19, etc].

So, why are strata stakeholders on this strata merry go round and how can we get off?

POSSIBLE REASONS FOR THE STRATA MERRY GO ROUND

I believe the main reasons we see strata stakeholders caught up in repeating cycles of the same or similar activities in their strata building [individually], and, in larger groups of strata buildings [across strata manager portfolios or business organisations], are because no-one is taking a critical macro view of these things and because there a number of other factors that mitigate to prevent that happening.

I can’t say or do much about strata stakeholders’ lack of critical thinking, but some of the factors holding it back are as follows.

1.    Government isn’t interested and/or doesn’t understand

Whilst governments create the strata laws and operate the regulatory bodies for strata buildings and strata managers, they really don’t have a good understanding of strata buildings, strata owners and strata building operations.

You can see this in the many issues facing strata owners that are not addressed or poorly addressed like building defects, strata dispute handling, out of control compulsory managers, etc.

It’s also because governments have limited foci on strata buildings that are usually limited to:

  • a property development focus:  where strata buildings are one of the end products of the construction sector which they care about for economic and employment benefits, that interest is limited to facilitating strata development and those interests are usually driven by budgetary considerations and lobbying by interest groups,
  • a planning focus: where strata buildings simply fit into land planning and use policies that apply across their jurisdictions and are not differentiated from other property types, that interest being often driven by local and immediate matters rather than long term thinking and that is negatively affected by nimbyism, and
  • a consumer protection focus: where strata operations are measured against the negative impacts on strata owners and residents’ rights and experiences so that one-off problems achieve overly important status and collective strata building issues are secondary or subservient.

Plus, most governments [and opposition parties] don’t have detailed or considered policies about strata building issues at all.

2.   No [or limited] research and data

There’s no broad-based, reliable or readily available research or data about the kinds and frequency of strata building activities to look at or compare.

The best strata research so far in Australia has been focused on overall sector size and demographic data or building defects or climate change as I wrote about in the following articles.

But there isn’t any way to find out what strata buildings spend on different things, what they spend time on, and/or what decisions they make.

The number of strata owner contacts or queries to strata buildings and strata managers are not captured or analysed to see what’s going on for strata owners.  And, they can’t be accessed outside reviewing individual strata building records [if at all].

The approach taken in relation to strata operations by strata committees or strata managers is not recorded [outside of an individual strata building’s records] for comparison or re-use elsewhere.

And, no one is doing any research on this or collecting that data of which I’m aware.

So, even if I [or someone else] wanted to compare how thousands of strata buildings have handled water leaks into strata apartments to determine an optimal approach, it’s impossible.  And, for the reasons I’ve explain further below, there no incentive for anyone to do that either.

So, there’s no data, information or thinking to help strata stakeholders with strata operations.

3.   Strata buildings and strata managers are siloed

Strata sector stakeholders are generally isolated from each other, which prevents [or at least complicates] broader views, analyses and solutions as the following points demonstrate.

Firstly, each strata building operates on its own, independently of other strata buildings [including its neighbours] and acts according to the decisions of its unique set of strata owners and strata committee members.  What happens in other strata buildings appears irrelevant.  And, in many instances, strata buildings are proud of their uniqueness and jealously guard that independence.

Secondly, the managers of strata buildings are also focused on each strata building in connection with its issues and operations only.  Whether that’s the strata committee [which can only focus on their own strata building], the building manager who operates at individual strata building sites, or the strata manager who is individually contracted to that strata building, and, [as explained below] still treat each strata building separately despite having a portfolio of strata buildings.

Thirdly, strata managers and strata management businesses are almost universally organised so that their contracted strata buildings are separated into portfolios and allocated to individual strata managers [and their support teams] to manage.  Plus, customer relationships with individual strata managers [rather than the strata management business brand] is the predominant business growth and retention strategy.  So, each strata manager is permitted [and even encouraged] to operate in their own unique ways within the strata management business in relation to their portfolio of strata buildings [especially if they are effective in their roles]. 

Finally, each strata manager in a strata business guards or hides their particular management approach, style and techniques for managing strata buildings: whether they are good [to preserve their status and secrets], and/or if they are bad [to cover up their mistakes or failures]. So, there’s not much shared learning within strata businesses between strata managers.

And, these phenomena occur in both the smallest and the largest strata management businesses.

So, there’s no collective or shared approach by those who manage strata buildings over strata operations.

4.   Centralised, risk-managed and reactive processes

I’ve witnessed a shift in strata operations over the last 30 years from delegated decision making and action by strata executives, committees and managers to a centralised approach where decision making and action is deferred and left to all strata owners collectively in meetings.

Regulators have also progressively reduced the powers of strata committees and strata managers to make decisions for strata buildings; forcing those decision to strata owners’ meetings.

Strata committees and strata managers have become concerned about legal claims and legal actions over decisions they make that turn out to be wrong, that receive owner complaints, or cost a lot of money.  So, they also prefer to defer those decisions to strata owners’ meetings to avoid those risks.

Strata owners have also become more sceptical and less trusting of strata committee and strata manager decisions and actions and so, complain more, and want to see and approve strata activities and decisions themselves in strata owner meeitngs.  Which the risk-averse strata committees and strata managers are happy to do.

And, these trends to centralised decisions at strata owners’ meetings have also led to a reactive [rather than a proactive] approach to strata operations.  So, instead of strata managers identifying issues and acting quickly to address them; issues arise, options are developed and a strata owners’ meeting is scheduled [14 or more days later] to discuss and decide about those issues.

Whilst I support increased strata owner engagement in their strata buildings and decisions, unfortunately this has occurred without a comparable or matching increase in strata owner knowledge or understanding about strata issues through education, information and tools that help them make better decisions. 

So, we have more and more but less informed and experienced strata owners making strata decisions reactively rather than educated and experienced strata managers and strata committees doing so proactively.

5.   A propensity to save money & do as little as possible

Underpinning all strata operations is money and, unsurprisingly, strata owners would prefer to spend less [than more] money. 

Of course, the correct financial approach in strata buildings is neither to spend more or less money, but rather, to pay the correct amount of money and to get value for that money.  But, that message and approach seems lost [if it ever existed] and strata stakeholders everywhere have a ‘low spend’ or ‘no spend’ mentality in relation to strata building operations.

Strata owners with poor knowledge, experience or understanding of strata issues and who don’t have strata education options, information and tools will often choose the cheapest option and/or defer action and expenditures.

Strata committees also fear advocating spending more money than is available since they are unpaid volunteers doing a thankless job who would prefer not to alienate other strata owners [and their neighbours].

And, strata managers know that one of the key reasons strata buildings change strata managers is because they believe they are paying overly high strata levies and/or that strata expenditures are increasing.  So, there’s an incentive for strata managers to support lower levies, reduced or deferred spending, buying the cheapest option, and squeezing supplier prices down by getting multiple undifferentiated quotes [leaving strata owners with difficult choices that easily degenerate into buying the cheapest].

These trends also mitigate against medium or long term approaches in strata buildings and against comparisons of the cost, effects and outcomes of different approaches between strata buildings and over repeating time periods.

So, there’s less and less focus on value in strata operations, which can only be assessed over time and with a broader and comparative perspective, and much more on absolute price. 

AN ALTERNATIVE APPROACH

So, strata stakeholders need to get off the strata merry go round [and round], repeating the same undesirable behaviours.

To do that, I suggest we flip the way we run strata buildings around so that we focus on the anomalies as one-off and uniquely handled issues and standardise the routine activities by doing the following things.

1.     Identify repeating strata activities and issues to remove them from strata manager or strata committee focus as one-off matters and reposition them as standardised processes with a predetermined set of actions and predictable outcomes.  This can happen progressively by doing one strata activity at a time as they are identified and the processes developed and refined.

2.     Develop standardised and predetermined responses and actions for the most common strata activities and issues that apply by default whenever they occur.  This should be coupled with a system to identify, filter and process those activities or issues in strata buildings, to also extract anomalies when they occur, and to identify when things go wrong.

3.     When common strata activities and issues are being handled consistently and effectively by the standardised processes in actions 1 and 2, introduce more automation into the processes by utilising technology and by including self-help or DIY tools for strata stakeholders: thereby further improving efficiency, cost, speed, predictability and quality.

4.     Identify one-off, complex, special and/or crisis-driven strata activities and issues that need higher level and/or specialised skills and approaches so that they can be notified to strata committees, strata managers, and affected strata owners or residents and handled by the appropriate person/s and expert/s.

5.     Train and educate all strata stakeholders [from strata owners to strata managers] about the strata activities and issues that have been identified as routine and non-routine to help them better participate in strata operations and use the developed processes, understand the processes and have faith in the outcomes.

6.     Collect, analyse and share the data that is generated by these new filtering and strata operations management processes so that more insights can be made and further process and system refinements can occur.  Plus, it’s likely that shared strata building information can be collated, analysed, used to demonstrate the better outcomes and better value this strata operations management approach provides to strata buildings and strata owners.

Remember not all strata activities and issues need to be handled this way initially, or ever. 

But, any commonplace strata activities that are removed from traditional hands-on, reactive, and time-intensive management processes that are repeated over and over will deliver better outcomes for all strata stakeholders.

CONCLUSIONS

Rather than having strata buildings treating every new strata activity, problem or issue that arises like it is the first time it has ever happened and needs one off and personalised attention by strata committees, strata managers and others to be decided in strata owners’ meetings, let’s see if we can take some of the routine strata stuff out and run it more efficiently and predictably, so we can work harder on the non-routine, higher stakes, urgent and more complex strata activities, problems, and issues.

Doing more mundane strata activities with less work and putting that effort instead into more interesting and valuable strata things is a better way than just repeating and repeating and repeating the same strata stuff.

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    Jimmy-T
    Keymaster

      Why do we treat every regular occurrence in strata as if it were a brand new challenge? Francesco Andreone of GoStrata suggests we develop systems to make the regular routine.

      [See the full post at: Strata Groundhog Days: Wince, rinse and repeat]

      The opinions offered in these Forum posts and replies are not intended to be taken as legal advice. Readers with serious issues should consult experienced strata lawyers.
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