You’ve been doing residential work for years. The jobs are fine, but the margins are tight, homeowners haggle on everything, and one slow month puts you behind on bills. Meanwhile, you see other contractors pulling steady work from apartment complexes, office parks, and property management companies.

That’s not luck. It’s strategy. Here’s how to break into commercial and property management work — even if you’re a small operation.

Why Commercial Work Is Worth Chasing

Residential jobs are one-and-done. You finish a kitchen remodel, collect your check, and start hunting for the next customer. Commercial and property management contracts are different:

  • Recurring revenue: Property managers need ongoing maintenance — HVAC, plumbing, electrical, painting, landscaping. One relationship can feed your business for years.
  • Bigger ticket sizes: Commercial jobs typically run 3-10x larger than residential work.
  • Less price sensitivity: Property managers care about reliability and speed more than getting the cheapest bid.
  • Predictable scheduling: Maintenance contracts let you plan weeks or months ahead instead of scrambling day to day.

How to Get Your Foot in the Door

Start With Your Existing Network

You probably already know someone who manages rental properties or small commercial buildings. Landlords with 5-20 units are the perfect entry point — they’re too small for the big commercial outfits but big enough to need a reliable contractor on speed dial.

Ask your current customers: “Do you know anyone who manages rental properties?” You’d be surprised how often that one question opens a door.

Get Your Paperwork in Order

Property management companies won’t even consider you without proper documentation. At minimum, you need:

  • General liability insurance ($1M minimum, $2M is better)
  • Workers’ compensation (even if you’re solo, some PMs require it)
  • Business license current in every jurisdiction you serve
  • W-9 on file ready to send immediately
  • References from at least 3 commercial or multi-unit clients

If you don’t have commercial references yet, offer to do a small job at a competitive rate for a property manager. Treat it as an audition, not charity.

Build a Professional Presence

Property managers Google you before they call you. Make sure what they find looks professional:

  • A real website (not just a Facebook page)
  • Google Business Profile with 20+ reviews and a 4.5+ rating
  • Photos of completed commercial work, not just residential kitchens
  • A professional email address (not gmail, not yahoo)

How to Pitch Property Management Companies

Lead With Reliability, Not Price

The biggest pain point for property managers isn’t cost — it’s contractors who don’t show up, don’t communicate, and don’t finish on time. When you pitch, emphasize:

  • Your average response time for emergency calls
  • How you communicate job status and completion
  • Your process for documenting work with photos
  • How quickly you turn around invoices

This is where having a system matters. When you can show a property manager a customer portal where they can track every job, see photos, approve quotes, and pay invoices online, you’re immediately more credible than the guy scribbling estimates on a napkin. CrewRivet’s customer portal gives your clients that kind of visibility without extra work on your end.

Propose a Maintenance Agreement

Don’t just bid on one-off jobs. Propose a maintenance agreement that covers routine work at a set rate. For example:

  • Monthly HVAC filter changes and inspections across all units
  • Quarterly plumbing checks
  • On-call emergency service with a guaranteed response time
  • Annual painting touch-ups for common areas

Maintenance agreements lock in predictable revenue for you and predictable costs for them. Everyone wins.

Show You Can Scale

Property managers worry about hiring a one-person operation that can’t handle a pipe burst at 2 AM during their busiest week. Address this directly:

  • Explain your crew capacity and how you handle overflow
  • Mention any subcontractor relationships for specialized work
  • Show how you schedule and track multiple jobs simultaneously

Using scheduling software that lets you manage crews, track job progress, and dispatch work orders gives property managers confidence that you can handle the volume.

Keep the Relationship Once You Have It

Landing the contract is step one. Keeping it is where the real money lives.

Communicate Proactively

Send job completion reports with photos. Flag potential problems before they become emergencies. Respond to messages within an hour during business hours. Property managers will keep paying a slightly higher rate to avoid the headache of finding someone new.

Invoice Promptly and Professionally

Nothing kills a commercial relationship faster than sloppy invoicing. Send detailed invoices the same day the job is complete, with line items, photos, and clear payment terms. If you’re chasing invoices manually, you’re already behind — automated invoicing and payment reminders keep cash flowing without awkward follow-up calls.

Track Everything

Document every job with before-and-after photos, time logs, and material receipts. This protects you in disputes and gives property managers the paper trail they need for their own reporting.

The Bottom Line

Breaking into commercial work isn’t about being the biggest or cheapest contractor. It’s about being the most organized, responsive, and professional. Property managers are desperate for contractors they can count on. Be that contractor, and the work will follow.

Ready to look like a bigger operation? Start your free 60-day trial of CrewRivet — scheduling, invoicing, customer portals, and photo documentation built for contractors who want to grow.