
Why Rental Property Assessments Are Essential for Protecting Landlords and Residents

Communication in Property Management
Good property management lives or dies on communication.
Not the “we sent an email” kind of communication. Real communication. The kind where residents feel heard during a stressful maintenance issue. The kind where homeowners feel confident their asset is protected and nothing important gets missed. The kind where a small misunderstanding does not turn into a big problem.
At On Q Property Management, customer feedback drives that kind of communication. It has since day one.
Founded in 2010, On Q has grown by treating feedback like operational data, not background noise. Every call, email, and complaint tells a story about what is working and what needs to tighten up. That is why On Q built a process (and a dedicated team) focused on reviewing communication, learning from escalations, and improving the experience for both homeowners and residents.
If you are evaluating a property manager, or if you already work with one, this is a behind-the-scenes look at what “communication in property management” looks like when it is treated as a core system.
Quick links:
Contact: https://www.onqpm.com/contact/
Property Management Services: https://www.onqpm.com/property-management/
Resident Services: https://www.onqpm.com/resident-services/
Owner Services: https://www.onqpm.com/owner-services/
Customer feedback is not a department. It is a workflow.
In many traditional models, “feedback” means a bad review, a frustrated phone call, or a complaint that gets handed around until someone has time to deal with it.
On Q takes the opposite approach.
Feedback enters a defined workflow, with clear ownership, clear documentation, and clear next steps. The goal is simple: resolve issues quickly, fairly, and transparently, while also learning enough to reduce the chance of repeat problems.
That is why On Q built a structured escalation process that supports both owners and residents, and why every escalation becomes part of a continuous improvement loop.
How On Q handles escalations, step by step
Escalations usually start in a predictable place. A resident feels stuck on a maintenance timeline. A homeowner disagrees with a policy decision. Someone feels unheard. Sometimes there is a legal concern, a safety issue, or a request that goes beyond standard authority.
On Q’s escalation process exists for those moments. It creates consistency, protects relationships, and makes sure the right people get involved early instead of late.
Here is how it works in practice.
Step 1: Acknowledge quickly and de-escalate with clarity
The first job is not to defend a decision. The first job is to lower the temperature and confirm the concern is being taken seriously.
That usually sounds like:
- “I understand your concern and aim to resolve this quickly and fairly. Let’s review the facts together to determine next steps.”
- “I understand your frustration. I will clarify next steps and ensure your issue is addressed promptly.”
When communication in property management goes wrong, it often fails right here. People feel ignored, so they repeat themselves. They call more. They email more. They escalate emotionally because no one has given them a clear path forward.
On Q trains teams to start with acknowledgement, then move immediately into facts and next steps.
Step 2: Gather the full context before making promises
Fast communication matters, but accurate communication matters more.
On Q teams gather key details before locking in a resolution:
- What happened, and when
- What each party expects
- What communication has already occurred
- Any safety or legal risk
- How urgent the timeline is
This protects residents from getting vague answers and protects homeowners from decisions made on incomplete information.
Step 3: Route the issue to the right level of ownership
Not every issue needs an executive. Not every issue should stay at the front line.
On Q uses clear escalation levels so owners and residents get help from the right person, at the right time:
- Level 1: Property Manager handles routine issues and aims for immediate resolution.
- Level 2: Senior Property Manager steps in for complex issues, emotional situations, or policy disputes.
- Level 3: COO or Regional Director supports high-risk situations.
- Level 4: Broker addresses legal, compliance, and licensing concerns.
This structure keeps communication consistent and avoids one of the most common breakdowns in property management: waiting too long to escalate.
Step 4: Provide a fair and reasonable solution, not a vague apology
A real solution includes specifics.
For example:
- If a homeowner is concerned about vacancy, the response includes activity reporting, market comparison, and concrete pricing or marketing recommendations.
- If a resident is frustrated by a maintenance delay, the response includes an apology plus a clear update schedule and vendor timeline.
- If there is a fee dispute, the response includes a lease or policy review, plus escalation when the situation is ambiguous.
The standard is fairness and clarity. That is what restores trust, even when the answer is not the one someone hoped for.
Step 5: Set the next update time, even if the update is “still working”
This one detail changes everything.
When someone knows exactly when they will hear back, they stop guessing. They stop calling just to check. They stop feeling like they have to chase the property manager to get attention.
On Q teams set a clear next update time and follow through.
Step 6: Document the full story, every time
Communication is only as strong as the record behind it.
On Q documents escalation history and decisions in a case system to keep everyone aligned and accountable. That includes timelines, decision rationale, and the communication trail so teams can act quickly and consistently, even through handoffs, weekends, and high-volume seasons.
The part most companies do not have: a dedicated team reviewing communication
Here is where On Q’s approach becomes unusually operational.
On Q has a team dedicated to quality review and post-resolution analysis. This is not a “blame” process. It is a learning loop designed to improve outcomes and prevent repeat issues.
That team reviews:
- Call recordings
- Email communication
- Text messages (when applicable)
- Case history and documented timelines
They look for communication gaps, missed opportunities, and training needs. Then they turn those findings into coaching and process improvements—so the next homeowner or resident gets a better experience.
That is how customer complaints (from both owners and residents) become better systems.
It is also how On Q protects both sides of the relationship:
- Residents get clearer timelines, fewer surprises, and more consistent service.
- Homeowners get better documentation, lower long-term risk, and a team that catches small issues before they become expensive ones.
Public reviews are feedback at scale, and On Q pays attention
One of the simplest ways to evaluate communication in property management is to look at the places where people share honest experiences.
On Q welcomes that transparency and actively monitors what customers say across major review platforms.
You can find On Q Property Management reviews on:
- Google reviews (via On Q’s reviews hub): https://www.onqpm.com/reviews/
- Trustpilot: https://www.trustpilot.com/review/www.onqpm.com
- Better Business Bureau (BBB): https://www.bbb.org/us/tx/plano/profile/property-management/on-q-property-management-0875-91334689/customer-reviews
Google reviews
Google is often the first place people look, and it is also one of the hardest places to maintain strong performance over time. High volume, long-term consistency, and real-time customer sentiment matter.
That is why On Q pays close attention to review feedback there—because it reflects what customers experience in real moments, not just what a company promises on a website.
Trustpilot reviews
Trustpilot adds another layer of transparency, especially for people who want detailed written feedback and patterns over time.
On Q’s Trustpilot presence is one more way customers can share what they experienced—and one more way On Q can identify what to improve.
BBB reviews
The BBB matters for a different reason. It is structured around trust, complaint handling, and business accountability.
On Q is BBB Accredited, and the BBB profile provides a public record of customer reviews and business response behavior.
What this means for residents
For residents, communication is the experience.
A maintenance issue already disrupts a day. A confusing ledger creates stress. An unclear move-out process can turn into conflict fast.
On Q’s communication systems are designed to reduce those pain points by consistently providing:
- Clear acknowledgement when an issue comes in
- Specific next steps instead of vague promises
- A set update time so residents are not left guessing
- Documentation that prevents “starting over” with every new person
Residents can also use On Q’s online tools and resources:
- Resident Services: https://www.onqpm.com/resident-services/
- Maintenance Requests: https://www.onqpm.com/resident-services/maintenance-requests/
- Current Clients / Portal options: https://www.onqpm.com/current-clients/
What this means for homeowners
For homeowners, communication is risk management.
A good property manager does not just “handle issues.” A good property manager documents decisions, escalates early, and communicates in a way that protects the asset and the relationship.
On Q’s approach supports homeowners through:
- A defined escalation ladder, so high-risk issues reach senior leadership quickly
- Transparent documentation, so decisions stay clear and trackable
- A quality review loop that improves performance over time
- Online tools and resources via Owner Services: https://www.onqpm.com/owner-services/
If you are considering management with On Q:
- Property Management Services: https://www.onqpm.com/property-management/
- Get Started: https://www.onqpm.com/property-management/get-started/
Why communication systems matter in property management
This is bigger than one company.
When communication is strong, maintenance gets handled sooner, expectations stay clear, and trust builds. When communication breaks down, everything costs more: time, staff effort, resident frustration, owner risk, and (often) repair costs.
That is why On Q treats communication in property management as a measurable system, not a soft skill.
Closing thought: Excellence is a habit, built through feedback
On Q’s commitment to excellence does not come from a slogan. It comes from systems that listen and improve.
Founded in 2010, On Q continues to grow by treating communication in property management as a core operating function. Escalation levels keep ownership clear. Documentation keeps facts straight. A dedicated quality review team examines calls, emails, and customer complaints (both owner and resident) to improve training and strengthen processes over time.
That is the real promise: not perfection, but serious follow-through.
If you want a property management partner that treats communication as part of the product:
- Explore On Q Property Management services: https://www.onqpm.com/property-management/
- Reach out here: https://www.onqpm.com/contact/
FAQs: Communication in Property Management
Why is communication in property management so important?
Because it directly impacts resident satisfaction and homeowner confidence. Clear updates reduce repeat calls, prevent misunderstandings, and help issues get resolved faster.
What should a good property manager communicate during a maintenance issue?
Acknowledgement, the next steps, the expected timeline, and the next update time. If the timeline changes, the update should explain why and what happens next.
How does On Q handle customer complaints from homeowners and residents?
Concerns route through an escalation process with defined levels of responsibility. The team documents communication and decisions, sets expectations for follow-up, and reviews resolved escalations for coaching and process improvement.
What is an escalation in property management?
An escalation is a concern that needs support beyond routine handling, often due to emotion, policy disagreement, legal risk, safety issues, or unresolved complexity.
Where can I read On Q Property Management reviews?
Start with https://www.onqpm.com/reviews/ and also review third-party platforms like Trustpilot (https://www.trustpilot.com/review/www.onqpm.com) and the BBB customer review page (https://www.bbb.org/us/tx/plano/profile/property-management/on-q-property-management-0875-91334689/customer-reviews).



