The people running their communities on Arbor Lane.
Rental communities, management companies, and homeowner associations run their day-to-day here — collecting rent and dues, closing tickets, getting leases and covenants signed, holding votes. These are their stories: what they ran before, what changed, and what it freed up. Organized by the kind of community, so you can read the one that looks like yours.
Find a community like yours.
The same software runs three kinds of community, and the stories sort the same way. Read the room that matches yours — the work, the words, and the wins look a little different in each.
Landlords and rental communities — a few units run on the side, or a few hundred run full-time. What they came for is usually the rent; what they keep is the leasing, the maintenance, and the single place it all lives.
Management companies running properties on owners' behalf, across more than one community. What they came for is usually consolidating the tool sprawl; what they keep is the owner reporting, the vendor coordination, and one operation instead of a login per property.
Homeowner associations — run by a professional manager or a volunteer board. What they came for is usually the dues; what they keep is the governing documents, the violation tracking, and the governance done by the book.
What you'll find in each story.
Every story here is built the same way, so you can compare them honestly:
- Where they started — the tools they were stitching together before, and what that cost them in time.
- What they switched — what they moved to Arbor Lane, and how the move went.
- What changed — the busywork that stopped landing on a person, in their own words.
- What it freed up — the hours and attention that went back to the people instead of the paperwork.
No staged metrics, no logo we paid to show. Just what the work looked like before and after, from the people who do it.
Here's the shape of one.
This is the frame each published story fills. The names, numbers, and quotes below are bracketed placeholders, shown so you can see the structure — a real, named story replaces this as communities come on board.
[Community type: Rental / Management / HOA] · [Community name] · [Size, in doors]
- Where they started.
- [The before: the spreadsheet, the inbox, the three tools that didn't talk — in the community's own words.]
- What they switched.
- [What they moved to Arbor Lane, and how the migration went.]
- What changed.
- [The specific busywork that stopped — the reconciliation, the chasing, the re-explaining.]
- In their words.
- [A real quote from a real person, once there's one to print. Until then, this stays bracketed — we don't write quotes for people.]
Be one of the first stories here.
Arbor Lane is early, and the communities coming on now are the ones whose stories will fill this page. If you switch and it changes how your day runs, we'd genuinely like to hear it — and to let the next board, landlord, or manager read it. No script, no staged shoot. Just what the work looked like before and after, in your words.
See what it does for a community like yours.
The clearest customer story is the one you write yourself. Whoever runs the place — a few rentals, a growing portfolio, or a board doing this on nights and weekends — you can start the trial yourself, today, and have your first tickets, dues or rent, and announcements moving by the end of the afternoon.
Rather talk it through first? There's a human on the other end
Month-to-month by default. No sales call to get started.
Less time on the busywork. More on the people.