How to Get a Pet Waste Management Proposal for Your Community (And What to Expect)
Getting a pet waste management proposal for an apartment community or HOA is not complicated but it has more steps than most property managers expect, and the quality of what comes back from a vendor depends significantly on the quality of what the property manager provides upfront. A proposal issued without a site inspection is a price estimate, not a service plan. A proposal that does not specify frequency, scope, and materials is not a document you can hold a vendor accountable to after signing. And a proposal that arrives via email without a follow-up call is a transaction, not the beginning of a managed service relationship.
This guide walks property managers and HOA boards through the complete proposal process from initial contact to signed agreement including what information to prepare before the first call, what steps a serious vendor goes through before issuing a proposal, what every proposal must contain to be worth signing, and what the first 14 days of service actually look like after the agreement is executed.
It also covers the specific proposal process at CoPS on Doody, which is built around a physical site assessment rather than an online quote form because the frequency, placement, and scope recommendations in a proposal should reflect the actual property, not a standardized rate applied to a unit count.
TL;DR Key Takeaways
- A pet waste management proposal issued without a site inspection is an estimate, not a service plan. The distinction matters at the first service failure.
- Before your first vendor call, have five pieces of information ready: community name, address, existing station count, current service frequency if applicable, and your billing contact.
- Every proposal must include six elements: scope of services, service frequency, monthly rate with billing terms, material specification, service reporting method, and contract terms.
- The time from first contact to first service visit at CoPS on Doody is 14 days or fewer for most properties with existing stations.
- HOA boards need the proposal in a specific format to present it for approval — understanding that format before the proposal arrives saves a board meeting cycle.
- A vendor who issues a proposal without visiting the property first is committing to a service level they cannot verify is appropriate for your specific community.
Why Pet Waste Management Proposals Vary So Widely And What That Means for Your Decision
Property managers who have shopped pet waste station service in DC metro or Atlanta have likely received proposals that look dramatically different from one another in format, in specificity, and in what they commit to. That variation is not a function of vendor personality or presentation style. It is a function of how each vendor built their pricing model, what accountability structure they operate under, and whether they actually inspected the property before issuing the document.
A proposal from a landscaping company that services stations as an add-on will typically be a line item on an existing grounds maintenance proposal often a single dollar figure with no service frequency, no scope definition, and no reporting commitment. A proposal from a national franchise operator will typically use a standardized rate card applied to station count, with minimal customization to the specific property's layout or pet traffic patterns. A proposal from a dedicated commercial pet waste management provider will typically reflect a site assessment, define frequency and scope at the visit level, specify materials, and include service terms that can be incorporated into a vendor management framework.
Understanding why proposals look different gives property managers the context to evaluate them correctly not just on price, but on the operational specificity that determines whether the service will actually perform as described.
The Core Evaluation Standard
A proposal is only as useful as what it commits to. A document that states a monthly rate without defining what happens at each visit, how often visits occur, what materials are used, or how the property manager will know the service was performed is not a service commitment. It is a price. A price without a scope is not something you can manage a vendor against.
Before the First Call What to Have Ready
The first contact with a pet waste service provider is more productive when the property manager has specific information available. Most vendors will ask for this information either before or during the initial call. Having it ready prevents the conversation from stalling on basic details and moves the inquiry toward a site assessment and proposal faster.
Community name and address
Confirms geographic eligibility — vendor checks whether the property is within their service area before investing time in an assessment
Yes before first call
Existing station count
First pricing input for most vendors. Even if the site assessment will verify the count, having a starting number helps the vendor estimate route time and proposal complexity.
Yes before first call
Current service provider and frequency
Tells the vendor what the baseline is and what they are replacing. Useful for assessing whether the current service level is the issue or the vendor relationship.
Yes before first call
Approximate unit count and pet ownership rate
Drives the frequency recommendation. A 200-unit community with 50% pet ownership has different station demand than a 200-unit community with 15% pet ownership.
Yes before assessment
Billing address and billing contact name
Required to complete the proposal. Confirms who the invoice should be addressed to and where it should go.
Yes before assessment
Current complaint volume or specific problem description
Helps the vendor understand whether the primary issue is service frequency, station placement, vendor accountability, or a combination. Shapes the proposal's frequency recommendation.
Yes before assessment
Property map or site layout if available
Speeds up the site assessment by giving the vendor advance context on the property's footprint, walking routes, and station locations before the visit.
Helpful not required
Any HOA board approval requirements
If the proposal needs to be presented for board approval before the agreement can be signed, the vendor should know this upfront so the proposal is formatted appropriately.
Yes if applicable
The Proposal Process What a Serious Vendor Does Before Issuing a Price
The sequence from first contact to signed agreement with a dedicated commercial pet waste service provider follows a defined structure. Each step is there for a reason. A vendor who skips a step particularly the site assessment is issuing a proposal that cannot be fully calibrated to the property's actual needs.
Step
1
Initial Contact and Geographic Qualification
Day 1 typically same day or next business day
The first call or contact establishes two things: whether the property is within the vendor's service area, and whether a site assessment is warranted. For CoPS on Doody, this step confirms that the community is in DC metro (Fairfax, Loudoun, Montgomery, Frederick, Prince William, Prince George's, or Washington DC) or Atlanta metro (Atlanta, Fulton north, Gwinnett, Cherokee, or DeKalb). If the property is within the service area, the next step is scheduling the site assessment.
Step
2
Site Assessment — The Physical Property Inspection
Typically within 3–5 business days of first contact
A CoPS representative visits the property to inspect and verify the location, condition, and count of existing pet waste stations and trash cans; evaluate station placement quality relative to the property's primary dog walking routes; assess the community's physical footprint and any access considerations for the service route; and gather the information needed to recommend a service frequency calibrated to the property's actual pet traffic. This step is non-negotiable — a proposal issued without it is not based on the actual property.
Step
3
Proposal Issued — Usually Within 72 Hours of Assessment
Within 72 hours of site assessment completion or formal RFP receipt
Following the assessment, CoPS issues a detailed written proposal covering: the service scope at each visit, the recommended service frequency, the monthly flat rate with all materials included, the USDA Certified Biobased material specification, the service reporting method, the contract terms, and the onboarding timeline. The proposal is specific to the property — not a standard rate card with the unit count filled in.
Step
4
Proposal Review: Property Manager or HOA Board
Property's timeline CoPS is available to answer questions during review
The property manager or HOA board reviews the proposal. For property managers with signing authority, this step is typically completed within a few days. For HOAs requiring board approval, this step may span a board meeting cycle — 30 to 60 days in some cases. CoPS can provide supporting documentation for board presentations, including a summary of the service scope, SLA commitments, and billing terms in a format appropriate for board meeting materials.
Step
5
Agreement Signed — Service Countdown Begins
Day 0 of the service commitment period
Once the service agreement is signed, two clocks start. For properties with existing stations: first service within 7 days. For properties requiring new station installation: installation within 14 days, with service beginning as stations are placed. The property manager receives confirmation of the first service date and the service contact information for any between-visit questions or issues.
Step
6
First Service Visit — Reporting Begins
Within 7 days of signed agreement (existing stations) or within 14 days (new installation)
The first service visit establishes the operating cadence. The service crew performs the full scope — liner and bag replacement, bin emptying, ground scooping, station inspection, condition documentation — and delivers a service completion report to the designated property contact by email or text within hours of the visit. This is the first data point in the service record the property manager will use to manage the relationship going forward.
The Full Timeline From First Call to First Service Visit
For most DC metro and Atlanta apartment communities with existing pet waste stations, the time from first contact to first service visit is 14 days or fewer. The following timeline reflects the CoPS on Doody process for a property with existing stations and a property manager with signing authority.
Call or online inquiry. Geographic qualification confirmed. Assessment scheduled.
CoPS representative inspects property. Station count, placement, and condition evaluated.
Detailed written proposal delivered within 72 hours of assessment.
Property manager reviews and signs. HOA boards may require additional time for approval.
First service visit completed within 7 days of signed agreement. Service report delivered same day.
What Every Pet Waste Management Proposal Must Include The Six-Element Standard
Not every proposal a property manager receives will meet this standard. The following table defines what each element should state and what it signals when it is absent. Use this as a review checklist before signing any pet waste service agreement.
Service scope
An explicit list of every task performed at each scheduled visit — liner replacement, bag restocking, ground scooping radius, bin emptying, station inspection, condition reporting
Vendor defines scope unilaterally after signing
Service frequency
Minimum visits per week or per cycle, specified by day of week if relevant, with a stated policy on frequency adjustments
Vendor services 'as needed' with no defined minimum
Monthly rate and billing terms
Flat monthly figure, statement of what is included, any separately billed items listed with prices, maximum rate increase notice period
Variable billing with undefined triggers creates invoice surprises
Material specification
Bag and liner type, material certification if applicable (USDA Certified Biobased), and statement that materials are included in the monthly rate
Material quality not guaranteed; restocking may be billed separately
Service reporting method
Format of service completion reports, delivery method (email or text), delivery timing after each visit, and named property contact for report delivery
No documentation obligation — property manager has no performance record
Contract and termination terms
Service term (month-to-month or fixed term), written notice requirement for termination, early termination fee if applicable, and missed-service credit policy
Auto-renewal or long term locks the property in; no credit mechanism for missed visits
Reading Any Proposal Red Flags and Green Flags
Before signing any pet waste service proposal from CoPS or from any other provider review it against these specific flags. Red flags indicate provisions that create risk for the property. Green flags indicate provisions that create accountability for the vendor.
✘
Proposal issued without a site inspection visit
✔
Proposal follows a physical site inspection with documented station count and placement review
✘
Monthly rate described as 'base rate' with additional charges possible
✔
Flat monthly rate with all services and materials explicitly included, no variable add-ons
✘
Service frequency described as 'regular' or 'as needed' without a defined minimum
✔
Minimum visits per week stated numerically — not as a descriptor
✘
No service completion reporting obligation
✔
Service completion report delivered to named contact after every visit, with stated delivery timing
✘
Termination requires 60 or more days notice, or includes an early termination fee
✔
Month-to-month service with 30 days or fewer written notice for termination, no exit fee
✘
No missed-service credit or remedy provision
✔
Missed-service credit explicitly stated — prorated value credited to next invoice
✘
Material specification absent — 'standard bags' or no mention
✔
Material type and certification specified — USDA Certified Biobased or equivalent with verification path
✘
Proposal auto-expires in 48 hours with pressure to sign quickly
✔
Proposal remains open for review with no artificial urgency applied to the signing decision
Presenting the Proposal to an HOA Board What the Board Needs to Approve
For HOA boards that must vote to approve vendor agreements, the proposal presentation is a distinct step that many property managers and community managers underestimate. A board that receives a proposal without adequate context particularly on pricing, service scope, and termination terms may table the decision for a second meeting, adding 30 to 60 days to the onboarding timeline.
Preparing a board-ready summary of the proposal before the meeting reduces this friction significantly. The following materials give a board the information it needs to approve a pet waste service agreement in a single meeting.
Board Presentation Package Minimum Contents
Before presenting the proposal to the board, prepare a one-page summary that includes the following elements:
- Service scope summary: what the vendor does at each visit, in plain language — not the full proposal language
- Service frequency: visits per week and how that compares to the current service level or complaint history
- Monthly rate: the flat monthly figure, confirmation that it includes all materials, and the annual cost total for budget approval context
- Material specification: USDA Certified Biobased or equivalent — one line that gives the board confidence in the material claim
- Contract terms: month-to-month confirmation, written notice period, no early termination fee — the three terms that address board fiduciary concern about commitment risk
- SLA commitments: proposal turnaround, installation timeline, first service date, and issue response window — shows the board the vendor is operationally committed
- Comparison to current cost: what the property is currently spending on pet waste management (including staff time) vs. the proposed flat rate
HOA Timing Note
If the board meets monthly and the next meeting is three weeks away, start the proposal process now — not after the meeting. The site assessment and proposal can be completed before the board meeting, giving the board a fully evaluated document to vote on at the next session rather than a vendor name and a verbal quote. First service can begin within 7 days of the board's approval vote.
What Happens After the Agreement Is Signed The First 14 Days
The period between signing and first service is where most vendor relationships either establish credibility or erode it. A vendor who confirms the first service date, delivers the service report on time after the first visit, and responds to any between-visit questions within the committed window starts the relationship with demonstrated accountability. A vendor who is unresponsive in the days following signing signals how the relationship will operate going forward.
First Service (Existing Stations)
7 Days
From signed agreement
New Station Installation
14 Days
From signed agreement
First Report Delivery
Same Visit Day
Email or text after first service
Issue Response Window
3 Bus. Hours
Customer care between visits
During the first 14 days, the property manager should verify four things. First, that the service completion report arrives after the first visit with the information the proposal committed to date, time, station condition, any issues noted. Second, that the first invoice matches the monthly rate in the proposal with no additional line items. Third, that the service contact information provided at signing is responsive when tested with a non-urgent question. Fourth, that the service frequency committed to in the proposal is reflected in the actual visit schedule.
If any of these four verification points produce a discrepancy in the first 14 days, address it in writing before the second service visit. The first weeks of a service relationship establish the operational baseline. A discrepancy that is not documented early is harder to resolve later and under a month-to-month agreement, a relationship that does not meet its committed standard in the first two service cycles is a relationship worth reconsidering before the second invoice arrives.
First-Visit Verification
After the first service visit, compare the service completion report against the proposal's scope definition. Every element listed in the scope section of the proposal should appear as completed in the report. If the report documents fewer tasks than the scope committed to, contact the vendor immediately — this is the data point that establishes whether the scope in the proposal reflects what the service team actually executes.
How long does the entire process take from first call to active service?
For a community with existing pet waste stations in DC metro or Atlanta, the full process from first contact to first service visit takes 14 days or fewer under the CoPS on Doody process. The site assessment is typically scheduled within three to five business days of first contact, the proposal is issued within 72 hours of the assessment, and first service begins within seven days of a signed agreement. For communities requiring new station installation, the installation is completed within 14 days of signing, and service begins as stations are placed. HOA boards requiring a formal vote may add 30 to 60 days depending on their meeting schedule but the assessment and proposal can be completed before the board meeting, so the vote is on a fully evaluated document rather than a concept.
What if I submit a contact form on your website what happens next?
After a form submission on copsondoody.com, a CoPS team member contacts the inquiring party to confirm the community's location, gather the initial information needed to schedule a site assessment, and explain the proposal process. The conversation is not a sales pitch it is an intake step to confirm whether the community is in the service area and to schedule the assessment visit. If the property is outside the current service geography, that is communicated at this stage before any further time investment is made by either party.
Can we get a proposal without a site inspection we just need a ballpark number for budget planning?
CoPS can provide a general rate range for budget planning purposes based on station count and service frequency before a formal proposal is issued which gives the property manager or board a working figure for preliminary budget discussions. The formal proposal requires a site inspection because the frequency recommendation and scope calibration depend on the actual property. A formal proposal issued without a site visit is a standard rate card applied to a unit count, not a service plan and CoPS does not issue formal proposals that way. Budget range discussions are available without the inspection commitment.
What is the difference between the proposal and the service agreement are they the same document?
The proposal is the offer document it details the service scope, frequency, pricing, materials, and terms, and it is issued by CoPS for the property's review. The service agreement is the signed commitment it incorporates the proposal terms and formalizes the service relationship. At CoPS, the proposal is sent for signature, and the signed proposal serves as the service agreement. There is no separate contract document to negotiate after the proposal is reviewed the proposal is the agreement, which is why the specificity of the proposal's contents matters so much before signing.
We are currently mid-contract with another vendor. Can we start the CoPS proposal process now?
Yes. Starting the CoPS proposal process does not require the existing vendor relationship to be terminated first. The site assessment and proposal can be completed while the current service is still active, so the CoPS agreement is ready to execute as soon as the transition becomes possible. If the current vendor has a defined termination notice period, CoPS can be onboarded to begin service immediately after that notice period expires, eliminating any service gap during the transition. The CoPS team can advise on transition timing based on the existing agreement's terms.
Getting a pet waste management proposal is a straightforward process when you know what to prepare, what to expect from a vendor who takes the assessment seriously, and what every proposal must contain before it is worth signing. The five pieces of information to have ready before the first call, the six elements that every proposal must define, and the red-and-green flag review before signing are the tools that separate a managed vendor decision from a reactive one.
The timeline from first contact to active service is shorter than most property managers expect: 14 days or fewer for a community with existing stations, under the CoPS on Doody process. The assessment is free. The proposal arrives within 72 hours of the inspection. Service begins within seven days of signing. No contract is required to start, and no long-term commitment is required to stay.
If your apartment community or HOA in DC metro or Atlanta is ready to move from the first call to a site assessment, the CoPS team is available Monday through Friday, 8:30am to 5:00pm ET.
Ready to get your proposal? Here's how to start.
Call or contact CoPS on Doody to schedule your free community assessment. DC metro and Atlanta. Proposal within 72 hours. First service within 7 days of signing. No contract required.
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