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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.
