03/09/2026
Next time you see a community manager, thank them.
The job is nothing like what people think it is.
There have been nights I’ve missed my kids’ activities so I could make a late board meeting work for a community that needed guidance. I’ve answered calls long after business hours because a situation in the neighborhood couldn’t wait. I’ve spent weeks helping boards work through difficult decisions that affect hundreds of homeowners.
And if you talk to most of us… we’d do it again.
Because here’s the thing.
You remember the day you fell in love with your neighborhood. Maybe it was the clean streets, the well-kept landscaping, the park where your kids play, or the feeling that someone is looking out for the community as a whole. That sense of order and care doesn’t just happen.
Behind the scenes there are budgets being balanced, vendors being coordinated, documents being interpreted, problems being solved, and sometimes tough conversations being navigated so communities can continue to run smoothly.
Most of the time, the best work community managers do is invisible.
When things are working well, no one notices the late nights spent preparing board packets, the phone calls to resolve issues before they escalate, the vendor negotiations that protect the association’s finances, or the guidance that helps volunteer board members make responsible decisions.
That was your community manager. Quietly keeping the wheels turning.
And when the day is done, many of them go home to their own families, their own communities, and their own lives—only to wake up the next morning and do it all over again for the neighborhoods they serve.
I understand why community management can be misunderstood. Most people only see a rule enforcement letter or a meeting agenda. They don’t see the hundreds of small decisions and conversations happening behind the scenes to protect the health and stability of the community.
But this work matters.
Strong communities don’t happen by accident. They happen because dedicated volunteers and professional managers work together to care for them.
So to the community managers out there—especially the ones who keep showing up even on the hard days—thank you.
Your work helps neighborhoods function, protects property values, and supports the places families call home.
And to my fellow managers reading this late at night after a meeting or finishing tomorrow’s agenda… keep going. What you do matters more than you know.