Cecilia Community Management & Consulting

Waltham, United States

···

Map

Streetview

Activate map

Description

Specialties

Cecilia Community Management is a community management firm, which specializes in the management of condominium associations.

Our client base ranges from condominiums, including commercial and mixed-​use properties, to home owner associations and self-​managed properties.

We recognize that each property has very distinct needs. We adapt to those needs by uniquely customizing our services for every single client offering a number of management options, including full-​service management, financial management and an array of a la cart services, which are attractive options for self-​managed properties.

History

Established in 2010.

Jessyka Cecilia, principal of Cecilia Community Management & Consulting (CCM&C), having worked in the field of property management and real estate consulting for over six years, saw first-​hand the lack of quality and accountability that permeates the industry.

Responding to her desire to provide trustworthy, dependable management, management consistent with her ethics, she resigned from a lucrative position, having declined a promotion to Vice-​President. Motivated to provide quality management, she took the initiative to open her own management firm. A firm that places a premium on transparency, knowledge, professionalism, and providing clients with principled management.

The firm’s philosophy is that the management process is participatory and collaborative. Their team works together with partners and clients, as a single unit, to achieve a common purpose, providing unsurpassed service. They do this through employing optimism, persistence, genuine commitment, and good citizenship.

Meet the Business Owner

Jessyka C.

Business Owner

Jessyka’s ultimate goal,

«…It would be to change the industries’ standards, increasing the level of professionalism and accountability that management companies provide to their clients. The fact is that Property Management remains, for the most part, unregulated in Massachusetts.

A property manager does not need to have a license to manage properties, nor do they need to hold any type of accreditation. One does not need a high school diploma to manage properties or even to open up a management firm. Outrageous considering that condominium associations are required to adhere to Massachusetts General Law 183A, their governing documents and regulatory agencies.

An illustration of this is the budgeting process. This should be done methodically; complying with the Association’s governing documents, and the lending guidelines incorporated by FHA, Fannie Mae, and Freddie Mac. If Association’s do not comply with these guidelines, they seriously handicap the resale of units.