Built by someone who got tired of the alternatives

SiteOps exists because the tools available to small property managers were either embarrassingly basic or enterprise-grade overkill — with enterprise-grade pricing to match.


The problem worth solving

Property managers — especially those running 5 to 50 units — are stuck in an awkward middle. They've outgrown texting and spreadsheets, but they don't need (or want to pay for) the bloated platforms built for 500-unit portfolios. Maintenance requests get lost. Tenant follow-up is manual. Work orders live in email threads no one can find. There had to be a better option.

How SiteOps came to be

I'm Alexander. I built SiteOps because I kept running into the same problem: property management software was either a mess of duct-taped spreadsheets or a $300/month enterprise platform designed for companies with an IT department.

Neither made sense for someone managing a handful of properties who just needed to stop losing track of maintenance requests.

I'm a software developer. So I built the thing I wanted to exist: a clean, simple tool where tenants submit requests through a browser link (no app download required), and property managers get a dashboard that actually shows what's open, in progress, and done.

No bloat. No per-seat pricing tiers. No upsell calls.

SiteOps is the tool I'd want to use. I hope it's the one you've been looking for too.

What SiteOps is (and isn't)

SiteOps IS

  • A maintenance request management platform for small-to-mid property managers
  • Simple enough to set up in an afternoon
  • Affordable — designed for real operators, not corporate portfolios
  • Actively maintained by a founder who cares if it works

SiteOps is NOT

  • An enterprise property management platform
  • Built for 500-unit portfolios with dedicated maintenance staff
  • Going to nickel-and-dime you with per-unit pricing

Ready to simplify maintenance requests?

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Questions? I read every email: alexander@siteops.org