Commercial Real Estate Software for Asset Managers
Compare planned projections versus recorded actuals, identify variance drivers by period, and use timeline views to catch lease rollover, vacancy risk, and operating pressure points early.
Where asset management teams gain leverage
- Projected vs actual: Compare recorded rent collections, debt service, and recoveries against forecast periods.
- Variance diagnosis: Isolate whether the problem came from occupancy, expenses, recoveries, financing, or timing.
- Operational continuity: Keep centralized system records instead of relying on team-specific spreadsheet habits.
- Governance: Use activity history and audit trails for cleaner reporting and approval workflows.
Built for the real operating cycle
See pressure points sooner: Lease rollover, vacancy periods, and occupancy-sensitive expenses show up clearly in timeline views instead of being buried in tabs or disconnected models.
Understand the why behind variance: When actual performance misses plan, Compass helps teams trace the problem back to specific assumptions and periods.
Keep reporting aligned: Internal underwriting, management commentary, and investor updates pull from the same underlying numbers.
Lease rollover visibility
Track vacancy gaps, successor tenants, holdover periods, and rollover timing with less guesswork.
Occupancy-sensitive forecasting
Understand how occupancy changes affect recoveries and variable expenses instead of assuming flat expense behavior.
Cleaner reporting cadence
Reduce manual reconciliation work during monthly, quarterly, and annual reporting cycles.
FAQs for asset managers
What makes software useful for CRE asset managers?
Asset managers need projected-versus-actual analysis, period-based variance visibility, lease rollover awareness, occupancy-sensitive expense logic, and a clean audit trail for governance and reporting.
Can Compass help compare forecast vs actual performance?
Yes. Compass is built to compare projected assumptions against actual rent collections, debt service, recoveries, and other period outcomes so teams can identify variance drivers quickly.
Why is a timeline view important for asset management?
Timeline views make lease rollovers, vacancy exposure, debt changes, and expense pressure points easier to spot before they become reporting surprises or cash flow problems.
Go deeper on variance reporting
Asset Management Variance Reporting: How CRE Teams Should Compare Actual vs Projected Performance
How to isolate variance drivers by period, rollover, recoveries, and operating pressure points.
NNN Lease Recovery Analysis
Understand how reimbursements, occupancy, and recoverable expense pools affect asset performance.