May 1, 2026
How do restoration companies get commercial accounts? Restoration companies win commercial facility management accounts through systematic relationship development with property managers and facility directors — not through price competition. The key is demonstrating response reliability, documentation quality, and IICRC certification depth before a loss event occurs, so the relationship exists when the emergency happens.
The best commercial restoration relationships aren’t won in a competitive bid process. They’re won months or years before the first job, through relationship development that positions your company as the obvious choice when something goes wrong.
Identify the 30–50 commercial properties in your market that represent the highest-value restoration accounts. Targets include: large multi-family residential complexes (200+ units), commercial office parks, healthcare facilities, retail centers, and hospitality properties. These properties have high loss probability, significant restoration scope when losses occur, and professional property management that values vendor relationships.
The restoration vendor decision for most commercial properties is made by the facility manager or director of facilities — not by ownership or finance. LinkedIn, building management websites, and local BOMA (Building Owners and Managers Association) membership directories are the best sources for identifying these contacts.
Cold outreach focused on “we want to be your restoration contractor” doesn’t work. Value-first outreach does. Effective approaches include: offering a complimentary building vulnerability assessment (water intrusion risks, drainage issues, aging infrastructure), inviting the facility manager to an IICRC continuing education lunch, or providing a written reference on your company’s emergency response protocols that they can file in their vendor binder.
When the relationship is developed, formalize it with a preferred vendor agreement — a simple document that establishes your company as the first call for restoration emergencies at their property. Include your 24/7 emergency contact, response time commitment, and a summary of your certifications. The agreement doesn’t need to be exclusive or contractually binding to be effective — it just needs to exist so that when the emergency happens, you’re on the list.
BOMA (Building Owners and Managers Association) is the primary professional association for commercial real estate property managers. BOMA chapters hold regular events, publish member directories, and provide networking access to the facility managers who control commercial restoration vendor relationships. Membership and active participation in local BOMA chapters is one of the most direct paths to commercial account development.
Commercial account development typically requires 6–18 months of relationship building before the first significant job. The timeline depends on when a loss event occurs at the target property — which is why a portfolio approach (developing relationships with 20–30 targets simultaneously) is more effective than focusing on a single account.
Mike McCabe is The Profit Detective — a 36-year restoration industry veteran who has developed commercial account strategies for restoration companies across North America.
Most engagements pay for themselves within the first week.