She collects rent, opens tickets, calms anxious tenants in Hebrew & English — and never sleeps. You just check the receipts in the morning.
A vaad shouldn't be a part-time job for the most volunteer-y neighbor. It should run itself — quietly, fairly, in the background of life.
The best property tool is the one residents forget exists. We answer faster, in their language, on the apps they already use.
Predictable bills, automatic receipts, clean year-end exports. No spreadsheets. No "remind me what this charge was."
It's stewardship. Flora handles the admin so the people who actually run the building can focus on the building.
Flora opens the conversation, sends the link, follows up on day 3, day 7, day 14. She matches every shekel to an apartment, sends receipts in Hebrew, and lets the vaad see who paid without ever asking.
Tenants WhatsApp the broken elevator at 11 PM. Flora opens a ticket, dispatches the on-call vendor, updates the residents, and only escalates to the vaad if there's something only a human can decide.
Trained on your building's documents, your past protocols, your vendor list. She replies in Hebrew, English, Russian, Arabic — and tells the truth, including when she doesn't know.
Flora caught a ₪3,200 double-charge from our water company before I even noticed. Three years of vaad and she'd already paid for herself in week two.
14-day pilot. One building. We import your tenant list, point Flora at your bank, and you get a quiet week.