Lead (8-12 years)

Lead Facilities Operations Coordinator

This role is all about running a building, or maybe a small cluster of them, like a well-oiled machine. You're the person who makes sure everything from the lights to the lifts is working, that the tenants are happy, and that we're getting good value from our contractors. It's a hands-on leadership role, where you'll be guiding a small team while still getting your hands dirty with the day-to-day stuff. You'll be the go-to person for a specific property, making sure it hums along nicely.

Job ID
JD-BOFM-LDFA-004
Department
Realestate Facilities Management
NOS Level
OFQUAL Level 7
OFQUAL Level
Level 7
Experience
Lead (8-12 years)

Role Purpose & Context

Role Summary

The Lead Facilities Operations Coordinator is responsible for the smooth, safe, and cost-effective running of a specific building or small portfolio of properties. You'll set the operational rhythm for your site, making sure all the cogs turn efficiently and that our tenants have a great experience. This means you're at the intersection of property management, engineering, and customer service, translating strategic goals into daily actions that keep the lights on and the water running. When this role is done well, our buildings are safe, efficient, and our tenants barely notice you're there – because everything just works. When it's not, you'll hear about it: complaints will stack up, costs will spiral, and we'll have unhappy tenants. The challenge is balancing reactive emergencies with proactive planning, all while managing a budget and a small team. The reward? Seeing a complex building operate flawlessly because of your leadership and knowing you've created a great environment for hundreds of people.

Reporting Structure

Key Stakeholders

Internal:

External:

Organisational Impact

Scope: You're directly responsible for the operational efficiency and tenant satisfaction of a significant asset within our portfolio. Your decisions on maintenance, vendor selection, and project execution directly impact operational costs, tenant retention, and the overall reputation of our properties. Get it right, and you save us money and keep our clients happy. Get it wrong, and we're looking at increased costs, potential safety risks, and lost revenue.

Performance Metrics

Quantitative Metrics

  1. Metric: Operational Budget Adherence
  2. Desc: Managing your assigned property's operational expenditure within the agreed-upon budget.
  3. Target: Within +/- 5% variance of forecast
  4. Freq: Monthly and Quarterly
  5. Example: If your quarterly operational budget is £150,000, you'd aim to spend between £142,500 and £157,500. Anything outside that, and we'll need a clear explanation and a plan to get back on track.
  6. Metric: Work Order SLA Compliance
  7. Desc: The percentage of maintenance requests (work orders) closed within their agreed service level agreement times.
  8. Target: >95% for critical issues, >90% for routine issues
  9. Freq: Weekly and Monthly
  10. Example: If we get 100 critical work orders in a month, you'd need to close at least 95 of them on time. Miss too many, and tenants get frustrated, which means more complaints for you.
  11. Metric: Preventive Maintenance (PM) Completion Rate
  12. Desc: The percentage of scheduled preventive maintenance tasks for critical building systems that are completed on time.
  13. Target: >98% monthly
  14. Freq: Monthly
  15. Example: If we have 50 scheduled PM tasks for the month (e.g., HVAC filter changes, fire pump checks), you'd need to ensure at least 49 are done. Missing PMs means more breakdowns, which means more reactive work and higher costs.
  16. Metric: Vendor Invoice Accuracy
  17. Desc: The percentage of vendor invoices that are processed without errors or disputes, aligning with agreed contract rates and work performed.
  18. Target: <2% error rate
  19. Freq: Monthly
  20. Example: Out of 100 invoices, you should only have 1 or 2 that need correction or dispute. Catching these errors saves us real money and keeps Finance happy.

Qualitative Metrics

  1. Metric: Tenant Satisfaction (T-Sat)
  2. Desc: How happy our tenants are with the facilities services, measured through feedback and direct interactions.
  3. Evidence: Average score of 4.5/5 on post-work order surveys; positive direct feedback from key tenant contacts; low number of escalated complaints to Property Management; active participation in tenant meetings, offering solutions.
  4. Metric: Team Leadership & Development
  5. Desc: How effectively you lead, mentor, and develop your direct reports, fostering a positive and high-performing team.
  6. Evidence: Regular 1:1s with clear development plans; team members taking on more responsibility; positive feedback from your team in engagement surveys; low team turnover; your team consistently meeting their individual targets.
  7. Metric: Risk Mitigation & Compliance
  8. Desc: Proactive identification and resolution of potential safety, operational, or regulatory risks within your property.
  9. Evidence: Zero critical safety incidents; all regulatory inspections passed with minimal findings; timely completion of all compliance training for your team; proactive identification of potential issues during 'rounds and readings' before they become problems.
  10. Metric: Process Improvement & Innovation
  11. Desc: Your ability to identify inefficiencies in current processes and propose/implement better ways of working.
  12. Evidence: Proposing and implementing a new work order flow that reduces resolution time by 10%; suggesting a new vendor management approach that saves 5% on a key contract; successfully rolling out a new digital tool to your team that makes their lives easier.

Primary Traits

Supporting Traits

Primary Motivators

  1. Motivator: Solving Complex Problems
  2. Daily: You get a real buzz from figuring out why a system is failing, coordinating multiple trades to fix it, and seeing the building return to normal. You enjoy the challenge of balancing competing priorities and finding the optimal solution.
  3. Motivator: Building & Leading a Team
  4. Daily: You enjoy coaching junior staff, seeing them grow, and empowering them to take ownership. You like setting the direction for your team and seeing them deliver excellent results under your guidance.
  5. Motivator: Making a Tangible Impact
  6. Daily: You like seeing the direct results of your work – a smoothly running building, happy tenants, and a well-managed budget. You're driven by the sense of responsibility for a physical asset and the people within it.

Potential Demotivators

Honestly, this role isn't for everyone. You'll often be the first point of contact for every building complaint, even if it's not your fault (e.g., a utility outage). You'll have to deal with vendors who don't show up, parts that are delayed, and tenants who are, frankly, quite demanding. You'll spend a fair bit of time 'chasing COIs' and dealing with paperwork that feels endless. Sometimes, you'll put in a lot of effort into a project only for budget cuts to put it on hold indefinitely. If you need every day to be predictable, or if you struggle with constant interruptions and shifting priorities, you'll likely find this role frustrating.

Common Frustrations

  1. The Vendor Void: Chasing down contractors who are running late, brought the wrong parts, or are completely unresponsive, all while an angry tenant is staring at you demanding an ETA.
  2. Budget vs. Reality: Trying to justify a £20,000 repair for a 25-year-old boiler to a property manager who only sees it as an expense, not a critical failure risk.
  3. "Can you just...?": The constant stream of "quick" requests from tenants or staff that aren't in the work order system and completely derail your planned schedule.
  4. Documentation Black Holes: Trying to troubleshoot a critical system failure using building drawings from 1985 that don't reflect the last three renovations.
  5. The After-Hours Ambush: The inevitability of critical failures (floods, power loss, major leaks) happening at 2 AM on a Saturday, meaning your phone will ring.

What Role Doesn't Offer

  1. A quiet, predictable 9-to-5 desk job.
  2. Complete autonomy without any budget constraints or stakeholder input.
  3. A role where you only deal with cutting-edge technology and never have to touch legacy systems.
  4. A role without any difficult conversations or conflict resolution.

ADHD Positives

  1. The fast-paced, varied nature of facilities management can be engaging, with constant new problems to solve and shifting priorities preventing boredom.
  2. Emergency response situations often require quick, decisive action and hyperfocus, which can be a strength.
  3. The need to quickly switch between tasks and manage multiple small projects simultaneously can suit a dynamic work style.

ADHD Challenges and Accommodations

  1. Maintaining detailed documentation and following strict processes can be challenging; using highly structured CMMS systems with mandatory fields and automated prompts can help.
  2. Dealing with constant interruptions and 'urgent' requests can make it hard to focus on planned work; strategies like dedicated 'focus time' blocks or using noise-cancelling headphones can be useful.
  3. Organising and prioritising a large volume of incoming requests might require robust digital task management tools and regular check-ins to stay on track.

Dyslexia Positives

  1. This role often involves strong spatial reasoning and practical problem-solving, which are common strengths for individuals with dyslexia.
  2. The emphasis on hands-on coordination, visual inspections, and direct communication can be more comfortable than heavy text-based tasks.
  3. Using digital tools with text-to-speech, dictation, and grammar-checking features can significantly aid written communication and documentation.

Dyslexia Challenges and Accommodations

  1. Reading and interpreting complex technical manuals, contracts, or regulatory documents might be difficult; providing access to digital versions with text-to-speech or summary tools can help.
  2. Ensuring accuracy in detailed reports or financial documents is crucial; using templates, proofreading software, and having a colleague review key documents can mitigate risks.
  3. Organising and categorising large amounts of information (e.g., vendor contracts, building plans) might require visual organisation tools and consistent digital filing systems.

Autism Positives

  1. The strong emphasis on logical problem-solving, adherence to safety protocols, and systematic process management can be a good fit.
  2. A clear focus on tangible outcomes – a working building, resolved issues – can be very satisfying.
  3. The ability to specialise in understanding complex building systems (MEP, BMS) can be a significant advantage.

Autism Challenges and Accommodations

  1. Navigating complex social dynamics with frustrated tenants or demanding vendors can be challenging; clear communication scripts, pre-defined escalation paths, and support from a manager can assist.
  2. Unexpected changes in schedule or emergency situations can be disruptive; providing as much advanced notice as possible for planned changes and clear, concise instructions during emergencies can help.
  3. Sensory overload from noisy plant rooms, flashing alarms, or crowded common areas might be an issue; allowing for quiet breaks, providing noise-cancelling headphones, and flexible working arrangements where possible can be beneficial.

Sensory Considerations

The work environment is a mix. You'll spend time in quiet offices, but also in noisy plant rooms, bustling tenant areas, and potentially dusty construction zones. Expect varying temperatures, occasional strong smells (e.g., during repairs), and the need to be alert to alarms or unusual sounds. Social interaction is frequent, from team meetings to tenant interactions and vendor negotiations.

Flexibility Notes

We're open to discussing reasonable adjustments to make this role work for the right person. For example, some flexibility in start/end times might be possible, or the provision of specific software tools to aid with documentation. The core of the role, however, requires on-site presence and responsiveness to building needs.

Key Responsibilities

Experience Levels Responsibilities

  1. Level: Lead Facilities Operations Coordinator
  2. Responsibilities: Define and implement the daily operational strategy for your assigned property, ensuring all building systems (MEP, fire, security) are running optimally and safely. This means you're setting the pace and the standards for your team.
  3. Accountable for the property's operational budget (up to £500K annually), tracking expenditure, identifying cost-saving opportunities, and approving invoices. You'll need to justify every significant spend to the Regional Facilities Manager.
  4. Build and lead a small team of 3-5 Building Operations Coordinators (L1-L2), providing daily supervision, mentoring, performance reviews, and supporting their development. You're their first point of call for any issues.
  5. Influence key internal stakeholders like Property Management and Health & Safety to ensure facilities operations align with broader business goals and compliance requirements. You'll present your case clearly and persuasively.
  6. Architect and refine preventive maintenance programmes using our CMMS (Archibus/FMX), making sure we're proactive, not just reactive. This includes optimising schedules and ensuring your team completes all PMs on time.
  7. Manage critical vendor relationships, negotiating contracts (up to £50K), ensuring Service Level Agreements (SLAs) are met, and conducting regular performance reviews. You'll also handle the trickier conversations when a vendor isn't performing.
  8. Lead emergency response efforts for your property, acting as the primary incident commander during critical events like floods, power outages, or fire alarms. You'll coordinate your team and external services to ensure tenant safety and minimise disruption.
  9. Supervision: You'll have monthly strategic alignment meetings with the Regional Facilities Manager, but day-to-day, you're autonomous on execution. You're expected to make most operational decisions independently, only escalating major strategic shifts or significant budget overruns.
  10. Decision: Full operational authority within your domain. You can approve purchases up to £10,000 without prior sign-off, and vendor contracts up to £50,000 with a quick 'heads-up' to your manager. You'll make hiring recommendations for your team, but final approval sits with the Regional Facilities Manager. Any decision impacting tenant leases or significant capital expenditure (over £50,000) needs senior management approval.
  11. Success: A smoothly running building with high tenant satisfaction, a well-managed budget within +/- 5% variance, a high PM completion rate (>98%), and a well-developed, high-performing team. You'll also be judged on your ability to proactively identify and mitigate risks, preventing issues before they become emergencies.

Decision-Making Authority

Save 15-25 Hours Weekly: Supercharge Your Facilities Operations with AI

Imagine cutting down on repetitive admin, predicting equipment failures before they happen, and communicating with tenants effortlessly. That's the reality with AI in facilities management. We're not talking about robots replacing you, but smart tools that make your job easier, faster, and more strategic.

ID:

Tool: Automated Work Order Triage & Routing

Benefit: AI can analyse incoming tenant emails and service requests, automatically identifying the issue (e.g., 'too cold,' 'flickering light'), assigning a priority level, and creating a detailed work order in our CMMS (Archibus/FMX) for the correct trade. It'll even suggest the right technician based on availability and skill set. This means less manual data entry and quicker response times.

ID:

Tool: Predictive Maintenance Alerts

Benefit: Imagine knowing an HVAC unit is about to fail *before* it actually breaks down. AI monitors real-time data from our BMS (Johnson Controls Metasys/Siemens Desigo) on critical assets. It identifies subtle anomalies that predict future failures and automatically generates a PM work order to investigate, shifting us from costly reactive repairs to planned, efficient maintenance. You'll be a hero.

ID:

Tool: Smart Vendor Compliance & Contract Review

Benefit: An AI tool can automatically scan vendor-submitted Certificates of Insurance (COIs), flagging non-compliant coverage amounts or expired policies. It'll also review contract terms against invoices, highlighting discrepancies. This prevents risky, uninsured contractors from working on-site and catches billing errors, saving us money and headaches. No more 'chasing COIs' endlessly.

ID: ✍️

Tool: AI-Assisted Tenant & Team Communications

Benefit: When a work order status is updated, AI can generate clear, empathetic status updates for the tenant (e.g., 'A technician has been assigned and is scheduled for tomorrow between 1-3 PM.'). It can also draft building-wide notices for planned maintenance or even help you structure performance feedback for your team. This ensures consistent, professional communication and frees you from typing repetitive updates.

15-25 hours per week on administrative tasks and reactive problem-solving. Weekly time savings potential
Roughly £50-£150/month for advanced AI tools and integrations, but the ROI is massive. Typical tool investment
Explore AI Productivity for Lead Facilities Operations Coordinator →

12-15 specific tools & techniques with implementation guides

Competency Requirements

Foundation Skills (Transferable)

Beyond the technical know-how, you'll need a solid set of 'human' skills to truly excel here. You're leading a team and dealing with a lot of people, so how you communicate, solve problems, and adapt is just as important as your understanding of a boiler.

Functional Skills (Role-Specific Technical)

This is where your deep understanding of how buildings work, combined with your ability to use the right tools, really shines. You're not just executing; you're designing, optimising, and troubleshooting at a higher level.

Technical Competencies

Digital Tools

Industry Knowledge

Regulatory Compliance Regulations

Essential Prerequisites

Career Pathway Context

We're looking for someone who's already been in the trenches and understands the complexities of running a building. You should be comfortable leading a small team and taking full ownership of a property's day-to-day operations. This isn't a role where you'll be learning the basics; you'll be applying your extensive knowledge and leadership skills from day one.

Qualifications & Credentials

Emerging Foundation Skills

Advancing Technical Skills

Future Skills Closing Note

The future of facilities management is about leveraging technology to work smarter, not just harder. By developing these skills, you won't just keep up; you'll be leading the charge, making our buildings more efficient, safer, and more responsive to the needs of our tenants. It's an exciting time to be in this field, and we want you to be at the forefront.

Education Requirements

Experience Requirements

You'll need at least 8-12 years of hands-on experience in building operations and facilities management, with a minimum of 3-5 years in a leadership or supervisory capacity. This isn't an entry-level management role; we need someone who's already proven they can run a property, manage a budget, and lead a small team. You should have a strong track record of managing vendors, optimising maintenance programmes, and successfully handling emergency situations in a commercial property setting.

Preferred Certifications

Recommended Activities

Career Progression Pathways

Entry Paths to This Role

Career Progression From This Role

Long Term Vision Potential Roles

Sector Mobility

The skills you'll develop here are highly transferable. You could move into corporate real estate, property management, project management for construction, or even specialise in areas like sustainability or smart building technology within other industries. The core principles of managing physical assets and ensuring operational excellence are universal.

How Zavmo Delivers This Role's Development

DISCOVER Phase: Skills Gap Analysis

Zavmo maps your current competencies against all requirements in this job description through conversational assessment. We evaluate your foundation skills (communication, strategic thinking), functional skills (CRM expertise, negotiation), and readiness for career progression.

Output: Personalised skills gap heat map showing strengths and priorities, estimated time to competency, neurodiversity accommodations.

DISCUSS Phase: Personalised Learning Pathway

Based on your DISCOVER results, Zavmo creates a personalised learning plan prioritised by impact: foundation skills first, then functional skills. We adapt to your learning style, pace, and neurodiversity needs (ADHD, dyslexia, autism).

Output: Week-by-week schedule, each module linked to specific job responsibilities, checkpoints and milestones.

DELIVER Phase: Conversational Learning

Learn through conversation, not boring modules. Zavmo uses 10 conversation types (Socratic dialogue, role-play, coaching, case studies) to build competence. Practice difficult QBR presentations, negotiate tough renewals, and handle churn conversations in a safe AI environment before facing real clients.

Example: "For 'Stakeholder Mapping', Zavmo will guide you through analysing a complex enterprise account, identifying key decision-makers, and building an engagement strategy."

DEMONSTRATE Phase: Competency Assessment

Zavmo automatically builds your evidence portfolio as you learn. Every conversation, practice scenario, and application example is captured and mapped to NOS performance criteria. When ready, your portfolio supports OFQUAL qualification claims and demonstrates competence to employers.

Output: Competency matrix, evidence portfolio (downloadable), qualification readiness, career progression score.

Discover Your Skills Gap Explore Learning Paths