How to close out a CAM audit engagement and deliver the savings report
Engagement closeout is one of the most revenue-generating steps in a CAM audit practice, and the most frequently skipped. Partners who deliver findings, support a dispute, and then go silent when the resolution comes in miss the moment when the client relationship is warmest and the transition to ongoing monitoring is easiest to propose.
A properly executed closeout does three things: it delivers a final, organized savings report the client can file and reference; it creates a documented record that protects the partner in any future professional liability question; and it opens the conversation about re-audit timing and ongoing monitoring.
Forward Savings: The estimated future value of a CAM audit finding that corrects an ongoing overcharge. Distinct from past recovery (overcharges already paid and recovered through dispute), forward savings quantifies the benefit of corrected charges flowing into future lease years. A management fee correction that reduces annual CAM by $2,400 with 4 years of remaining term produces $9,600 in forward savings. Forward savings estimates are based on current expense levels and remaining lease term and carry uncertainty, but represent real economic value to the client.
The closeout deliverable: the final savings report
The final savings report is the formal output of the engagement. It translates the technical findings and dispute outcomes into a client-ready document that answers the question every client has: "What did this engagement actually produce?"
The report structure:
Engagement summary. One paragraph covering the scope: which years were reviewed, which locations, and which documents were analyzed. This section establishes what the engagement covered and, by implication, what it did not cover, protecting the partner from claims about periods or locations outside scope.
Findings summary table. A table listing each finding with the finding type, the annual overcharge amount, the lookback period covered, and the total recovery for that finding. Include a total row. Present confirmed recoveries and contested amounts separately if any findings are still unresolved.
Resolution status. A narrative description of how each finding was resolved: confirmed recovery, credit applied, payment received, finding contested and withdrawn, or finding under continued dispute. This section documents the outcome of the dispute cycle.
Forward savings estimate. A separate section presenting the annualized value of corrections flowing into future lease years, multiplied by remaining term. Label clearly as an estimate. This section demonstrates the multi-year value of the engagement beyond the past recovery.
Recommendations. A brief closing section recommending when the next reconciliation should be reviewed, whether any contested findings should be monitored for future developments, and whether any lease provisions should be flagged for the client's renewal negotiation.
Calculating and presenting recovery amounts
Recovery amounts in the final savings report should match the documented outcomes: the credit amount confirmed by the landlord, the payment received, or the recalculated amount agreed upon in a negotiated settlement.
Do not include in the final confirmed recovery: findings contested by the landlord and not yet resolved, findings the client elected not to pursue, findings withdrawn after landlord counter-argument.
Do include in a separate "additional potential" section: findings still under active dispute, findings where the landlord has not responded but the dispute letter is within window, and findings the client may choose to raise in a future reconciliation negotiation.
This distinction matters because clients sometimes share the savings report with their CFO, their attorney, or their business partners. A report that conflates projected potential with confirmed recovery creates expectations that may not be met.
The closeout conversation
The closeout meeting or call covers three topics: the final savings report, the dispute resolution outcome summary, and the proposal for ongoing monitoring.
Savings report delivery. Walk through the report page by page for the first engagement with a client. For re-audit clients who are familiar with the format, a brief summary of what changed versus last year is sufficient.
Resolution summary. Review each finding's outcome. For any findings still under dispute, confirm whether the client wants to continue pursuing them and what the next step is. For any findings withdrawn, explain why clearly.
Ongoing monitoring proposal. The transition to monitoring is a natural follow-on: "Your next reconciliation arrives in [month]. We can set up a standing arrangement to review it within the audit rights window as it comes in. The re-audit takes about a third of the time of this initial engagement because the lease is already analyzed. The cost is [fee], and we handle everything the same way we handled this engagement."
Clients who experienced good findings in the initial engagement convert to ongoing monitoring at high rates when the proposal is made at closeout. The engagement outcome is fresh, the trust is established, and the client understands the process.
After the meeting: the referral ask
After the closeout meeting, send a brief follow-up email within 48 hours that includes the final savings report as an attachment and a referral request.
The referral request email:
"Thank you for the opportunity to work through this with you. If you have colleagues or clients who are in similar NNN lease situations, we are happy to do a quick initial assessment for them. Feel free to pass along my contact information, or let me know if you'd like me to reach out to someone directly."
This email format is direct without being aggressive, it provides a clear action for the client (pass along contact info or give permission to reach out), and it arrives at the highest-engagement moment in the relationship.
Filing and retention
Complete the engagement file at closeout. The file should include:
- Signed engagement letter
- All documents collected from the client
- Detection output (full findings report from CAMAudit)
- Dispute letter draft(s) prepared
- All dispute correspondence (dated)
- Final resolution documentation (credit memo, payment confirmation, or settlement agreement)
- Final savings report as delivered
- Client communications log
Organize the file by date and store it in the firm's document management system. Label the file clearly with the client name, property, and engagement year. Retain for the statute of limitations period applicable in your state, typically 3 to 6 years from engagement close.
The organized engagement file serves as: a reference for the re-audit engagement, the defense file if a professional liability claim is ever filed, and the basis for case study writing if the client gives permission.
For a full overview of the white-label engagement model, including deliverable formats and client-facing branding tools, see the CAMAudit white-label partner program.