How to present CAM audit findings to a client: accuracy, tone, and avoiding overpromising
The findings delivery meeting is the highest-value touchpoint in a CAM audit engagement. It is where the analysis becomes real for the client, where trust is built or damaged, and where the client decides whether to pursue a dispute.
Partners who deliver findings poorly do two predictable things: they overstate finding certainty and create expectations the landlord's response will not meet, or they understate findings to manage expectations and leave the client with no clear sense of what to do next. Both failures damage the partner's credibility and reduce the probability of engagement renewal.
The goal of a findings delivery is to present an accurate, calibrated assessment of what the analysis found, what each finding means for the client, and what options the client has. This guide covers how to structure that presentation.
High-Confidence Finding: A CAM audit finding supported by explicit calculation from unambiguous lease language. For example: the lease caps the management fee at 4% of collected rents, the reconciliation shows a management fee of $12,000, and collected rents were $240,000, making the maximum allowed fee $9,600 and the overcharge $2,400. The lease language is clear, the numbers are documented, and the calculation is arithmetic. Confidence levels in CAMAudit''s findings output distinguish between math-verified findings and classification-based findings that require lease language interpretation.
Before the meeting: preparation and review
The partner should review the detection output in full before the client meeting, not during it. The pre-meeting review serves three purposes.
First, it identifies findings that need additional context before delivery. A management fee finding where the computation base is ambiguous in the lease requires a note explaining the ambiguity. An excluded service charge finding where the exclusion clause language is broadly worded requires a note about the interpretation the finding relies on.
Second, it allows the partner to verify the most significant findings independently. For any finding above $5,000 per year, re-run the calculation manually against the lease provision before delivery. Detection engine outputs should be treated as accurate, but manual verification on material findings prevents the embarrassment of a calculation error being identified during the delivery meeting.
Third, it allows the partner to sequence the findings for the meeting. Present findings in order from highest to lowest dollar magnitude, with the most defensible findings first. Starting with the most certain and most valuable finding anchors the client's attention on the strongest part of the case.
The delivery meeting structure
A well-structured findings delivery meeting has four phases.
Phase 1: Setting the context (10 minutes)
Explain what was reviewed: the specific lease provisions, the specific reconciliation years, and the rules the detection engine applied. Clients who understand what was analyzed are better positioned to evaluate the findings and ask useful questions.
Cover the confidence calibration framework at the start: "I'll tell you for each finding whether this is a confirmed calculation error we can document clearly from the lease, or whether it's a potential issue that requires additional documentation from the landlord. These are different and I want to make sure you understand the distinction as we go through them."
Phase 2: Walking through findings (20-30 minutes)
Present each finding individually with the following elements:
The finding name in plain language: "The management fee was calculated on a base that includes items the lease excludes."
The specific lease provision: "Your lease section [X] limits the management fee to [percentage] of collected rents. Collected rents are defined in Section [Y] as base rent payments received, excluding operating expense reimbursements."
The reconciliation figure: "The reconciliation shows a management fee of $[amount] applied to a base of $[amount], which includes $[excluded amount] in operating expense reimbursements."
The finding amount: "The maximum permitted fee would be $[calculation]. The overcharge is $[difference] for [year], and $[multi-year total] across the [X] years we reviewed."
The confidence level: "This is a high-confidence finding because the lease language is explicit on the definition of collected rents and the reconciliation separately lists the base the fee was applied to."
Phase 3: Decision framing (10 minutes)
After presenting all findings, give the client a total and a choice structure. Do not assume they want to pursue every finding. Some clients prioritize the landlord relationship over recovery. Some want to pursue only the largest findings. Some want a formal dispute on all findings.
Present the options: "You have three paths here. We can send a formal dispute letter on all confirmed findings, which is the maximum recovery approach. We can prioritize the two largest findings and raise them informally before committing to a formal dispute process. Or you can table the findings for now and use them as context for your lease renewal discussion. Each of these is a legitimate choice depending on how you want to manage the landlord relationship."
Phase 4: Next steps (5 minutes)
Confirm which path the client wants to take, set the timeline for the next step (dispute letter drafting, informal landlord communication, or renewal preparation), and confirm what the client needs to do before the next engagement step.
Explaining each finding type to non-specialist clients
Management fee overcharges
The management fee is what the landlord charges for managing the property, expressed as a percentage of a defined base. The finding is that the base is wrong.
Plain language explanation: "Your property management company charges for their management services as a percentage of how much revenue the property generates. Your lease defines what counts as revenue for that calculation. The calculation in the reconciliation includes amounts that your lease says shouldn't be counted. That makes the fee larger than your lease allows."
Visual aid: a simple table showing the contracted percentage, the correct base, the computed correct fee, the actual fee charged, and the difference.
Pro-rata share errors
The pro-rata share is the tenant's allocated percentage of total building expenses. The finding is that the percentage is wrong.
Plain language explanation: "Your share of operating expenses should be your square footage divided by the total building area. The reconciliation applies a higher percentage than that calculation produces. The extra percentage points represent a charge above what your lease requires."
Visual aid: a calculation showing leased area, total building area, computed percentage, stated percentage, and the dollar difference at current expense levels.
Excluded service charges
Excluded service charges are costs the lease prohibits from the CAM pool. The finding is that the landlord included prohibited costs.
Plain language explanation: "Your lease lists certain costs the landlord cannot include in your CAM charges. We found [specific cost category] in the reconciliation's expense list, and your lease specifically excludes that category. You should not have been charged for it."
Note for delivery: classification-based findings require more careful language than math-based findings. Present them as "appears to include an excluded cost" rather than "definitely includes an excluded cost" when the exclusion clause requires interpretation.
Controllable expense cap violations
The controllable cap limits how fast certain operating costs can grow. The finding is that growth exceeded the cap.
Plain language explanation: "Your lease limits how much the landlord can increase certain operating costs year over year. The costs covered by this cap increased by more than the limit allows. The amount above the limit is a charge your lease does not permit."
The language guard: what not to say
Certain phrases in findings delivery create problems that outlast the engagement.
Do not say "the landlord violated your lease." Say "the calculation does not match the formula your lease specifies." The distinction is legally significant because a violation implies intentional breach, which is a legal conclusion the partner is not qualified to make.
Do not say "you are owed [specific amount]." Say "if the findings are confirmed, the recovery would be approximately [amount]." The recovery amount is confirmed through a dispute process, not through detection alone.
Do not say "the landlord will have to pay." Say "these findings give you a documented basis to request a correction and a credit." The landlord's response is not within the partner's control.
Do not say "this is definitely fraud." Do not say "this is a standard error." The former creates legal exposure. The latter minimizes findings the client may need to be taken seriously.
After the delivery: the next engagement moment
The findings delivery meeting is also a business development moment. A client who understands what the audit found is positioned to share that experience with peers who have similar leases. Before ending the meeting, ask if the client knows other business owners or colleagues in similar NNN lease situations who might benefit from the same review. This question is natural after a successful delivery and produces the highest-quality referrals in the partner's practice.
Partners who want details on delivery formats, dispute letter draft preparation, and the full white-label engagement scope can review the CAMAudit white-label partner program.