Diagnostics
Select where you are.
"Is this community's occupancy defensible, and can the operator sustain or grow it in this specific market?"
External Signals Assessment
Every dimension is assessed from fully external, independently verifiable data.
Verified Backend Assessment
Move-in source reporting, traffic and conversion data, advertising performance records. Exported by the seller into the data room, then cross-verified against the External Signals findings to confirm or challenge what the offering memo claims.
Seller refusal to cooperate on the Verified Backend Assessment is itself a finding, documented as a risk signal in the External Signals Assessment deliverable.
Portfolio Operator Read
Applies the External Signals Assessment methodology across every asset an operator currently runs in their visible portfolio. Produces a read on operator consistency: whether market-facing capability holds across the footprint, where it concentrates, and where it thins. Built for REITs evaluating SHOP conversions, capital partners acquiring multi-asset operators, and any buyer whose commitment extends across multiple assets under a single operator.
External Signals Assessment
$15,000 per community
Verified Backend Assessment
$27,500 per community
Where does this community appear in local search? Is it visible to families actively searching? How does its digital footprint compare to the three to five closest competitors?
Is the review profile improving, stable, or declining? What is the velocity and sentiment trend across Google, aggregator sites, and care-specific review sites?
Who is winning in this local market and why? What is the competitive density, and where does this community rank on the signals that drive family selection?
How dependent is this community on aggregator-sourced demand versus organic demand? High aggregator dependency means high ongoing cost and low pricing power.
Does the operator own the digital infrastructure (website, domain, Google Business Profile, ad accounts) or is it controlled by a third party? Ownership determines transition risk. The dimension also captures Physical Presentation Signals as Observed signals of operator stewardship: stale photos, outdated virtual tours, and unmaintained listings. Physical plant condition is a separate workstream.
Does the operator demonstrate local market awareness, community engagement, and responsiveness to market-facing signals? This is the most interpretive dimension.
What is the community's exact commercial position at the moment of assessment? This becomes the reference point if the deal proceeds.
Illustrative pattern, drawn from the kinds of findings Nordon routinely surfaces. Not a specific past engagement.
A capital partner had a twelve-community senior housing portfolio under LOI at a $42M asking price. The offering memo showed stabilized occupancy of 88% across the portfolio, which the seller positioned as proof of operational strength. Financial reporting confirmed the occupancy. Nothing in the deal documents addressed how that occupancy was being produced.
Financial reporting confirmed the 88% occupancy. Rent rolls were clean. NOI was consistent with the offering memorandum. Nothing in the standard diligence package addressed lead source composition or the cost structure behind the move-in volume.
All twelve communities carried enhanced paid listings on multiple aggregator sites. Google Business Profile presence was weak or dormant. Organic search rankings were near-invisible for high-intent terms in all twelve markets. No professional referral network was documented in nine of the twelve markets. The external signals pointed to a portfolio where occupancy was being purchased, not earned. The finding was graded Critical.
Seller-provided move-in source data confirmed the magnitude: 76% of trailing twelve-month move-ins had originated from paid aggregator referrals, at an effective cost of $4,200 per move-in. Industry aggregator share for stabilized communities sits in the 30 to 45 percent range. The portfolio was more than double the industry norm.
The 88% occupancy was real. The cost of maintaining it was structurally elevated by an estimated $1.1M annually in excess aggregator fees. More material than the cost itself: the portfolio's NOI was exposed to two risks that financial statements would not surface until two to three quarters after the trigger event. First, aggregator pricing increases. Second, aggregator algorithm or relationship changes that could compress lead flow inside a single quarter, with no replacement pipeline to absorb the loss.
The capital partner used the documented finding to restructure the deal. The transaction closed at $39.4M against the original $42M asking, a $2.6M reduction directly attributed to the dependency risk surfaced in the diagnostic. The partner also embedded an aggregator-reduction operating thesis into the post-close 100-day plan, with measurable milestones at six, twelve, and eighteen months.
Aggregator dependency fell from 76% to 41% portfolio-wide, inside the industry benchmark range. Cost-per-move-in dropped from $4,200 to a blended $1,800. NOI lift attributable to acquisition-cost reduction: approximately $980K annualized.
A healthcare PE fund acquired an eight-community assisted living portfolio in a mid-density Southeast market. Purchase price: $136M. Trailing twelve-month occupancy across the portfolio averaged 91%. The seller had stabilized the portfolio over 18 months following a post-pandemic census rebuild, and the financials reflected that recovery. The fund underwrote a 36-month hold with a 93% stabilized occupancy target and a 7.2% exit cap rate.
Rent rolls confirmed the 91% figure. TTM NOI was consistent with the OM projections. DSCR cleared the lender threshold at 1.35x. The appraisal supported the purchase price. Financial diligence confirmed what it was designed to confirm: the numbers on the page were real.
The 91% occupancy was real. How it was achieved was the problem. Six of the eight communities were running move-in concessions averaging two months of free rent, with community fees waived on 40% of new admissions. Concession depth had increased in each of the prior three quarters. The operator was buying census, not earning it.
A Pre-Acquisition Assessment would have measured the signals underneath that occupancy number. Online reputation scores across the portfolio had declined 14% over the trailing 12 months, with three communities falling below the competitive median in their submarket. Search visibility for high-intent terms had dropped across five of the eight markets as competitors invested in local digital presence. The portfolio's lead pipeline showed 68% aggregator dependency, with no owned digital demand generation. Competitor communities in four of the eight submarkets had launched or expanded memory care programs in the prior 18 months, shifting the competitive landscape for the assisted living census the portfolio depended on.
The occupancy number was accurate. The trajectory underneath it pointed down. Every concession that expired was a retention test the portfolio was poorly positioned to pass.
The fund closed. Within six months, concessions began rolling off. Residents who had moved in at discounted rates saw rate normalization and began evaluating alternatives. Four communities dropped below 85% occupancy within nine months of close. NOI compression across the portfolio reached 22% by month 14. The fund's exit timeline extended from 36 months to a projected 54 months, with the revised exit cap rate widening to 7.8%. The estimated valuation impact: $11M to $14M in lost exit value against the original underwriting.
"Who is winning in this market and why, and is there a viable position for a new entrant?"
Single Tier
Every operator in the target market is assessed externally without their involvement or knowledge. The report maps competitive density, identifies who controls demand in each sub-market, and determines whether there is a defensible position for a new entrant.
Starting at $15,000 per market
Illustrative pattern, drawn from the kinds of findings Nordon routinely surfaces. Not a specific past engagement.
An operator-backed company committed to entering three new metropolitan submarkets in the upper Midwest as part of a capital-funded expansion plan. Combined capital at risk: $52M across two acquisitions and one ground-up development. The expansion thesis was demographic. NIC MAP data showed 80+ population growth of 18% projected over five years, absorption rates exceeding inventory growth for six consecutive quarters, and submarket occupancy averaging 89%. The numbers supported entry.
Feasibility studies confirmed the demographic case. Absorption data supported the occupancy trajectory. The financial models showed stabilization at 90% within 24 months across all three assets, consistent with the submarket averages. The capital commitment proceeded on schedule.
A Market Entry Analysis would have assessed what the demographics could not: whether the demand could be captured by a new entrant, or whether the competitive structure of each submarket had already allocated it.
In two of the three markets, a single regional operator controlled 55% to 60% of available beds with communities that had been operating for 12 to 18 years. Those operators had locked in the local referral ecosystem. Hospital discharge planners, physician practices, elder law attorneys, and home health agencies in those markets had established routing patterns that sent families to the incumbents. Search visibility analysis would have shown the dominant operators holding first-page positions on 80%+ of local high-intent search terms. Online reputation profiles for the incumbents averaged 4.4 stars on 200+ reviews. A new entrant would start with zero reviews, zero referral relationships, and no search presence.
The third market had more competitive fragmentation but also had two new communities under construction by operators with existing regional brand recognition. The entrant would be arriving at the same time as competitors who already had local name awareness.
The operator entered all three markets. After 18 months, the two acquired communities had stabilized at 76% and 79% occupancy, well below the 90% underwriting. The development project leased to 62% in its first year. Lead volume in the two incumbent-dominated markets came almost entirely from aggregator referrals at high cost-per-lead, because the operator had no organic demand generation. The operator spent $1.2M in unplanned marketing over the first two years attempting to build visibility that the incumbents had accumulated over a decade. The revised stabilization timeline extended to 36+ months. Capital return projections on the three-market expansion eroded by an estimated $8M to $12M against the original model.
"What was the community's exact commercial position the day the keys changed hands?"
Not sold as a standalone engagement. This is the natural continuation for Pre-Acquisition Assessment buyers who proceed to close. It captures the community's exact commercial position at the moment of ownership transfer, establishing the reference point for all subsequent performance measurement.
Illustrative pattern, drawn from the kinds of findings Nordon routinely surfaces. Not a specific past engagement.
A mid-cap REIT acquired a five-community assisted living and memory care portfolio in the Mountain West for $78M under a SHOP structure. Occupancy at close: 88%. As part of the acquisition, the REIT transitioned management from the seller's operating team to a third-party operator with a strong regional track record and 30+ communities under management. The new operator assumed control 45 days after close.
Financial diligence confirmed the 88% occupancy, stable NOI, and clean rent rolls. The incoming operator's portfolio-level metrics were reviewed: average occupancy of 90% across its existing managed communities, positive revenue growth, and favorable reference checks. The REIT's asset management team was satisfied with the financial handoff.
A Transition Baseline would have captured the commercial position of each community at the moment the keys changed hands. That snapshot would have documented: where each community ranked in local search results for its care category, the online reputation profile including review volume, sentiment trajectory, and competitive standing, the lead source mix and aggregator dependency, the competitive position relative to every direct competitor within the primary draw radius, and the state of the community's digital marketing infrastructure.
This is not a performance assessment. It is a timestamp. It records the inherited position so that any future movement, up or down, can be measured against a documented starting point. Without it, the investor has no instrument to distinguish between a market condition, a transition disruption, and an operator performance failure. Every future conversation about accountability starts from an undocumented baseline.
Within six months, portfolio occupancy dropped from 88% to 81%. Two communities fell below 78%. The REIT's asset management team requested an explanation. The operator attributed the decline to transition disruption: families uncomfortable with the change, staff turnover during the handoff, and referral source relationships that needed time to rebuild. The REIT had no evidence to challenge that narrative. There was no documented record of where the communities stood in the market at the moment of transition. The operator's explanation was plausible but unverifiable.
Twelve months passed before the REIT concluded the decline was operator performance, not transition disruption. By then, three communities had dropped below 75% and the REIT initiated a second operator search. The remediation cost including lost NOI, transition expenses, and management fee overlap exceeded $3.2M. The 12-month delay in identifying the cause was the most expensive part of the problem.
"Is the operator performing as underwritten, and are there early warning signals the financial reporting cannot yet show?"
Requires proven delivery infrastructure from the Pre-Acquisition Assessment and Market Entry Analysis.
Market-facing deterioration typically precedes occupancy decline by 6-12 months. This configuration surfaces those signals on a recurring basis, giving capital partners time to intervene before the financial reporting reflects the problem.
Illustrative pattern, drawn from the kinds of findings Nordon routinely surfaces. Not a specific past engagement.
A REIT held a 19-community SHOP portfolio across four states, predominantly assisted living and memory care. The portfolio was acquired over a 30-month period through three separate transactions, all managed by a single operating partner under a RIDEA structure. Aggregate investment: $310M. Portfolio occupancy had held between 87% and 90% since the final acquisition closed. NOI reported stable for six consecutive quarters.
Quarterly financial reporting confirmed the occupancy band. NOI met or exceeded budget in each reporting period. The REIT's asset management team flagged no performance concerns. Operator calls were routine. The portfolio appeared healthy by every financial metric available to the investment committee.
A Portfolio Health Monitor would have been reporting on the market-facing trajectory of each community on a quarterly or monthly cadence. Starting approximately nine months before the NOI moved, the signals would have shown a pattern forming across multiple communities simultaneously.
Online reputation scores at seven communities had declined quarter-over-quarter for three consecutive periods. Review volume at four communities had dropped below the competitive median, signaling reduced family engagement with the brand. Search visibility for assisted living and memory care terms had eroded in six submarkets as competitors increased their digital presence. In five communities, competitor occupancy was rising while the portfolio community's lead volume was flat or declining. The competitive gap was widening in real time.
None of these signals appeared in a rent roll. All of them were observable from outside the building. Together, they formed a pattern: the operator was losing ground in the market before it showed up in the financials. The NOI was a lagging indicator of a problem that had been building for three quarters.
In Q7, NOI dropped across eight communities simultaneously. Occupancy declined from the 87% to 90% band to an average of 82% within two quarters. The operator attributed the decline to market softness. The REIT's own investigation confirmed that five of the eight affected communities were in submarkets where competitor occupancy had actually increased during the same period. The problem was operator performance, not market conditions. By the time the financials revealed the pattern, the remediation window was already compressed. Restoring competitive position in eight submarkets required marketing investment, reputation rebuilding, and in three cases, supplemental staffing for the sales function. Estimated NOI erosion over the correction period: $4.8M. Estimated remediation spend: $1.6M.
"Why is this asset I own underperforming, and what is driving it?"
Asset Performance Diagnostic
A point-in-time investigation of a single asset where the owner has identified a performance question and needs to know what is driving it. The diagnostic surfaces causes. Execution belongs to the operator or to a separate execution advisor.
Deliverable Includes
Deliverable Excludes
$22,500 per asset
Illustrative pattern, drawn from the kinds of findings Nordon routinely surfaces. Not a specific past engagement.
A capital owner held a 110-unit assisted living and memory care community in a Mid-Atlantic submarket. Census across both segments was stable at 90 percent. Over an eight-week period, the owner observed a softening trend in MC inquiry volume on the operator's weekly pipeline reports. Move-ins remained on plan. NOI was unaffected. The operator attributed the slowdown to seasonality.
Financial reporting showed no impact. Census remained at 90 percent. The pipeline weakening was visible only in inquiry volume and tour conversion. Standard quarterly reporting cycles would not surface the issue for another two to three quarters.
MC-specific search visibility had declined approximately 30 percent in the prior six weeks. A newly opened MC community 2.4 miles away had launched an aggressive paid search campaign targeting the same draw radius. Four negative reviews referencing a recent staff transition had appeared on the owner's MC profile. Operator-authorized CRM exports confirmed MC inquiry volume down 34 percent over the eight-week window. The decline was structural, not seasonal. The finding was graded Material.
The owner authorized corrective action within five days of receiving the diagnostic. MC inquiry volume recovered to baseline within 60 days. Census across both segments remained at 90 percent throughout. NOI was not impacted in any reporting period.
"Can you document to the exit buyer that this asset's commercial performance supports the valuation you are asking for?"
Requires documented track record across the product line.
Same analytical engine as the Pre-Acquisition Assessment, reframed as a performance narrative for the exit buyer. The acquisition-side buyer will conduct their own diligence. If they find undocumented decline, they price that uncertainty into their offer. Documented performance evidence removes the justification for that discount.
Illustrative pattern, drawn from the kinds of findings Nordon routinely surfaces. Not a specific past engagement.
A PE fund brought a six-community independent living and assisted living portfolio to market after a 48-month hold. The portfolio was in a supply-constrained Sun Belt market. Trailing twelve-month financials were strong: average occupancy of 92%, NOI growth of 8% year-over-year, and rate increases averaging 5.5% annually. The fund's broker positioned the portfolio at a 6.8% exit cap rate, implying a sale price in the range of $94M to $98M.
The seller's data room contained the standard financial package: three years of audited financials, rent rolls, operating budgets, capital expenditure history, and demographic overlays showing the 80+ population growth trajectory. Every financial metric supported the asking price. The seller expected a competitive process with multiple qualified bids.
An Exit Positioning Package would have documented the portfolio's commercial position from the buyer's perspective before the sale process began. It would have provided independently verified evidence of competitive standing, reputation strength, lead pipeline health, and digital presence. More critically, it would have identified and addressed the questions that a sophisticated buyer's diligence team would raise.
In this case, the buyer's own assessment found: two communities with online reputation scores below the submarket median and declining review trajectories over six months; aggregator dependency exceeding 55% of lead volume at three communities, meaning a meaningful share of the demand pipeline was rented, not owned; one community where a competitor 1.8 miles away had opened a newly built assisted living wing six months prior and was actively absorbing move-ins from the same draw area; and no documented marketing infrastructure that would transfer to a new owner. The operator's sales team was the marketing function. If the operator changed, the lead generation capability would leave with them.
The buyer's diligence team surfaced every finding listed above. Each one became a negotiating point. The aggregator dependency was priced as a lead source risk, discounted at an estimated 15 to 25 basis points. The competitive threat from the new community was modeled as a potential occupancy drag on the most exposed asset. The reputation vulnerability at two communities was factored into a risk-adjusted NOI projection. The absence of transferable marketing infrastructure was treated as a transition cost the buyer would absorb.
The final sale price: $91.4M. The gap between the broker's positioning and the closed price was $2.6M to $6.6M, depending on whether the lower or upper end of the original range is used. Every discount was directly attributable to unanswered questions the seller could have documented first. The buyer did not invent these findings. They observed them. The seller's failure was not having the evidence ready.
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