
By the time an HOA or MDU community reaches the proposal stage, fatigue often sets in.
Boards are juggling multiple vendors, residents are impatient, and everyone wants a decision. This is when shortcuts happen, and shortcuts are expensive.
This checklist is designed to slow the process down just enough to prevent costly mistakes. It provides a structured way to evaluate internet providers, identify red flags, and compare proposals fairly.
No provider will check every box perfectly. The goal is informed decision making, not perfection.
Before You Use This Checklist
This checklist works best when boards agree on priorities before reviewing proposals.
Before applying the checklist, boards should align on:
- Target budget range
- Preferred contract length
- Importance of resident choice versus uniformity
- Tolerance for construction and disruption
Without alignment, the checklist can turn into a debate tool instead of a decision tool.
Before reviewing proposals, confirm the decision structure.
- Who has authority to approve the agreement
- Whether a resident vote is required
- What quorum or approval threshold applies
- Who is authorized to sign contracts
If this is unclear, stop and resolve it first.
Understand exactly what will be built or modified.
Ask providers:
- What infrastructure will be installed
- Where equipment will be located
- What construction is required
- How long installation will take
Vague answers here often lead to surprises later.
Speed numbers alone do not tell the full story.
Boards should ask:
- Are speeds symmetrical or asymmetrical
- How performance holds up during peak usage
- What uptime commitments exist
- How outages are handled
Reliability and consistency matter more than peak speed.
Look beyond promotional rates.
Confirm:
- Total monthly cost per unit
- Length of promotional pricing
- Rate increase terms
- Additional fees or charges
Ask for pricing modeled across the full contract term.
Contracts should reflect the community’s tolerance for risk.
Confirm:
- Contract length
- Conditions for early termination
- Performance based exit options
- Penalties or fees
Flexibility protects the community long term.
Ownership determines future freedom.
Ask:
- Who owns wiring and equipment
- Who controls access to infrastructure
- What happens to infrastructure if the contract ends
Unclear ownership language is a major red flag.
Support quality directly affects resident satisfaction.
Confirm:
- Who handles repairs
- Response time expectations
- Resident support channels
- After hours or emergency support
Strong support can compensate for minor service issues.
Certain warning signs deserve extra scrutiny.
Common red flags include:
- Pressure to sign quickly
- Long contracts with no exit flexibility
- Unclear ownership or maintenance terms
- Promises not documented in writing
Red flags do not always mean rejection, but they require clear answers.
Commonly Overlooked Questions
Boards often forget to ask questions that reveal long term risk.
Be sure to ask:
- What happens if the provider is acquired or merges
- How upgrades are handled mid contract
- Whether service levels are guaranteed or best effort
- How disputes are resolved
These questions surface issues before contracts are signed.
Use the same criteria for every provider.
Create a comparison framework that includes:
- Cost over the full contract term
- Service reliability and support
- Contract flexibility
- Impact on residents
Avoid comparing options based on speed or price alone.
When Two Options Look Similar
When proposals are closely matched, boards should consider:
- Which option offers greater flexibility
- Which provider communicated more clearly
- Which proposal reduces long term risk
A good decision is often about risk management, not marginal differences in speed.
Before approval, ensure transparency.
Share with residents:
- Why certain options were considered
- Why others were eliminated
- What tradeoffs were accepted
Clear communication reduces resistance and builds trust.
Why This Checklist Matters Later
Using a structured checklist creates documentation.
That documentation shows:
- Options were evaluated consistently
- Tradeoffs were discussed openly
- Decisions were made in good faith
This protects boards, supports future boards, and reduces second guessing years later.
A Simple Comparison Framework
| Factor | Provider A | Provider B |
| Monthly Cost | ||
| Contract Length | ||
| Ownership | ||
| Exit Options | ||
| Support |
This framework keeps discussions focused and productive.
Key Takeaways Before Moving On
Before approving any provider, boards should confidently answer:
- Do we understand what we are agreeing to
- Have we compared options fairly
- Can we explain the decision clearly
If the answer is no, pause and revisit the checklist.
