Why This 10-Book Series Is Different
Most HOA books, websites, and educational resources explain how the existing system works.
They describe the laws, outline homeowner rights, explain board responsibilities, discuss elections, and offer advice for resolving disputes.
That information is valuable.
But it addresses the symptoms rather than the underlying structure that produces those symptoms.
This series was developed to answer a different set of questions.
Instead of asking how homeowners can work within the current system, it asks whether the system itself should be redesigned.
It explores three fundamental questions:
Why do the same HOA problems keep recurring, even after board members change?
Why do well-intentioned reform efforts often produce little lasting improvement?
What type of governance structure is most likely to produce transparency, accountability, homeowner participation, and long-term success?
A Complete System—Not a Collection of Books
Redesigning HOAs for Homeowners is not a series of independent books.
Each volume builds upon the one before it, creating a logical progression from understanding the current system to designing a better one.
The series follows a structured path:
Understanding → Diagnosis → Structural Design → Overcoming Resistance → Implementation → Sustainability
Each stage provides the foundation for the next.
Skipping steps often results in incomplete solutions, repeated frustration, and reforms that fail to address the root causes of HOA problems.
Why This Matters
If you've ever wondered why:
The same problems continue year after year...
Homeowner concerns seem to receive little attention...
Boards change, but the community changes very little...
Meaningful reform feels difficult or even impossible...
