News: Front Section

Phillips joins Trinity Management as vice president of marketing and business development

Courtney Phillips has joined Trinity Management, LLC as its vice president of marketing and business development. Courtney Phillips, Trinity Management, LLC

Boston, MA Courtney Phillips has joined Trinity Management, LLC as its vice president of marketing and business development.

Phillips has more than 10 years of experience in operational sales, marketing and strategic planning, with a particular focus on the market-rate, multi-family sector. She also has extensive knowledge of risk management, asset re-positioning, employee recruitment, team leadership and property operations in many diverse housing markets across the country.

Before joining Trinity Management, Phillips was the vice president of sales and marketing for a startup where she scaled the marketing efforts and expanded the national sales portfolio. Prior to that, she was a general manager at Building and Land Technology overseeing the operations of the largest historical residential renovation in the country consisting of six high-rise buildings with 1,154 units. She also worked as a senior manager for Aspen Square Management evaluating, transitioning and rebranding newly acquired assets.

Her career has taken her to varied markets throughout the country, including Atlanta, GA, Jersey City, N.J., Danbury, Conn., Stamford, Conn., and further afield to Ohio, the Carolinas and California. Raised on the South Shore of Boston, she is very pleased to be back home and working for Trinity, which is growing its market portfolio along with its affordable properties.

Phillips graduated Magna Cum Laude from Bay Path University and now serves as a member on their Alumni Association Counsel.  She gives back to her local community as a member of the Board Seat Initiative Committee for the Boston Junior League.

She expects to make Trinity Management her home base for years to come. 

“I like the culture here,” she said. “Whether a resident or staffer of an affordable or market-rate property, everyone is treated the same, and everyone is respected.”

Phillips’s first order of business is the new Boston East market-rate property to be developed in East Boston, as well as a number of other new business prospects in Massachusetts, Connecticut, Rhode Island and New York.

MORE FROM Front Section
Front Section

Newmark negotiates sale of 10 Liberty Sq. and 12 Post Office Sq.

Boston, MA Newmark has completed the sale of 10 Liberty Sq. and 12 Post Office Sq. Newmark co-head of U.S. Capital Markets Robert Griffin and Boston Capital Markets executive vice chairman Edward Maher, vice chairman Matthew Pullen, executive managing director James Tribble,
READ ON THE GO
DIGITAL EDITIONS
Subscribe
Columns and Thought Leadership
Five ways to ruin a  Section 1031  Like-Kind Exchange - by Bill Lopriore

Five ways to ruin a Section 1031 Like-Kind Exchange - by Bill Lopriore

While there is some flexibility when structuring a like-kind exchange, some important requirements must be met. A mistake can ruin your exchange. Here are five mistakes to avoid:
Make PR pop by highlighting unique angles - by Stanley Hurwitz

Make PR pop by highlighting unique angles - by Stanley Hurwitz

Coming out of the pandemic, a client with three hotels in Provincetown, Mass., needed ways to let the world know his properties were open for business for the 2021 tourist season.
How COVID-19 has impacted office leasing - by Noble Allen and John Sokul

How COVID-19 has impacted office leasing - by Noble Allen and John Sokul

To say that the effects of COVID-19 has transformed office leasing is an understatement. When COVID-19 was at its peak, office spaces were practically abandoned either through governmental mandates or through actions taken by businesses themselves.

Four tips for a smooth 1031 Exchange - by Bill Lopriore

Four tips for a smooth 1031 Exchange - by Bill Lopriore

Many real estate investors do not understand the specific requirements that must be met to secure the benefits of a tax-deferred 1031 exchange. For example, the replacement property must be identified within 45 days of the closing date of the relinquished property.