At 23, Annabelle Chauncy had no funding, no roadmap, and no business plan, just a determination to educate poverty out of existence. Today, as Founding Director of School for Life, she leads a $6 million global organisation that has built schools, educated thousands, and transformed communities in Uganda.
Speaking at the PM/One conference, Annabelleโs message wasnโt about education alone, it was about the art of relentless evolution. Her journey offers surprising and powerful lessons for anyone in property management navigating change, leading teams, or simply trying to do more with less.
Lesson 1: Start where you are. Use what you have. Solve whatโs in front of you.
Annabelle grew up on a sheep and cattle farm in regional NSW, where solving problems without a blueprint was second nature. When she first visited East Africa as a volunteer, she was overwhelmed by what she sawโschools with broken desks, no supplies, and students walking 10km on empty stomachs just for a chance to learn.
โI remember thinking: the problem is too big. How can one person make a difference?โ she said. โBut I also knewโif not me, then who?โ
Thatโs a mindset property managers will recognise. In an industry where problems arrive dailyโlate rent, compliance, maintenance blowoutsโitโs easy to feel like one person canโt shift the system. But as Annabelle shows, real impact often starts with simply deciding to act.
Lesson 2: Relationships are your greatest asset
In launching School for Life, Annabelle faced a crowded charity market and an uphill battle for funding. Her answer? Become the best relationship manager in the sector.
โWe wanted our donors to feel inspired, not guilted. We didnโt want to just report on problemsโwe wanted to make people feel like they were part of the solution,โ she said.
Sound familiar? In property management, your landlords, tenants and trades are your โdonor baseโโand how they feel about working with you determines your future. Like Annabelle, PMs can win by doubling down on relationship quality, transparency and value. It’s not about being everything to everyoneโitโs about being indispensable to the right people.
She built her model around three principles: relationships, rigour and real-world impact. โThink about what your non-negotiables are,โ she challenged the audience. โWhatโs your North Star? What will your team be known for?โ
Lesson 3: Resilience is the most important KPI
Annabelleโs story is filled with moments where quitting wouldโve made sense. Armed military evacuations, cultural resistance, nights on a concrete floor, 90% rejection rates from would-be donors. She even booked a black-tie fundraising ball on her personal credit cardโwith just 43 tickets sold two weeks out.
โIโve learned to hear โnoโ as โnot yetโ,โ she said. โEvery obstacle is a chance to evolve.โ
That lesson hits home for property managers dealing with high churn, constant demands, and little public recognition. Annabelleโs advice? Build personal rituals to stay grounded. Reflect daily. Set boundaries. And most importantly, surround yourself with people who lift you higher.
โWeโre nothing without our teams,โ she said. โHire for mindset. Align them to your vision. And make sure theyโre clear on what matters most.โ
Make impact non-negotiable
What made School for Life different wasnโt just infrastructure or curriculum, it was purpose. Every student they serve is seen as a โprosperity maker,โ trained not just in academics but in character, entrepreneurship and contribution. Even during Ugandaโs two-year school closures, Annabelleโs team doubled down, building boarding facilities, launching social enterprise programs and preparing for the comeback.
For property managers, the parallel is this: donโt just manage properties – build prosperity. Use systems to save time, but spend that time creating meaningful moments. Educate your clients. Mentor your team. Look beyond transactions to the human stories behind them.
As Annabelle reminded the audience, โSometimes youโve got to bite off more than you can chew – and then chew like hell.โ