TenantSee Weekly: Why You Need to Spend More on Design
Architecture, interior design and furniture design each impact how we feel. If you’re someone who is not particularly aware of this connection, take a moment over the coming days to note your feelings upon entering different buildings, different spaces. Notice the volume. Contemplate the impact of day light and other light sources. Consider the way the rooms are designed, the flow. What about the furnishings? Is it comfortable? Does it look interesting? Is there artwork? If so, how does it affect you? Does the space inspire you? Does it make you feel content? Does it make you anxious? Does it make you feel gloomy?
TenantSee Weekly: When Workplace Isn't a Place
Technology used to compliment space. It was an adjunct to the physical office. However, today’s workplace is really not a place at all; rather, it’s a hub of technology resources that travel with the employee wherever she may go, which may or may not include a corporate office. Tech has jumped ahead of space as the more important element in defining the total workplace.
TenantSee Weekly: Culture and the Modern Workplace
Culture: noun: the customs, arts, social institutions, and achievements of a particular nation, people, or other social group.
We all want to be part of something great. We want our workplace culture to be worthy of its “Best Places to Work” status. But in many cases, the corporate “cultural persona” does not fully reflect the cultural reality.
Why? Firstly, leadership. Leaders tend to focus on the desired culture as opposed to the existing culture. It’s easier (and more uplifting) to identify the cultural characteristics you want, as opposed to sifting through the complexities of the culture you have. But when the aspirational culture fails to align with the existing culture, it results in an authenticity problem. However, you can’t fully blame leaders. Most companies lack the right incentives for leadership to invest in the hard work and difficult decisions necessary to bridge the gap between existing and aspirational culture. For example, achieving cultural alignment might necessitate terminating individuals who are financially productive but culturally cancerous. There could be entire groups within the company who behave in a manner that is inconsistent with the aspirational culture.
TenantSee Weekly: Intent, Policy, and Behavior
It’s not uncommon to see discrepancies between corporate policy, the intent of the policy and the actual behavior of the leaders who are charged with implementing the policy. Jan Johnson and Jeff Leitner have studied this phenomenon in their work on the power of unwritten rules in shaping human behavior. I was thinking about their work as I recently participated in a panel discussion titled, “The New Geography of Work”, hosted by the Northern California Chapter of CoreNet. The discussion was fascinating, mostly thanks to the contributions of our moderator, Robert Teed of Integri Group, and the smart panel members, Kate Lister of Global Workplace, Chandler Bonnie of Dropbox and Irene Thomas Johnson of JLL.
TenantSee Weekly: The Space Between
Choppy markets lack data that point to a trendline which all participants understand and accept. The San Francisco office market is now in the choppy phase of a broad decline that has yet to fully materialize. The data is lacking both in terms of sustained tenant demand and completed transactions.
During this phase, completed transactions often seem too high or too low; whereas, once the market trend is clear, pricing becomes more unified. Resistance is a real factor. Landlords do not want to lower rent and increase concessions. But the market trend is, ultimately, fed by the supply/demand dynamic. It cares not what an investor paid for the asset, just as the impact of higher rent on the tenant’s bottom line is not a factor in determining how much rent a landlord can charge in a tight market. In the end, everyone has to play in the same sandbox.