TenantSee Weekly: The Ingredients Matter
Strategy is to occupier real estate what a recipe is to a great meal. A recipe is more than the sum of its parts. It’s about how each ingredient is prepared, how and when it’s added to the mix. As with any recipe in which there are primary ingredients, vital to its success, similarly, every great strategy requires 3 main parts:
TenantSee Weekly: Modern Workplace Planning: Solving for Experience Part VII: Design and Construction
One common mistake tenants and their advisors make when negotiating the office lease is failure to properly account for design and construction implications. These are important considerations. Space design plays a vital role in determining the efficacy of the space, how it translates in terms of value to the employees. Construction is expensive, representing a material component of the tenant’s total occupancy cost. Gaining understanding about design and construction at the right time in the transaction process provides useful data in the context of effective negotiations.
TenantSee Weekly: This, or That?
Negotiations are always about (or should always be about) this or that. There’s always something else, maybe that something else is nothing (as in sometimes the best thing to do is nothing at all). Decisions made without proper consideration of all relevant alternative scenarios are decisions made poorly. As important, in the context of office lease negotiations, the best negotiated outcomes are directly correlated to the extent to which we understand the alternatives of the landlord counterparty. This is a bit counter intuitive, allow us to explain.