TenantSee Weekly: Modern Workplace Planning: Solving for Experience Part VI: Negotiating the Lease
Leases vary by building, by market, and by market circumstances. In most major metros, when dealing with larger buildings, the lease document is sophisticated and complex, addressing a broad range of variables that will have a material impact on the occupier’s experience at the building, as well as its cost of occupancy. If you’ve done a good job negotiating the letter of intent, you should begin the lease negotiation phase from a position of relative strength. However, even when the letter of intent is fully maximized, there’s still a lot to negotiate in the lease.
TenantSee Weekly: Modern Workplace Planning: Solving for Experience Part IV: Implementing an Effective Market Process
You’ve identified the purpose behind your physical space needs, you’ve created a thorough project budget and schedule, and you’ve developed the right strategy. It’s now time to implement a market process.
What is “…a market process”? In the context of office leasing, market process is how you engage the market. It ties to your strategy, with sensitivity to the objectives you seek to accomplish. The market is where you implement your strategy, where you take it from theory to reality.
TenantSee Weekly: Modern Workplace Planning: Solving for Experience Part I: The Purpose
In the years leading up to the pandemic, most medium and small companies defined their office space need based on headcount (current and projected), space programming, and industry/sector norms. The exercise was mostly formulaic. The primary differences in the offices of a small, regional law firm compared to those of an AM Law 100 firm would be scale, the cost of finishes, and the quality of the building and views. It was planning for the same outcome, just at different levels on the cost spectrum. Companies having a larger portfolio of offices would typically create a “workplace strategy” that included guidelines around programming (e.g., space layout, office size, critical adjacencies, growth factor, finishes, FF&E, etc.). These guidelines could then be used to inform the real estate process across geography.
TenantSee Weekly: Successful Negotiating Strategies for Office Tenants
Many business executives know how to negotiate. Indeed, it’s a vital skillset essential to advancement in nearly all careers. But not all negotiations are equal. Negotiating leases on behalf of office tenants, for example, is a specialized undertaking. As with all negotiations, successful tenant lease negotiations are highly correlated with understanding the motivations of the counterparty. This means knowing everything about the landlord, including the equity and debt positions, the investment thesis, the leasing dynamic at the building (vacancy, lease rollover, etc.), the value of any recently completed comparable lease transactions in the building and in the market, and the overall market dynamic. These factors are fundamental to assessing leverage. Yet even when these basic elements are in place, the act of exercising leverage also requires special skills.
TenantSee Weekly: The Negative Deal
Investors invest in office buildings to generate a positive return on their investment. Return is created in 2 primary ways, one is through ongoing profits generated from the individual leasing transactions completed within the project, and the other is through financing activities (taking on debt which allows the investor to pull equity from the investment or selling the asset). This TenantSee Weekly is focused on the first of these 2 scenarios, the one in which the landlord seeks to create positive cash flow through its leasing activities.