Commercial Investment Real Estate September/October 2019 | Page 13
helping tenants approach the market differently today, focusing on how to build
flexible space for growth, without adding square footage. We continue to structure
leases with options to respond to business drivers over the life of their lease.”
5. Recognize real estate is an unavoidable and somewhat fixed capital expense.
Current economic conditions are ideal for conducting a full-scale evaluation of real
estate assets. The technology sector has evolved to the point where data collection,
synthesis, and application have provided a strategic advantage for tenants.
Pay Attention to Economic Cycles
Historically, when the market experiences a slowdown, corporations quickly reach
for options to help maintain profitability and shareholder confidence. What areas
are hit? Research and development? Marketing and advertising? Layoffs might
provide a quick fix, but how does that impact an organization’s overall morale?
“I’m witnessing a large investment in activities and amenities that drive corporate
culture,” says Vik Bangia, CEO of VERUM Consulting in Minneapolis. “Clients
who demonstrate a concerted effort to foster their corporate culture are experienc-
ing the greatest growth and will be in better competitive position to weather any
pending economic storm.”
With today’s low unemployment rate, some say the war for talent is driving the
need for increased employee engagement and amenity-rich spaces. Flexible space
can help companies remain light on their feet as employee populations fluctuate.
Rolling the Dice Is Not a Strategy
Because no two recessions are exactly alike, how might a downturn affect your
portfolio? What are some steps a commercial real estate professional might consider
doing now?
• Partner with a company’s financial team to understand the market outlook
and impact on the business (cash flow, credit rating, etc.).
• Create an enterprise plan that spans your portfolio.
• Identify immediate, midterm, and long-term opportunities to
optimize the portfolio.
• Develop three to five planning scenarios for various market conditions
(hot, warm, and cold).
• Identify tactics for each condition.
• Balance strategic scenario planning against the human/cultural side of things.
Everything begins and ends with customers (both internal and external). When
the market contracts, customer behavior shifts — in terms of confidence, lacking
funds, shifting priorities, and other factors — and strong businesses acknowledge
that the game has fundamentally changed.
While it may seem incongruous to plan for the worst when times are good, the
best CRE professionals will. They will be in tune to their lines of business and
understand how the work, the worker, and the workplace may change. They look
at how to adapt spaces if a tenant or part of their organization moves out, and they
know how long the investment can be carried if a downturn becomes extended.
You do not have to be a trained economist, but you need to understand and act
when it comes to up and down cycles. As a result, you’ll will be able to create a more
well thought-out commercial real estate investment strategy.
Start the conversation on planning for the worst, even if you remain bullish about
the investment market.
Christopher LaPata, MCR, is a client leader for Cincinnati-based BHDP
Architecture, a firm that works with commercial real estate developers/investors
and occupiers. Contact him at [email protected].
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