REoptimizer® Blog

5 Ways to Use Benchmarking as a Tool to Boost Portfolio Performance

Posted by Don Catalano on Oct 03, 2013

The secret to boosting your corporate real estate portfolio performance is using the proper benchmark. Measuring the portfolio on the basis of the numbers it posts rather than the subjective performance it delivers is one way to do this. Here are five ways to apply a benchmark to your unique locations in order to improve performance. 

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A Tenant's Guide to Due Diligence Using Commercial Real Estate Software

Posted by Don Catalano on Oct 02, 2013

Commercial real estate software goes beyond helping you manage your existing portfolio. Given the right combination of tools, it can also help to simplify and automate the due diligence process. Software brings two key benefits: easier management of documents and access to comparative information.

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Tactical CRE: Adapting Your Real Estate Portfolio for an Evolving Global Economy

Posted by Don Catalano on Oct 01, 2013

"Eating the Elephant"

There's an old riddle that asks "How do you eat an elephant?" The answer is, "one bite at a time." The joke is extremely applicable to tactical commercial real estate on the global scale. Taking the first bite of the global market may be challenging, but it'll expand your business into new opportunities. The U.S. represents less than 5% of the world's population and 25% of economic output, and both figures are shrinking. Growing in the global economy means expanding to other countries.

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3 Quick Fixes to Shrink Warehouse Occupancy Costs

Posted by Don Catalano on Sep 30, 2013

Warehouse occupancy costs are under your control. As long as you own the space or have a triple net lease that allows you to have control over how the space is managed, there are a few quick fixes that you can put into place that will have an immediate impact on the cost of managing and operating your warehouse space.

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5 Qualities of an Outstanding CRE Portfolio

Posted by Don Catalano on Sep 27, 2013

The value of your company's corporate real estate portfolio can be identified in five ways. While there are many soft standards that you can apply to judge your company's collection of locations, it's hard to quantify how much your employees like a space or exactly how much a space contributes to your brand image.You can, however, easily quantify the manageability of the portfolio, how each space performs relative to other spaces and your industry, and the flexibility of your portfolio. Here are five qualities of an outstanding CRE portfolio.


1. Occupancy Cost at or Below Market Average

If your company is large enough to have a CRE portfolio instead of a space or two, you should be able to negotiate competitive rents in any market you enter. As such, your total occupancy costs - rent plus CAMs - should be at or below the average for your market and your type of space. Maintaining an average or lower rent level while also holding sufficient spaces means that you've done a good job of negotiating for competitive pricing.

Learn more about REoptimizer®'s Benchmark to Market functionality


2. Staggered Rollovers

Given that renegotiating leases and potentially moving spaces can require a significant investment of labor, the rate at which lease renewals occur is part of setting up a successfully managed CRE portfolio. If you've configured your leases so that they all change at different times, you're able to maintain a steady workflow for your corporate real estate department, maximizing its efficiency. Staggered lease rollovers also give you the ability to constantly evolve your portfolio as you seek better performance.

A CRE portfolio with staggered rollover dates = a less stressed real estate department that can make crucial decisions successfully without being rushed

3. Uniformly Superior Metrics

When it comes to measuring how your real estate is impacting your business' bottom line, a CRE portfolio should be uniformly superior. The best portfolios perform at an optimized level at every location. 

For example, the rent-to-sales ratio is a common metric in retail businesses. If an industry targets a 3 percent rent to sales ratio, and your company comes in at 2.5 percent, it's a positive indicator. Getting there with all of your stores between 2.25 percent and 2.75 percent is an even better sign. Having locations that are pulling 4 or 5 percent ratios, on the other hand, is a sign of a non-optimized portfolio.

 

4. Time and Space Options

The problem with leased space in a CRE portfolio is that you can't truly be in the driver's seat. When landlords decide whether or not to re-lease to you, what to charge you, and if you can rent adjacent spaces, you're at their mercy. Strategically designed portfolios contain multiple renewal options and rights of first refusal or first negotiation on adjacent spaces. This lets you decide whether or not to stay and gives you a chance to lease expansion space before another company gets control of it. 

When you have market intelligence and lease terms with multiple options, you can open up your CRE portfolio to more opportunities.

 

5. Low Space Turnover

Ultimately, the best determinant of a successful CRE portfolio is how long your business stays in its existing spaces. While some turnover is a natural part of doing business, few businesses constantly replace existing spaces. If you're able to find spaces that work for you and stay in them through multiple renewals while still meeting all financial goals, you'll enjoy greater continuity in your business and lower management and occupancy costs.


A great CRE portfolio doesn't come about through luck or happenstance. Most come from careful planning and good strategy. Having expert, outside help from a skilled tenant representative gives you both perspective and market intelligence that you can use to build the perfect CRE portfolio.

 

Learn more about Commercial Real Estate Optimization:

What is Commercial Real Estate Optimization?

Commercial Real Estate Utilization Optimization and the C-Suite

Why Commercial Real Estate Optimization is Important for the C-Suite

 

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7 Ways Lease Administration Can Fail Using Excel

Posted by Don Catalano on Sep 26, 2013

For many corporate real estate departments, Microsoft Excel is the go-to tool for lease administration. After all, just about every business computer has it, it's good at storing and presenting information, and everyone knows how to use it. However, Excel isn't designed for lease administration. Here's why:

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Top 3 International Markets for Industrial Real Estate

Posted by Don Catalano on Sep 25, 2013

For a business that operates around the globe, it is imperative to invest in industrial real estate in other countries. The world's leading industrial real estate markets operate actively from North America to Asia. Whether you need a base for warehousing or you need a place where you can assemble and manufacture goods, here are three markets that an international business needs to be looking at.

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5 Ways to Stretch Your Tenant Improvement Allowance

Posted by Don Catalano on Sep 24, 2013

Will your tenant improvement allowance cover all of the costs of the build-out of your dreams? If not, you have two ways to get there. You can spend money out of your own pocket or you can get creative in how you structure your lease and how you use the money that you have available to you. Here are 5 ways to stretch your tenant improvement allowance:

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