Did you sign
a lease for a beautiful new building only to watch employee morale disintegrate
after you moved? What the heck just happened?
Your
corporate image is reflected in many ways, including your branding and
marketing materials, but perhaps in no way more dramatically than in your place
of business. Tenants, be they retail,
office, or industrial in nature, choose buildings based on their outside appearance
or “curb appeal”. While there is no discounting the way a
building looks from the street, experienced and knowledgeable real estate
brokers know that what you see isn’t always what you get. Poor brokers and naïve tenants overlook the
fact that there are two distinct audiences for their corporate image: the outside world (their clients and the
public at large) and, no less important, their employees.
On the
outside is the architecture, the building skin of granite or glass, the
expansive lobby and the corporate identity (not necessarily theirs) on the top
of the building. But what is important
to your valuable employees? Think ease
of parking, the speed of the elevators, the smell of the bathrooms, and the
comfort of the suite. What do you think
it does to productivity to have your employees chronically complaining that
they are too hot or too cold in their work area, or worse, going home feeling
sick because they are hypersensitive to these temperature extremes? Or when they take longer lunch breaks because
the food amenities located in or nearby the building are lousy?
How else
does a building impact your business operations? Is that impressive grand lobby in your three
story suburban building inflating your rentable square footage and costing you
more relative to other alternative buildings?
Are you setting yourself up for surprise billings from the landlord
because they are doing a poor job managing building operating expenses? It might surprise you to learn that these are
all things a good real estate broker can identify before you sign your lease.
Think about
it: those companies rated as “the best places to work” in your local business
journal never cite the exterior appearance of the building. It’s all about happy employees. And happy employees make for happy clients.
Aaron Weiner, CCIM, CPM, LEED AP
aaron.weiner@weinerproperty.com
Aaron Weiner, CCIM, CPM, LEED AP
aaron.weiner@weinerproperty.com
Good site! I guess whether it is friendly to my eyes it really is. | I was wondering how to be notified when a new post is made. I can do the trick you are subscribed to your feeds? ! Have a great day.
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