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5 for Friday with Joey Godbold of Sperry Van Ness/Percival Partners, LLC

This week, our 5 for Friday features Joey Godbold, Managing Director of Sperry Van Ness/Percival Partners, LLC out of Charlotte, North Carolina.

1. What is your geographic market and product specialty?

Joey Godbold | Managing Director | SVN/Percival Partners, LLC
Joey Godbold | Managing Director | SVN/Percival Partners, LLC

The Charlotte MSA, encompassing ten counties in North Carolina and South Carolina and a population base of 2.3 million, is my primary market area. For investment properties in excess of $1MM, I consider “the Carolinas” to be my extended area. Managing an office with multiple specialties, I try to stay connected with the five major sectors – office; industrial; retail; land; and investment properties. As to my personal practice, I tend to deal in multi-tenant investment properties.

2. What’s your latest best practice tip that you can share?

After you have decided on a specialty, do what it takes to know the players in that field. That may include joining – and being active in – trade associations; LinkedIn groups; SVN Product Councils, etc. Take the time and put forth the effort required to become an expert.

3. What’s been the biggest change over on how you run your business in the past decade?

It used to be that a real estate broker earned a commission, primarily, by introducing a qualified buyer to a reasonably-priced asset. Today, through the Internet, buyer and seller can find each other without our assistance. Therefore, more focus is placed on adding value to the transaction by advising clients and creating a competitive market in order to achieve the desired price level.

4. What business book do you like to recommend to your colleagues?

I just completed re-reading “Goals!” by Brian Tracy and am currently reading “Coaching Salespeople Into Sales Champions” by Keith Rosen. Both are commendable but the point is that we should always be reading something. Reading a so-so book is much better than reading nothing.

5. What’s a fun fact that not everyone knows about you?

I am often accused of having a boating “compulsion.” I do own too many floating vessels.

*All Sperry Van Ness offices are independently owned and operated.

Sperry Van Ness® | In the News | July 9 – July 23, 2014

Many of our Sperry Van Ness offices and Advisors are regularly appearing in the news.

The following is a list of some recent media coverage.

 

July 11, 2014
Sperry Van Ness Gryphon Parker and Parker Kruse Asset Management Open For Business
Advisor: Richard Kruse & Shawn Parker
Office: SVN/Gryphon Parker (Columbus, OH)

Albany Park Apartments Fetch $1.7 million
Advisor: Dawn Overstreet, Ph.D.
Office: Sperry Van Ness Chicago Commercial (Chicago, IL)

Packaging Properties For Profit
Advisor: Alex Ruggieri, CCIM, MBA
Office: SVN/Ramshaw Real Estate, Inc. (Champaign, IL)

July 12, 2014
Strawberry Fields For Sale
Advisor: Alex Ruggieri, CCIM, MBA
Office: SVN/Ramshaw Real Estate, Inc. (Champaign, IL)

Peek Honored with Wicomico Executive’s Fitness Council Award
Advisor: Chris Peek, CCIM
Office: SVN/Miller Commercial Real Estate (Salisbury, MD)

July 14, 2014
Self-Storage Brokerage Firm Sperry Van Ness Adds Franchise in Greenville, SC
Advisor: Ford Elliott & Carlos Salgado
Office: SVN/BlackStream Commercial, LLC (Greenville, SC)

Real Estate Deals
Advisor: Angela Varga
Office: Sperry Van Ness Commercial Advisory Group (Bradenton, FL)

Developers Circling Around Last 1,500 Undeveloped Acres in Carolina Forest
Advisor: Joe Garrell & Andrew Vicens
Office: SVN/Founders Group (Myrtle Beach, SC)

July 15, 2014
Rosemont’s Sycamore Office Plaza Listed for $8 million
Office: SVN/Walt Arnold Commercial Brokerage, Inc. (Albuquerque, NM)

July 16, 2014
BB&T Sells Foreclosed Offices to Kislak
Advisor: Caroline Camus, MBA
Office: SVN/South Commercial Real Estate Advisors (Miami, FL)

Nearly 500 Apartment Units Planned in Firestone
Advisor: Bill Reilly
Office: SVN/The Group Commercial, LLC (Ft. Collins, CO)

Sperry Van Ness Reports Recent Summer Transactions
Advisor: Mary Ridberg, Rommie Mojahed, Judy Jones, Erin Schrauth, Peter McQuaid, Greg Vanierberghe, Barbara McKenney, Ryan Mojahed, Beau Flahart, Justin Horwitz, Nicole Ridberg, Neil Sherman & Michael Gaida
Office: Sperry Van Ness, LLC (Phoenix, AZ)

July 17, 2014
Why is Content Marketing Important for B2B Marketers? Part 4
Advisor: Diane Danielson
Office: Sperry Van Ness International Corporation (Boston, MA)

SVN | Chicago Commercial Welcomes Tim Franz
Advisor: Timothy Franz
Office: Sperry Van Ness Chicago Commercial (Chicago, IL)

Sperry Van Ness Launches Greenville CRE Franchise
Advisor: Ford Elliott & Carlos Salgado
Office: SVN/BlackStream Commercial, LLC (Greenville, SC)

July 18, 2014
Denver Couple Buys Full Circle Ranch B&B in Cave Creek
Advisor: Carrick Sears
Office: Sperry Van Ness, LLC (Phoenix, AZ)

July 19, 2014
Achievement Park Leased in Easton
Advisor: Bradley Gillis, CCIM & Joey Gilkerson
Office: SVN/Miller Commercial Real Estate (Salisbury, MD)

July 21, 2014
SVN Auction Services Expands Presence in Midwest with Addition of New Office in Ohio
Advisor: Richard Kruse & Shawn Parker
Office: SVN/Gryphon Parker (Columbus, OH)

Office Market Vacancies Leap Higher in Q2
Advisor: Patti Peixotto
Office: SVN/Walt Arnold Commercial Brokerage, Inc. (Albuquerque, NM)

July 23, 2014
Undisclosed Bank May Enter Valley Market on Airport Property
Advisor: Chris Baj, CCIM, CPA
Office: SVN/Imperial Realty (Allentown, PA)

Lipsey_2014_Badge

All Sperry Van Ness® offices are independently owned and operated.

Sperry Van Ness® | In the News | June 26 – July 9, 2014

Many of our Sperry Van Ness offices and Advisors are regularly appearing in the news.

The following is a list of some recent media coverage.

 

June 26, 2014
Former Seahawk Brady Quinn Helps Wounded Iraq Vet
Advisor: Tom Hoban & Blake Stedman
Office: Coast/Sperry Van Ness (Everett, WA)

June 30, 2014
SVN Sells Multifamily/Mixed-use Building for $1.7M in Offmarket Deal
Advisor: Dawn Overstreet, Ph.D.
Office: Sperry Van Ness Chicago Commercial (Chicago, IL)

Longtime San Mateo Chili’s Becoming Retail Store
Advisor: Rusty Lober
Office: Sperry Van Ness/Walt Arnold Commercial Brokerage, Inc. (Albuquerque, NM)

Leases & Sales: Week of June 30, 2014
Advisor: Martin Perlmutter
Office: Sperry Van Ness/MG Property Advisors, Inc. (San Rafael, CA)

July 1, 2014
Percival McGuire Joins Sperry Van Ness, Rebrands as Percival Partners
Advisor: Joey Godbold & Bob Percival, SIOR, CPM
Office: Sperry Van Ness/Percival Partners, LLC (Charlotte, NC)

Retail’s at a Crossroads in the Recovery
Advisor: Shari Tucker-Gasser
Office: Sperry Van Ness, LLC (Phoenix, AZ)

Sperry Van Ness/Gilmore Auction to Auction New Homes, Lots & Gulf Shores Beach House for New Orleans Bankruptcy Case
Advisor: David E. Gilmore, CCIM, CAI, AARE
Office: Sperry Van Ness/Gilmore Auction & Realty Co. (Kennar, LA)

July 2, 2014
BB&T Sells Miami Lakes Office Condos at 18% Discount to Foreclosure
Advisor: Matthew Rotolante, CCIM, SIOR
Office: Sperry Van Ness/South Commercial Real Estate Advisors (Miami, FL)

Sperry Van Ness International Corporation Adds Franchise in Charlotte, NC
Advisor: Joey Godbold & Bob Percival, SIOR, CPM
Office: Sperry Van Ness/Percival Partners, LLC (Charlotte, NC)

Presbyterian’s North I-25 Move Bumps City’s Office Vacancy
Office: Sperry Van Ness/Walt Arnold Commercial Brokerage, Inc. (Albuquerque, NM) 

July 5, 2014
Doing Business: Movers & Shakers
Advisor: Will Moore, Bob Rich & Chris Peek, CCIM
Office: Sperry Van Ness/Miller Commercial Real Estate (Salisbury, MD)

July 6, 2014
Bulk Office Condo Portfolio Trades For $6,200,000
Advisor: Matthew Rotolante, CCIM, SIOR, Eric Amat & Caroline Camus, MBA
Office: Sperry Van Ness/South Commercial Real Estate Advisors (Miami, FL)

Optimism On the Rise for Buzzing Nokomis Strip
Advisor: Brad Lindberg
Office: Sperry Van Ness Commercial Advisory Group (Sarasota, FL)

July 7, 2014
CSP Dance Studios Boogies into Former Laffs Space
Advisor: Glenn Wright
Office: Sperry Van Ness/Walt Arnold Commercial Brokerage, Inc. (Albuquerque, NM)

Real Estate Deals
Advisor: Tony Veldkamp, CCIM
Office: Sperry Van Ness Commercial Advisory Group (Sarasota, FL) 

July 8, 2014
Bob Rich of Sperry Van Ness-Miller Earns Real Estate License for Delaware
Advisor: Bob Rich
Office: Sperry Van Ness/Miller Commercial Real Estate (Salisbury, MD)

July 9, 2014
Office Still Lags Outside Energy, Tech Markets
Advisor: Albert Lindeman
Office: Sperry Van Ness Chicago Commercial (Chicago, IL)

In Focus: Four Tips for Renewing Your Office Lease
Advisor: Stephen F. Graw
Office: Sperry Van Ness/Investec Realty Services (Brentwood, TN)

Former Marigold Indian Restaurant Could Be Replaced by Ramen, Comfort Food
Advisor: Tim Rasmussen
Office: Sperry Van Ness Chicago Commercial (Chicago, IL)

Lipsey_2014_Badge

All Sperry Van Ness® offices are independently owned and operated.

Sperry Van Ness® | In the News | June 11 – June 25, 2014

Many of our Sperry Van Ness® offices and Advisors are regularly appearing in the news.

The following is a list of recent media coverage.

 

June 11, 2014
Sperry Van Ness Brokers Sale of Development Site in Chicago
Advisor: Wayne Caplan
Office: Sperry Van Ness Chicago Commercial (Chicago, IL) 

Commercial Corner: What is Placemaking?
Advisor: David Wilk, CRE, MAI & Alex Ruggieri, CCIM, MBA
Office:  Sperry Van Ness Miller Commercial Real Estate (Wilmington, DE) & Sperry Van Ness/ Ramshaw Real Estate, Inc.  (Champaign, IL)

June 12, 2014
Bank-Owned Property Sales Increasing
Advisor: Wayne Caplan
Office: Sperry Van Ness Chicago Commercial (Chicago, IL)

Sperry Van Ness International Corp. Adds Franchise in Holland, Michigan
Advisor: David de Maagd & Peter Colvin
Office: Sperry Van Ness/Investment Property Advisors (Holland, MI) 

June 13, 2014
Dormant Office Building Sees Fresh Activity with Renovation Project
Advisor: Tom Skeans, CCIM
Office: Sperry Van Ness | Imperial Realty (Allentown, PA)

Hundreds Expected For Realtor Event
Office: Sperry Van Ness International Corporation (Boston, MA)

June 14, 2014
Sarasota Investor Buys Bradenton Cardiology Building
Advisor: Mark Alexander, CCIM & Bob Morris
Office: Sperry Van Ness (Mark Alexander) (Ft. Myers, FL) & Sperry Van Ness Commercial Advisory Group (Sarasota, FL)

June 17, 2014
How DTZ’s $1.2B Sale Could  Shake Up Chicago
Advisor: Jeffrey Baasch
Office: Sperry Van Ness Chicago Commercial (Chicago, IL) 

DealPoint Merrill Closed Escrow on 325,500 SF for Redevelopment in Columbus-Ohio, Tucson-Arizona and Saginaw-Michigan
Advisor: Mike Gustafson & Mark Mimms
Office: Sperry Van Ness, LLC (Phoenix, AZ) & Sperry Van Ness/DealPoint Merrill Property Corporation (Fresno, CA)

Leases/Leasing Contracts
Advisor: Ben Andrews
Office: Sperry Van Ness Chicago Commercial (Chicago, IL)

June 18, 2014
Done Deals: Dirt and retail in Brandon; new restaurant lease in Carrollwood
Advisor: Enon Winkler, CCIM Jad Richa, Deucie Bies & Brian Hunsicker
Office: Sperry Van Ness Florida Commercial Real Estate Advisors (Boynton Beach, FL) 

Sperry Van Ness International Corporation Appoints Diane Danielson Chief Operating Officer
Office: Sperry Van Ness International Corporation (Boston, MA)

NAIOP Arizona Reports Philanthropic Efforts, Achievements
Office: Sperry Van Ness, LLC (Phoenix, AZ)

June 19, 2014
DealPoint Merrill Targets Redevelopment Properties
Advisor: Mark Mimms
Office: Sperry Van Ness/DealPoint Merrill Property Corporation (Fresno, CA) 

June 20, 2014
Business briefs: BB&T selects clubs for Lighthouse project
Advisor: Reid Bennett, CCIM
Office: Sperry Van Ness Chicago Commercial (Chicago, IL)

Candelaria Business Center For Sale
Advisor: Joel White, MAI, Patti Peixotto & Hunter Green
Office: Sperry Van Ness/Walt Arnold Commercial Brokerage, Inc. (Albuquerque, NM) 

June 21, 2014
Heron Mural Makes Second Landing
Advisor: Rick Tilghman, CCIM
Office: Sperry Van Ness – Miller Commercial Real Estate (Salisbury, MD)

The Ticker
Office: Sperry Van Ness International Corporation (Boston, MA)

June 22, 2014
Wesley Cox of Sperry Van Ness-Miller presented with Humanitarian of the Year Award
Advisor: Wesley Cox, CCIM
Office: Sperry Van Ness – Miller Commercial Real Estate (Salisbury, MD) 

Walworth County Subdivision, Condo Project Revived After Bank Sells Land
Advisor: Jay Hintze
Office: Sperry Van Ness/The Hintze Group (Glendale, WI)

June 23, 2014
Apartments: Watch the Numbers in Jobs and Units
Advisor: Tony Veldkamp, CCIM, Angela Varga, Linda Emery & Bruce Dilges
Office: Sperry Van Ness Commercial Advisory Group (Sarasota, FL)

Historic Brennan’s Trade Name, Registered Service Marks, Wine Collection & Remaining Assets to be Auctioned July 9
Advisor: David E. Gilmore, CCIM, CAI, AARE
Office: Sperry Van Ness/Gilmore Auctions & Realty Co. (Kennar, LA)

Lipsey_2014_BadgeAll Sperry Van Ness® offices are independently owned and operated.

Sperry Van Ness® In the News

Many of our Sperry Van Ness® offices and Advisors are regularly appearing in the news. The following is a list of recent media coverage.

May 28, 2014
Jonathan Levy Joins Sperry Van Ness
Advisor: Jonathan Levy
Office: Sperry Van Ness, LLC (Phoenix, AZ)

People on the Move –  Professional Recognition
Advisor: Rommie Mojahed
Office: Sperry Van Ness, LLC (Phoenix, AZ)

May 29, 2014
Four Multi-family Transactions in Metro Phoenix 
Advisor: Neal Sherman & Carrick Sears
Office: Sperry Van Ness, LLC (Phoenix, AZ)

May 30, 2014
Delayed Recovery
Office: Sperry Van Ness Commercial Advisory Group (Sarasota, FL)

June 1, 2014
H&R Block Leases Former Quiznos Building in Salisbury
Advisor: Brent Miller, CCIM, CPM
Office: Sperry Van Ness – Miller Commercial Real Estate (Salisbury, MD)

June 2, 2014
MF Buyer Inks Healthcare Triple Net Sale-Leaseback
Advisor: Mark Alexander, CCIM
Office: Sperry Van Ness (Mark Alexander) (Ft. Myers, FL)

Business Winners
Office: Sperry Van Ness/Parke Group (Ft. Wayne, IN)

The Wood Shed Restaurant Coming to Central Station’s Retail Space in Evanston
Advisor: Ben Andrews
Office: Sperry Van Ness Chicago Commercial (Chicago, IL)

Big Deals: CRE leaders Talk Key Transactions at OBJ Industry Outlook
Advisor: Miguel de Arcos
Office: Sperry Van Ness Florida Commercial Real Estate Advisors (Orlando, FL)

June 4, 2014
Industrial Trends: E-commerce, Reshoring, Post-Panamax
Advisor: Matthew Rotolante, CCIM, SIOR
Office: Sperry Van Ness/South Commercial Real Estate Advisors (Miami, FL) 

Verizon Effect: 5 Businesses Coming to Lake Mary
Advisor: Miguel de Arcos
Office: Sperry Van Ness Florida Commercial Real Estate Advisors (Orlando, FL)

Group Buys Windsor Tract for Development
Advisor: Craig Hau & Robert Hau
Office: Sperry Van Ness/The Group Commercial, LLC (Ft. Collins, CO)

Sperry Van Ness South’s Harrison Klein Earns CCIM Designation
Advisor: Harrison Klein, CCIM
Office: Sperry Van Ness/South Commercial Real Estate Advisors (Miami, FL)

June 5, 2014
Sperry Van Ness International Corporation Adds Franchise in Oklahoma City, OK 
Advisor: Johnathan Russell, CCIM & Drew Dozier
Office: Sperry Van Ness/LandRun Commercial (Oklahoma City, OK)

Sign(s) of the Times as Bank Banners Compete at Chantilly Office Building
Advisor: Kayvan Mehrbakhsh, CCIM, MBA
Office: Sperry Van Ness/SVNMA (Herndon, VA)

June 6, 2014
Investor Buys Bradenton Cardiology Building
Advisor: Mark Alexander, CCIM & Bob Morris
Office: Sperry Van Ness (Mark Alexander) (Ft. Myers, FL) & Sperry Van Ness Commercial Advisory Group (Sarasota, FL)

Storage Firm Buys Vacant Parcel for $1.2 million
Advisor: Wayne Caplan
Office: Sperry Van Ness Chicago Commercial (Chicago, IL)

June 10, 2014
Done Deals: A Big Lease in St. Pete; Retail in Wesley Chapel; Prime Dirt in Clearwater
Advisor: Mark Alexander, CCIM & Bob Morris
Office: Sperry Van Ness (Mark Alexander) (Ft. Myers, FL) & Sperry Van Ness Commercial Advisory Group (Sarasota, FL)

Wesley Cox Named Sperry Van Ness’ 2013 Humanitarian of the Year
Advisor: Wesley Cox, CCIM
Office: Sperry Van Ness – Miller Commercial Real Estate (Salisbury, MD)

June 11, 2014
New Medical Look for SW 17th Street
Advisor: Bartow McDonald
Office: Sperry Van Ness Florida Commercial Real Estate Advisors (Ocala, FL)

Lipsey_2014_BadgeAll Sperry Van Ness® offices are independently owned and operated.

Sperry Van Ness® In the News

Many of our Sperry Van Ness® offices and Advisors are regularly appearing in the news. The following is a list of recent media coverage.

May 1, 2014

Awards and Accolades
Advisor: Justin Horwitz, Neal Sherman, Danny Lee, Rommie Mojahed & Mary Ridberg
Office: Sperry Van Ness, LLC (Phoenix, AZ)

Deli 620 moves to PNC Center in downtown Fort Wayne
Advisor: Whitney Peterson
Office: Sperry Van Ness/Parke Group (Ft. Wayne, IN)

Deal Makers
Advisor: Ryan Imbrie, CCIM
Office: Sperry Van Ness /Imbrie Realty, LLC (Portland, OR)

Done Deals: Apartments sold for $12.3 million
Advisor: Larry Starr & Brad Lindberg
Office: Sperry Van Ness Commercial Advisory Group (Sarasota, FL)

Tomorrow’s Leaders in Retail 
Advisor: Rommie Mojahed
Office: Sperry Van Ness, LLC (Phoenix, AZ)

May 5, 2014

Broward Bank of Commerce Invites Small Business Owners to Learn, Grow and Prosper from Complimentary Event Series Celebrating Small Business Week 2014
Advisor: Les Byron, SIOR, CCIM
Office: Sperry Van Ness Commercial Realty (Ft. Lauderdale, FL)

 Hot Real Estate Office Notches $43 Million in Sales
Advisor: Tony Veldkamp, CCIM
Office: Sperry Van Ness Commercial Advisory Group (Sarasota, FL)

Sperry Van Ness Welcomes Sayavedra
Advisor: Jimena Sayavedra
Office: Sperry Van Ness Chicago Commercial (Chicago, IL)

May 6, 2014

Sperry Van Ness sells 26 of 49 condo units in Evanston development
Advisor: Jim Sears & Reid Bennett, CCIM
Office: Sperry Van Ness Chicago Commercial (Chicago, IL)

May 7, 2014

Local Sperry Van Ness® Office Ranked #3 in the Nation
Advisor: Larry Starr
Office: Sperry Van Ness Commercial Advisory Group (Sarasota, FL)

$7.25M Evanston Illinois Bulk Condo Sale
Advisor: Jim Sears & Reid Bennett, CCIM
Office: Sperry Van Ness Chicago Commercial (Chicago, IL)

Sperry Van Ness® Announces Property Management Survey Results
Office: Sperry Van Ness International Corporation

The Deal Sheet
Advisor: Jim Sears & Reid Bennett, CCIM
Office: Sperry Van Ness Chicago Commercial (Chicago, IL)

May 8, 2014

Why Illinois Leads In Sustainability
Advisor: Jimena Sayavedra
Office: Sperry Van Ness Chicago Commercial (Chicago, IL)

Providing Value and Increasing Income Through Corporate Real Estate Services
Advisor: David Wilk, CRE, MAI & Alex Ruggieri, CCIM, MBA
Office:  Sperry Van Ness Miller Commercial Real Estate (Wilmington, DE) & Sperry Van Ness/ Ramshaw Real Estate, Inc.

May 9, 2014

Commercial real estate transactions
Advisor: David Dunn, CCIM, SIOR
Office: Sperry Van Ness/Dunn Commercial (Arlington, TX)

May 11, 2014

Sunday’s real estate roundup
Advisor: Mark Alexander, CCIM
Office: Sperry Van Ness (Mark Alexander) (Ft. Myers, FL)

May 12, 2014

MiBiz Growth Report
Advisor: Peter Colvin
Office: Sperry Van Ness/Investment Property Advisors (Holland, MI)

The Deal Sheet
Advisor: Jacquelyn Faranso
Office: Sperry Van Ness Chicago Commercial (Chicago, IL)

May 13, 2014

A Trail Helps Open Up a Dallas Neighborhood to New Development
Advisor: Todd Franks
Office: Sperry Van Ness/TJF Investments (Dallas, TX)

Real Estate Briefs
Advisor: Stan Snipes, CCIM, David W. Creed & Stephen F. Graw
Office: Sperry Van Ness/Investec Realty Services (Nashville, TN)

​Sperry Van Ness Advisors Close Several New Retail and Office Transactions
Office: Sperry Van Ness, LLC (Phoenix, AZ)

Positive First Quarter
Advisor: Mary Ridberg
Office: Sperry Van Ness, LLC (Phoenix, AZ)

May 14, 2014

Golden Hill apartment on A Street sold
Advisor: Jim Taylor & Shelly Bird
Office: Sperry Van Ness/Finest City Commercial (San Diego, CA)

May 16, 2014

Family farm expands to Caroline
Advisor: Ben Alder
Office: Sperry Van Ness – Miller Commercial Real Estate (Salisbury, MD)

May 17, 2014

Scene: Budding musicians celebrate at CMS brunch
Advisor: Deborah Skeans, CCIM, MAI
Office: Sperry Van Ness | Imperial Realty (Allentown, PA)

May 18, 2014

Rangers owners buy more land near ballpark from Tom Hicks
Advisor: Clint Montgomery, CPM, RPA
Office: Sperry Van Ness/Visions Commercial (Ft. Worth, TX)

May 19, 2014

USDA to Auction Nine Michigan Apartment Complexes
Advisor: John Johnson, CCIM, ALC & David Gilmore, CCIM, CAI, AARE
Office: Sperry Van Ness/Interstate Auction Management (Atlanta, GA)  & Sperry Van Ness/Gilmore Auction & Realty Co. (Kennar, LA)

May 21, 2014

Vacant industrial building in Alsip sells for $1.1 million
Advisor: Beverly Hayes
Office: Sperry Van Ness Chicago Commercial (Chicago, IL)

May 22, 2014 

Add Value by Using 1031 Exchanges
Advisor: Alex Ruggieri, CCIM, MBA
Office: Sperry Van Ness/ Ramshaw Real Estate, Inc.  (Champaign, IL)

May 23, 2014

Cobblestone Inn & Suites going up in Eaton
Advisor: Cobey Wess & Dan Leuschen
Office: Sperry Van Ness/The Group Commerical, LLC (Ft. Collins, CO)

May 27, 2014

AuctionWorks to Host Real Estate Auction June 23-25
Advisor: Diana Peterson
Office: Sperry Van Ness/AuctionWorks (Chicago, IL)

May 28, 2014

Bankruptcy Trustee Files Motion to Sell Brennan’s Trade Name, Seek Competing Bids
Advisor: David Gilmore, CCIM, CAI, AARE
Office: Sperry Van Ness/Gilmore Auction & Realty Co. (Kennar, LA)

 

2014 Lipsey

All Sperry Van Ness® offices are independently owned and operated.

Top 5 Things That Keep Property Management Executives Up At Night

Running a business can often be a thankless job.  When you couple that with the business being a property management company, the things that can keep you up at night are endless.  In January, the Sperry Van Ness® property management team conducted a survey of 100 commercial property management executives across the country to identify the issues with which they were struggling in their business.  The results overwhelmingly identified 5 issues that challenge property management executives in 2014.  Overwhelmingly, the executives surveyed stated that:

  1. We need a better pipeline for future business.
  2. We lack referrals for new business.
  3. We are not considered a preferred provider for larger or institutional landlords.
  4. We need more/better access to larger or institutional landlords.
  5. We lack marketing.

At Sperry Van Ness International Corporation our independently owned and operated Sperry Van Ness® franchisees tackle these issues and are able to sleep better at night knowing that they have a national brand with tools, resources, training and an entire community of real estate advisors standing behind them. Not only is Sperry Van Ness® a nationally recognized brand[1] with over 40 million square feet and 22,000+ multifamily units under management, our property management franchisees integrate seamlessly with our brokerage platform, which in 2013, participated in over $8 billion in transactions. This national platform provides our franchisees with multiple opportunities for:

  • Costs savings through our Master Insurance Program and other discounted services;
  • Unique offerings for your prospects and clients like SVNGreen for energy efficiency;
  • National account business; and
  • Expansion into brokerage through our SVN System for Growth™.

Download the “Top Five Things that Keep Property Management Executives Up at Night” white paper for free by clicking on the image below and take the next step in a better night’s sleep.

SVN-Upatnight-1

 

 

 

 

Want to learn more about Sperry Van Ness® property management franchises? Visit https://svn.com/cre-franchising-opportunities/ or contact us at pmfranchise@svn.com.


[1] Sperry Van Ness® brand was ranked the 12th largest Property Management firm for 2013 by Commercial Property Executive magazine.

Relating “The Extra Mile” by Glenn Morshower to the SVN Core Covenants

How does “The Extra Mile” by Glenn Morshower correspond and relate to the SVN Core Covenants?

We had the distinct pleasure of being exposed to an outstanding keynote speaker, Glenn Morshower, recently at our SVN National conference in San Antonio. As always our Executive team, Advisory Board and conference team hit a home run in my opinion with Glenn; certainly entertaining, definitely memorable and hugely credible. I think he hit on all facets of our SVN life, our business and our sense of community. For fun, I overlaid his “Extra Mile” concept over our Core Covenants. See if you agree that they line up very well.

[slideshow_deploy id=’5754′]

Cooperating proactively with all brokers and agents and always placing my client’s interests above my own.

“Do unto others as you would have life do unto you”.

Showing respect and support to my clients and colleagues.

“Who I am anywhere is who I am everywhere”.

Honoring my commitments.

“There is no boundary on good or truth”.

Personifying and upholding the Sperry Van Ness® brand.

“We are winners by design”.

Creating tangible benefits for my clients, colleagues and community.

“It’s not I’ll believe it when I see it, but rather I will see it when I believe it”

Resolving conflicts quickly, positively and effectively.

“I am no longer disposed to be in conflict with myself or anyone”.

Taking personal responsibility for achieving my own potential.

Like the “Circle of Habit” for Gill in the Fish Bowl…we know how to find and fill a bathtub…no limits.

Excelling in my market area and specialty within the firm.

“What do I want to do most?”

Focusing on the positive and possible.

“Impossibilities become possibilities; possibilities become probabilities; probabilities become inevitabilities”; it is up to you.

Nurturing my career while valuing the importance of family, health and community.

The balance of life is Spiritual, Emotional, Financial and Physical. Is what you are doing a “contribution or a contamination?”

Four Essential Qualities of a Highly Successful Commercial Real Estate Advisor

Four Essential Qualities of a Highly Successful Commercial Real Estate Advisor

There’s a lot more to being a successful commercial real estate Advisor than just having a few good suits and spending a lot of time with a cell phone glued to your ear. While it starts with thinking of yourself as an Advisor instead of just a broker that gets a deal done and moves onto the next one, after closing thousands of transactions, we’ve identified four must-have qualities that set the best Advisors apart.

An Allergy to No
To a large extent, commercial real estate Advisors make their living by being told “no.” It can take hundreds or thousands of unsuccessful cold calls to get to a single paycheck. For most people, “no” is an ending. Successful Advisors, on the other hand, take a “no” as a reason to go ask another question – or ask another prospect. And they keep going until they hear “yes.”

An Add-Value Attitude
We deal with highly sophisticated clients. Traditional sales tricks won’t work on them, while transactions are rare enough that you also can’t simply show up and hope that business will fall in your pocket. With this in mind, exemplary Advisors know that the key to building relationships that turn into transactions is to continually add value to prospects. Great Advisors earn relationships and loyalty by continually helping their clients. Whether they’re sharing a great piece of information to open up a prospecting call, sharing important market information or helping a client to better manage their operating expenses, they put in the work in the near term to earn the fees in the long term.

An Ability to Find Wins
Commercial real estate negotiations are some of the most complex in the business world. Good Advisors keep their client’s interests at heart. The best Advisors also understand what the other side in the negotiation needs. That way, they can find issues that will allow that party to win while still giving their client what she needs to successfully consummate the transaction.

An Absolute Sense of Integrity
Here’s a shocker. You don’t need integrity to get into commercial real estate. You don’t even need it to make money in the field. Where you need it is if you want to stay in the industry.
Above and beyond simply being the right thing to do, Integrity serves two important business purposes. The first is that it keeps you out of court. In a business where everyone can afford legal representation, it makes no sense to play fast and loose. The second is that real integrity is the most powerful brand-building tool you have. As clients see proof of your ethics over a period of years, you earn their loyalty and their referral business. If they learn that you lack it, on the other hand, your brand becomes irreparably tarnished.

Do you think we missed anything? Let us know what you think makes a great commercial real estate Advisor below by leaving a comment!


Sperry Van Ness In The News

Many of our Sperry Van Ness offices and Advisors are regularly appearing in the news. The following is a list of some recent media coverage.

April 30, 2014

Deli 620 moves to PNC Center in downtown Fort Wayne
Advisor: Whitney Peterson
Office: Sperry Van Ness/Parke Group (Ft. Wayne, IN)

April 29, 2014

Broker: ‘Distressed’ Silver Springs hotel sold
Advisor: Bartow McDonald
Office: Sperry Van Ness Florida Commercial Real Estate Advisors (Ocala, FL)

Extraction Oil & Gas leases property in Greeley
Advisor: Dan Leuschen & Steve Kawulok
Office: Sperry Van Ness/The Group Commercial, LLC (Fort Collins, CO)

Premium Valve Services takes space in Loveland
Advisor: Craig Hau
Office: Sperry Van Ness/The Group Commercial, LLC (Fort Collins, CO)

April 28, 2014

Firm gets new $4M home, complete with big rig in the sky
Advisor: Mark Motley
Office: Sperry Van Ness/Motley’s (Richmond, VA)

Justice Brandeis’ boyhood home auctioned for $880,000
Advisor: Bill Menish & Don Erler
Office: SVN Auction Services | ErlerMenish (Louisville, KY)

April 25, 2014

SVN Sarasota Office Receives Award
Advisor: Larry Starr
Office: Sperry Van Ness Commercial Advisory Group (Sarasota, FL)

Sperry Van Ness brokers deal for Midtown Title, INETCO
Advisor: Stan Snipes & David Creed
Office: Sperry Van Ness/Investec Realty Services (Brentwood, TN)

People On The Move
Advisor: Alex Ruggieri
Office: Sperry Van Ness/Ramshaw Real Estate, Inc. (Champaign, IL)

Timeco Systems moves to downtown office
Advisor: Angela Varga & Debra Cooper
Office: Sperry Van Ness Commercial Advisory Group (Sarasota, FL)

April 24, 2014

SVN Awarded at Conference
Office: Sperry Van Ness, LLC (Phoenix, AZ)

Sperry Van Ness closes deals
Advisor: Brad Lindburg, Larry Starr & Gail Bowden
Office: Sperry Van Ness Commercial Advisory Group (Sarasota, FL)

April 23, 2014

Brandeis childhood home up for sale to highest bidder
Advisor: Bill Menish
Office: SVN Auction Services | ErlerMenish (Louisville, KY)

NNN Burger King Trades for $1.65 Million in South Carolina
Advisor: Adam C. Wells
Office: Sperry Van Ness/South Commercial Real Estate Advisors (Miami, FL)

April 21, 2014

Brandeis home being sold at auction
Advisor: Bill Menish
Office: SVN Auction Services | ErlerMenish (Louisville, KY)

April 20, 2014

Louis Brandeis Boyhood Home Up For Auction
Advisor: Bill Menish
Office: SVN Auction Services | ErlerMenish (Louisville, KY)

April 18, 2014

Kevin Maggiacomo, Sperry Van Ness CEO, Delivers a Diversity Idea Worth Spreading at TEDx Orange Coast
Office: SVNIC

April 17, 2014

Sperry Van Ness Pushing Auction Services Program
Advisor: Jerry Anderson
Office: SVN Auction Services

Sperry Van Ness ramps up auction program
Advisor: Jerry Anderson
Office: SVN Auction Services 

April 16, 2014

Patty McClimmans Named as a ‘Top Achiever’
Advisor: Patty McClimmans
Office: Sperry Van Ness Real Estate, LLC (Naples, FL)

Sperry Puts Foot on CRE Auction Pedal
Advisor: Jerry Anderson
Office: SVN Auction Services

April 15, 2014

Sperry Van Ness advisors and staff attend national convention in Texas
Office: Sperry Van Ness/Miller Commercial Real Estate (Salisbury, MD)

 

Sperry Van Ness In The News

Many of our Sperry Van Ness offices and Advisors are regularly appearing in the news. The following is a list of some recent media coverage. 

March 20, 2014
Westlake Village Building Sells for $7.7 Million
Office: Sperry Van Ness – Rich Investment Real Estate Partners
Advisor: Jeff Albee, Travis Albee

April 2, 2014
Micro Apartments Reflect Macro Trends
Office: Sperry Van Ness | Bluestone & Hockley
Advisor: Steve Morris

Historical College Sees Hope In Sale
Office: SVN Auction Services | Motley’s
Advisor: Patrice Carroll, MBA

SVN | Chicago Commercial Completes Sale of Walton on the Park South
Office: Sperry Van Ness Chicago Commercial
Advisor: Jerry Goldner

Woman of the Year
Office: Sperry Van Ness Chicago Commercial
Advisor: Jacquelyn Faranso

Future of Saint Paul’s is Sealed
Office: SVN Auction Services | Motley’s
Advisor: Patrice Carroll, MBA

April 3, 2014
Sperry Van Ness® Launches National Expansion Initiative for Auction Services Program
Office: SVN Auction Services

TopGolf, Jimmy John’s Scope Out El Paso at Conference
Office: Sperry Van Ness/Fortune Real Estate
Advisor: Jacob Quinn

Culture | Owl Photographer
Office: Sperry Van Ness Chicago Commercial
Advisor: Jerry Goldner

April 4, 2014
People On the Move
Office: Sperry Van Ness Chicago Commercial
Advisor: Jacquelyn Faranso

On The Move | Phoenix Business Journal
Office: Sperry Van Ness, LLC
Advisor: Beau Flahart

April 7, 2014
Hampton Courts Auctioned Off for $1.95M
Office: SVN Auction Services, SVN Auction Services | Gilmore
Advisor: Louis Fisher, David Gilmore

April 8, 2014
Sperry Van Ness-RICORE Adds Investment Advisor to Team
Office: Sperry Van Ness – RICORE
Advisor: Nathan Murphy

April 10, 2014
Overview and Outlook for the Hospitality Industry
Office: Sperry Van Ness/Ramshaw Real Estate, Inc.
Advisor: Alex Ruggieri, CCIM

April 11, 2014
Real Estate Brokerage In Good Company
Office: Sperry Van Ness Commercial Advisory Group
Advisor: Tony Veldcamp, CCIM

Boyhood Home of Brandeis To Be Auctioned Off
Office: SVN Auction Services | ErlerMenish
Advisor: Bill Menish, CAI, AARE

Sperry Van Ness Phoenix Takes Home Several Awards at the SVN National Conference in San Antonio has been published on CEM
Office: Sperry Van Ness, LLC

Industry Professionals in the News
Office: Sperry Van Ness, LLC

S

What a Deal … SVN Chicago Commercial Closes Largest Sale in Sperry Van Ness History

A huge congratulations to Jerry Goldner, Vice President of Investment Sales at SVN Chicago Commercial, for recently closing the largest single deal in Sperry Van Ness history.

The property, Walton on the Park South, is located in Chicago’s Gold Coast at 2 West Delaware Street. The sale consisted of 160 units of the 201-unit high-rise rental condominium tower and an adjacent 17,180 square-foot development site zoned for 261 residential units. It was purchased by Miami developer, Crescent Heights, Inc.

Not only is this the largest deal in SVN history, but the largest for Goldner who, acting as sole broker, closed the deal with an unsolicited offer. Goldner has over 34-years of commercial real estate experience in the Chicago market and proved that when you work hard and offer the SVN Difference, you can do anything you set your mind to. Click here for full transaction details.

“This transaction started over 4 years ago when I represented the previous owners. It has been the most challenging and rewarding experience of my 34- years as an investment Advisor.”

 

Sources
The Broker List

*All Sperry Van Ness offices are independently owned and operated.

The Lipsey Results Are In!

SVN ranks #8 in the Lipsey Survey of the most recognized brands in commercial real estate.

The Lipsey Company once again produced their annual commercial real estate brand survey and the Sperry Van Ness brand continues to excel, moving up from last year.

Lipsey_2014_Badge

1. CBRE
2. Jones Lang LaSalle (tie)
2. Colliers International (tie)
2. Cushman & Wakefield (tie)
3. Newmark Grubb Knight Frank
4. Cassidy Turley
5. NAI Global
6. Avison Young
7. CoStar
8. Sperry Van Ness
9. Eastdil Secured
10. DTZ

Click here to see the results of the survey.

*All Sperry Van Ness offices are independently owned and operated.

The story behind the Sperry Van Ness Monday Morning Call

One of the hallmarks of the Sperry Van Ness® (SVN) brand is our Monday Morning Sales Call. While almost all commercial real estate teams have a weekly sales meeting of some sort, the SVN call is not only national in scope, but it’s open to the entire brokerage community.  Why do we do this? Because we believe in basic economic fundamentals:

The greater the exposure, the bigger demand; the bigger the demand, the higher the sale price of an asset.  It’s economics 101.

To find out more, view our SVN Difference video.

At SVN we believe that achieving the highest and best price is always in our clients’ best interests. We practice compensated cooperation where we pay equitable co-brokerage fees on all properties to not only our own Advisors, but to any and all outside brokers.  This is where the Monday Morning Sales Call comes in.

Sperry Van Ness National Call
SVN Parke Group watches the Sperry Van Ness national call as an office in their conference room.

With co-brokerage fees motivating the marketplace, compensated cooperation guarantees that more buyers view our clients’ properties, pumping up demand, and ultimately the purchase price.

When an SVN advisor receives a new listing, it’s immediately entered into our innovative cloud-based system, creating instantaneous marketing materials and websites as well as syndication links to multiple listing services.

Qualified properties are then featured on our weekly Monday National Sales call, which is attended by our SVN advisors and other guests who are potential partners for a deal. Following the call, SVN publicizes those properties across the Internet to thousands of more potential purchasers.  The result? Here’s what our advisors have to say:

“I’ve done 4 or 5 deals … with other SVN Advisors and most of them came from the Monday morning call.”

“Sold two [NNN Investment] properties in 2012 [due to Monday morning call].”

“I’ve closed many transactions as Buyer’s broker or Seller’s broker due to the Monday Morning Call.”

“Just this week, I sent a property to my buyer, and that buyer is looking hard at it.”

By exposing listings to not only SVN advisors across the country, but also members of the outside brokerage community our advisors have more opportunities to find the right partner to close more deals.   You may think that Advisors are giving up some by splitting the commission 50/50, but they gain a lot more when they close more deals, more quickly and at a higher price.

This dedication to transparency and collaboration is something we work into every facet of SVN services from investment sales to tenant representation, from property and asset management to corporate, leasing and auction services.

To register for our Monday Morning Sales Call click here.

To find out more about franchise opportunities click here.

How the Northern Colorado CRE Market is Doing–a Q2 Report

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Steve Kawulok, managing director, SVN The Group Commercial, Fort Collins, CO

Recession recovery is continuing at a higher pace in the Northern Colorado commercial real estate market, says Steve Kawulok, managing director of Sperry Van Ness The Group Commercial in Fort Collins, Colorado.

The Northern Colorado market, which encompasses the three counties of Boulder, Larimer and Weld, had an improving outlook for the second quarter of 2013. Among the signs of recovery and strength were:

  • Market sales of property went up ;
  • Retail properties  did the best;
  • Office properties gained momentum with the vacancy rates going down and rental rates on the uptick;
  • Investors are still active in this market.

For a complete picture of the Q2 activity in Northern Colorado, including significant commercial real estate transactions, read Steve’s Q2 report here.

*All Sperry Van Ness offices are independently owned and operated.

Sperry Van Ness is Hot on LinkedIn

One of the core values of the Sperry Van Ness® brand is that our clients get the most value when we create the most demand. It’s basic market fundamentals and collaboration at its best. This is why we open up our weekly National #CRE Sales Call to the entire brokerage and investment community and we encourage our Advisors and guests to share this information by email and social media.

Apparently, our Advisors did such a great job this week, that we received the following note from SlideShare (where we post new listings each week)!

Sperry Van Ness featured on Slideshare and LinkedIn

While our “Hot on LinkedIn” fame was short-lived, we’re hoping to make it up on the SlideShare leaderboard again!

Want to learn more about the Sperry Van Ness Difference when it comes to commercial real estate? Sign up for a call and join us on any Monday.

 

*All Sperry Van Ness® offices are independently owned and operated.

 

Top Trends in Secondary CRE Markets

Diane Danielson Sperry Van Ness
Diane Danielson, Chief Platform Officer, Sperry Van Ness International Corp.

Earlier this month we released our Top Trends and Markets to Watch in 2013 Report. Our goal with this publication is to look at trends beyond the largest commercial real estate markets like NYC, Boston, SF, LA and Washington DC. Many of those markets have been in recovery mode, and as a result, future opportunities will likely reside in some often-overlooked markets.

Of course, not every secondary and tertiary market is seeing the light at the end of the tunnel just yet, but if you read through our 2013 Markets to Watch Report, you’ll be able to identify certain factors that could lead to CRE opportunities with upside. Below is a quick overview of a few of the trends we are seeing.

Large-scale infrastructure projects

In 2015, the widening of the Panama Canal will be complete, allowing larger ships to pass through its locks. This has set off a race to dredge ports along the Eastern seaboard.  Industrial properties in areas around ports able to receive these larger ships like Miami, New York/New Jersey, Jacksonville and Charleston and Savannah stand to benefit.

Energy-related growth

Newly discovered gas reserves and recent advancements in drilling and extraction technology have paved the way for significant economic growth and investment opportunity in places like Louisiana, Ohio, western Pennsylvania and West Virginia.

Demographic shifts

With an aging Boomer population moving into retirement, and generation Y (the Boomer’s kids) facing an extended period of adolescence and underemployment, we are going to see a shift in attitudes about housing. Even if they could take over their parent’s McMansions, they might not want to be in that market.  Gen Y (or Millennials as they are also known) are more environmentally conscious and value-oriented.

This is a generation that is attracted to mixed-used developments along transportation lines (not all of them can afford cars when they have the weight of student loans) and nearby retail and entertainment. In big cities like Boston, they are attracted to 300-sf mini-units, with zipcar parking and shared communal space.  However, not all can afford big city prices. This presents a good opportunity for those secondary markets with emerging high-tech communities.

With lower costs of living, and lower barriers of entry for new high-tech companies (many of the companies developing apps don’t need to be right in Silicon Valley anymore to attract talent), markets like Austin, Texas; and Florida’s new tech corridor  (from Orlando to Tampa) stand to benefit.

These are only a few of the trends that we cover in our 2013 report that may be affecting your local Apartment, Office, Industrial or Retail markets.

Review or download the Sperry Van Ness® Top Trends and Markets to Watch in 2013.

Read more on the 2013 Markets to Watch Report at National Real Estate Investor.

By Diane K. Danielson, Chief Platform Officer, Sperry Van Ness International Corporation.

All Sperry Van Ness® offices are independently owned and operated.

Why We Collaborate

Kevin Maggiacomo, President & CEO of Sperry Van Ness Internationa
Kevin Maggiacomo, President & CEO of Sperry Van Ness International Corp.

I’m often asked why we give away some of the (otherwise proprietary) Sperry Van Ness®  systems, tools and resources. I’m further asked why SVN is investing in the development of new tools if only to hand some of them out to the brokerage community at large. “Aren’t we aiding our competitors?” “Are we losing pieces of our differentiated value proposition in doing so?” These are a few of the questions often posed to me. 

While losing market share and eroding gross margin are obviously not the extirpative goals of the aforementioned strategy, in this post I’ll attempt to clarify why we have taken our culture of collaboration up a notch, and how doing so is facilitating growth across all key performance indicators while helping to improve the fractured state of the commercial real estate (CRE) industry. 

By way of background, SVN was founded on the premise that proactively cooperating and collaborating with our brokerage brethren – sharing our fees 50/50 in the process – is the right thing to do for the client and is the only way to ensure maximum value for a property.  Debating the merits of that ethos is a topic for another day, and last month we released the SVN Difference Video, which scrutinized the CRE industry and its asset disposition practices, and was met with strong emotional reaction. 

In terms of opening-up and creating new SVN products for the benefit of the brokerage community, we’ve rolled out the following in the past 12 months, which can be categorized and described as follows:

  • Compensated Cooperation:  The SVN Monday Morning Sales call is now open to the public.  There, we showcase new listings procured by our SVN Advisors over the previous 7 days.  Every listing includes a buy-side commission which is always ½ of what the SVN Advisor stands to earn as a matter of policy.

  • Education:  We collaborated with more than 10 commercial real estate firms and industry organizations to launch www.CREvine.com, an open resource platform for CRE professionals to acquire new skills, gain knowledge, and “level-up” their practices.

  • Marketing:  Lastly, and as a BETA test, we’ve opened up a good portion of our (now retired) OnlinePublisherTM system.  Called CRElaunch, owners and brokers alike can use the tool to create brochures and market their properties (a word of caution here – the product is in BETA and has a long way to go).

But back to the topic at hand.

We collaborate not to merely suggest that “we’re the good guys,” but because we truly believe that making the otherwise dysfunctional commercial real estate market more efficient will benefit all stakeholders, including Sperry Van Ness.

Simply put, collaborating – harnessing the power of broad horizontal networks of participants to achieve a better outcome – will drive market efficiency and liquidity, while simultaneously increasing revenue and profitability to those who collaborate.  At SVN, we’ve aggressively grown our business by subscribing to this ethos and receive direct benefit in the following manner:

  • Recruiting:  As a CRE advisory, one of our biggest economic generators is recruiting talented, ethical and productive advisors.  Our opening-up certain components of SVN has allowed us to create relationships with thousands of brokers and we’ve recruited or awarded a brokerage position or SVN franchise to a small percentage of this new constituency.

  • Retention:  Just as strong as recruiting is a vital key performance indicator of growth, attrition (of producing Advisors) can have devastating consequences for an organization.  Through thought leadership, the contemporary nature of our collaborative growth strategy, and via a transparent business model, our attrition rate is at a 5-year low.

  • Sales:  When one harnesses the power of the entire brokerage community to market a for sale asset, organized competition is generated, multiple offers are posited, the market speaks, and the highest price is achieved.  Our compensated cooperation strategy, coupled with our core covenants, define SVN while moving inventory faster and at a higher price.

  • New Business Development:  It’s tough to argue against the growth strategies of the likes of Google, Skype, and Innocentive in suggesting that their “Freemium” business models don’t create raving fans, loyal customers, and a myriad of cross-selling opportunities (each of these companies offer a free “attraction” product while simultaneously offering paid premium products).  As described above, the SVN story – rooted in harnessing the power of collaboration to affect a better outcome – has been kicked-up a notch, shared with clients/prospects, has enhanced our point of differentiation, increased our “batting average,” and reduced the cost of sales.  We are winning new listings, doing more business – all while putting the clients interests’ first.

Mass collaboration, while not ubiquitous in CRE brokerage, is now a staple of the new economy and it’s here to stay.  As the members of Generation X & Y grow to positions of increasing power and control, collaboration and Freemium business strategies will become the norm in CRE as well.  Until then, I’ll continue to invest in the creation of new products and to share some of those we previously created.

Kevin Maggiacomo is the President and CEO of Sperry Van Ness International Corp.

*All Sperry Van Ness® offices are independently owned and operated.

 

Q2 2013 Office Market Update by John McDermott

For the office market, the next few years should see a significant shift back to the private client marketplace and away from distressed commercial real estate.

In my 40 years of real estate and finance experience, I have identified several leading indicators that serve to predict changes in the market. These are:

  • Compression of cap rates on single tenant net leased investments;
  • The insatiable acquisition of “trophy projects” in all product verticals;
  • An apartment market on fire with the fuel of cheap long-term money and many sources for it;
  • Resurgence of demand for land, lots and subdivisions from the largest public home builders all the way down to some of the smaller in-fill local and regional players, also fueled by low interest rates.

It’s clear that the office market will benefit from these real estate and economic indicators. However, the office market does face some challenges, including a significant variance in the numbers being published on office vacancy and activity, and the varying pricing tiers based on quality and location. These challenges may spell an opportunity for the astute investor and commercial real estate advisor to provide added value.

Advisors should be careful with the sources they quote. For example, REIS reports the National Office Vacancy at 17.1% and .50 basis points below the recession high while CoStar reports National Office Vacancy at 11.9%, which would be 5.70% better than the recession high.

Following are some current statistics:

Vacancy levels for different classes of buildings:

  • Class- A projects are at 13.3%
  • Class-B projects are at 12.4%
  • Class-C projects are at 8.8%

(Obviously the discounts and concessions in the better buildings are going away and rents are firming. Tenants still seek affordability, especially until their business and the economy improve)

  • U.S. CBD vacancy is 10.9%
  • U.S. Suburban vacancy is 12.2%
  • There is still a lot of reported Class A sub-lease space at 27M s.f. or 58% of all sublease space. Still, a significant amount of excess and under-utilized space is not formally on the market.
  • Suburban markets make up 33M s.f. of the sublease inventory or 71% of the total.

Lastly, a significant number of office property owners want to get off the vertical, based not only on the property’s age, but their own age and where they are in their personal investment cycle (they may be older, want more freedom, want to lower management issues, tired of tenant issues and demands, etc.). This situation creates a new frontier of adaptive re-use, space design and modification for today’s virtual or hoteling tenant and their employees along with a significant shift back into the vibrant American CBDs.

In my opinion, the product that represents the greatest opportunity is Class A suburban office, as long as it is properly priced.

Today, the most important part of advising clients is being aware of your local competitive landscape. Additionally, you must know what the new tenancy needs, wants and demands plus  how the growing focus in space design on more “we” space instead of the “me” space of old (like law firms at 350 s.f. per person on average) will affect your client’s specific property.

As of Q2, I think the future is bright and the office market will continue to be at the core of commercial real estate.

 

Prepared by:

John McDermott Sperry Van Ness Industrial Practice Chair
John McDermott, Office Product Council Chair

John McDermott

Council Chair of Office Properties

Sperry Van Ness Chicago Commercial

 

 

*All Sperry Van Ness® offices are independently owned and operated.

 

 

 

 

 

Sperry Van Ness ranks high on annual #CRE Lipsey Survey

Sperry Van Ness International Corporation is proud to announce that it is once again one of the most recognizable names in the commercial real estate industry, according to the annual Lipsey Survey.  The 2013 Top 25 Brands survey ranks Sperry Van Ness® 11th overall – and 10th among CRE brokerages.

This is the 12th year the Lipsey Company has conducted its survey of CRE brands. This year, about 100,000 votes were cast worldwide. Mike Lipsey, founder of the Lipsey Company, attributes the enthusiasm for the survey as a sign of continued recovery for the industry.

Brokers, developers, investors, mortgage bankers, property managers and clients participated in the annual event. The results are a combination of ballots, focus groups and individual surveys conducted with industry leaders, according to the Lipsey Company.

Click here for the full survey.

 

*All Sperry Van Ness® offices are independently owned and operated.

The Sperry Van Ness Difference Animated Video

At this year’s Annual National Conference, Sperry Van Ness International Corporation President & CEO, Kevin Maggiacomo, launched the new Sperry Van Ness Difference video. The SVN Difference Video boils down our core philosophy to it’s simplest form – it’s about going back to the basic fundamentals of supply and demand; and explains how putting the clients interests first is a benefit to everyone involved in a commercial real estate transaction.

*All Sperry Van Ness® offices are independently owned and operated.

 

Mobile Technology – Why having the Internet in your pocket changes how we use space.

We all know mobile is a huge trend this year, but I believe that we need to break it down further to really understand its reach. Earlier this month, I wrote about how mobile technology has changed how we perceive time. This week, I’m focused on how it changes our use of space.

In real estate, whether it’s residential or commercial, we are selling space and location and mobile technology has changed that forever.

You can now work anywhere. Companies like Sperry Van Ness International Corp. are storing their data and accessing software in the cloud. This means our employees and Advisors can work from wherever they want.  This change affects the traditional definition of “office space.” One example of the new era of office space is the Boston Innovation District (@IDBoston). This new district is a true testament to their “Live Play Work” slogan, with innovation centers where entrepreneurs can come together and smaller housing units with shared workspaces right in the building.  We’ve also recently seen the launch of Marriott’s workspace on demand program (powered by LiquidSpace) where a traditional hotelier is now providing short-term office space.

You can now live smaller. When you downsize your desktop computer to a laptop or tablet, do you really need a desk?  If you carry your books around on a Kindle, what would you do with a bookshelf? What if your iPad is your TV?  We used to need hundreds of square feet to hold all our stuff, but the next generation is able to fit all their possessions in the back of a Zipcar. And, who needs a parking space if you can share a car? This is why the Boston Innovation District is testing out micro-units with housing as small as 300 sf.

You can now share space across industries. While this has been a trend for dying industries, it may be a way to revive a few. In retail, with the ease of purchasing books, music and games on mobile devices, bookstores are trying to stay in business by adding cafés; and GameStop and others are pursuing kiosks, pop-ups and sub-leases within other stores. The Boston Globe, mired in another struggling industry, has even opened up it’s extra space to entrepreneurs. While some might see this as a depressing last ditch save, others might see the opportunity in the cross-pollination of ideas. What true entrepreneur would be able to resist telling their landlord how they might improve their service?

How do we address these changes in the commercial real estate industry? We can do the following:

  1. Help tenants and owners incorporate flexibility and adaptability into their space planning. Whether it’s for growth, remote workers, or in the worst case, downsizing, the more we can incorporate flexibility and adaptability into their space planning, the better service we are providing. It’s likely that tenant reps may end up doing a bit of space matchmaking in order to make a deal work.
  2. Update traditional space calculations. Does that law firm really need that many square feet per attorney when you cut out the library? Is one conference room enough? Or can you create more shared spaces? How we calculate and use space is changing. There is a need for more “we space” and less “my space.”
  3. Look for office opportunities within residential settings and vice versa. As the Boston Innovation District demonstrates, people want to blend where they work with where they live now that mobile technology allows them to do so. In urban planning, the key will be to prevent financial districts or under-developed areas from becoming ghost towns. Washington DC did this with a stadium.  In that case, they built it and the people, and businesses, did come.
  4. Analyze your own true space needs. Has your ability to access the web from anywhere changed how you work? Are there adjustments in your space needs or in how you use your space that could either lower operating expenses or increase productivity? You might be surprised to find how much your mobility has changed how you work and use your current space.

Has mobile technology changed how you operate your business? Please comment below, I’d like to know.

Diane K. Danielson is the Chief Platform Officer of Sperry Van Ness International Corp. Follow her on Twitter at @DianeDanielson.

 

*All Sperry Van Ness® offices are independently owned and operated.

 

Mobile Technology’s Effect on Time and Business

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Diane Danielson, Chief Platform Officer, Sperry Van Ness International Corp.

It’s unanimous that “mobile” is a top trend in 2013. But, it really needs to be broken down to examine how greatly it affects business. One aspect that mobile has changed tremendously in the past year is our perception of time.

  • How often do we talk with colleagues and immediately have to “look something up” to solve a debate. What did we do without Google at our fingertips?
  • When we download a season of our favorite TV show onto a mobile device, or watch via Hulu, we generally have no idea what night of the week it might be on. Gone are the days when we flocked to NBC’s Must See TV Thursday Night Lineup on Thursday night.
  • We see and read the news as it happens. No more waiting for a 6:00 pm news broadcast or the morning paper.

But, how does this time shift affect your business? It means that delivering services and information the same way you did in 2008 won’t work in a world where time has new, or no, meaning. It means we all need to adjust how we deliver services to meet the demands of the mobile world.

One example of a company that understands the new shift in how we perceive time is Comcast. They were one of the pioneers of using Twitter as instant customer service. Have an issue with Comcast? Tweet about it. Or better yet, tweet @comcastcares directly and their online twitter team will respond faster than you would ever get off hold on the phone!

In addition to Twitter, Comcast made another change. Remember the 4-hour window of wait time for service? Seems outrageous in an era of mobile technology and real-time communication, especially when drivers can be tracked by GPS. This is why Comcast dropped it to 2-hours with a guarantee to be within the window or you receive a $20 credit.

In commercial real estate, time as we know it is similarly collapsing. With new CRE tools like www.42Floors.com, clients (in certain markets) don’t have to wait to view a building. They can see photographs, street views, and maps from their computer (or tablet).  Through www.teneightapp.com, brokers and clients can rate buildings in real time.

There are also productivity tools like www.dropbox.com that make real-time data-sharing easy (and free). My latest find is www.slideshark.com, which allows you to view powerpoint shows on iPads and iPhones. Check out www.cre-apps.com or www.CREvine.com’s tool section for more.

At Sperry Van Ness International Corp., we have cloud-based systems for communication, marketing, CRM and project management so that our Advisors can deliver information to clients quickly and instantaneously.

How are you working in the new “time-less” era? Have you changed how you deliver services to clients? Are there new tools that help you shift time? Chime in below, we’d love to know.

Diane Danielson is the Chief Platform Officer of Sperry Van Ness International Corp.

 

*All Sperry Van Ness® offices are independently owned and operated.

 

Hospitality Real Estate Market: Q4 Analysis and Outlook for 2013

Tom Hamm Sperry Van Ness Commercial Real Estate Advisor
Tom Hamm, Hospitality Council Chair, Sperry Van Ness/Hamm & Co.

Hotels are operating businesses housed within commercial real estate boxes. As such, their value is based on the revenue and profit earned by the business, and fluctuates accordingly.

Hotel values dropped precipitously following the start of the recession in Q4 2008 with cutbacks in corporate, group and leisure travel. Hotels responded by slashing their rates in order to compete for what little business was available.

Since 2010,  recovery has been steady but slow, driven first by occupancy improvements, followed by room rate increases. Initially, the greatest improvements in both occupancy and average daily room rates (ADR)  was seen in the luxury segment.  In 2012, upper mid-scale and upscale enjoyed the greatest increase in rooms sold. Regionally, the West South Central and Pacific had the highest growth in rooms sold, year over year. Some markets, notably Manhattan, have seen dramatic demand improvements, which has spurred a hotel building boom there.

In most markets, supply growth has been constrained by limited  availability of financing. According to Smith Travel Research, for the trailing 12 months through November 2012 supply is up  0.4% while demand increased by 3%. That’s a great dynamic for the industry that has translated into an increased Revenue Per Available Room (RevPAR) of 6.8%.

For the 2012 year to date through November, performance for in the hospitality market in the United States was as follows:

 

Occupancy

Average room rate

RevPAR

2012 2011 2012 2011 2012 2011
62.6% 61.1% $106.23 $101.98 $66.47 $62.27

 

Hotel transaction volume was down 25% in Q3 but looks to be up 25% in Q4 compared to last year, driven by large portfolio transactions. On an individual property  basis, sales volume was flat, according to Real Capital Analytics.

Cap rates for hotels have held around 7.6%, down from 9.5% in 2009. Full service hotels traded on average at 7.2%, while limited service hotels traded at 8.6% cap rates.

Average price per room was $164,015 for full service and $64,233 for limited service. There continues to be strong buyer demand for deeply discounted distress opportunities, while publicly  traded REITs focus on major markets: seeing acquisitions in non-core markets as diluting the value.

In their 2013 outlook, hoteliers are less optimistic than in 2012. They see top line growth slowing with resistance to rate increases, while operating costs will increase at a faster rate than revenue, thereby putting pressure on profitability. In addition, the brands, which have shown patience and flexibility during the recession, are expected to tighten up on Quality Assurance standards and Property Improvement Plans (PIPs) associated with license renewals and hotel sales.

We expect that many hotel owners who struggled to hold on through the recession and benefited during recovery, will decide to sell in 2013 in light of anticipated slowing profits and before pent up buyer demand abates. This should bode well for brokered transactions in the hospitality arena.

Report submitted by:

Tom Hamm, Hospitality Council Chair, Sperry Van Ness/Hamm & Co., Stamford, CT

*All Sperry Van Ness offices are independently owned and operated.

 

Five for Friday with Joel Kattan of Sperry Van Ness Commercial Realty

It’s Friday, and this week we are spotlighting Joel Kattan, Senior Advisor, Sperry Van Ness Commercial Realtyin Fort Lauderdale, for our Five for Friday.

Joel Kattan, Senior Advisor Sperry Van Ness Commercial Realty
Joel Kattan, Senior Advisor, Sperry Van Ness Commercial Realty

1. What is your geographic market and product specialty?

My market is South Florida and my product specialties are Industrial and Office.

 

2. What’s your latest best practice tip that you can share?

Create and implement a business plan. Over the last couple of years, I’ve found that having a business plan has helped me tremendously in terms of keeping me focused. It also helps me identify which strategies grow my business, and which need to be revaluated. It may seem like a small thing, but it’s very effective.

 

3. What’s been the biggest change over on how you run your business in the past decade?

The South Florida industrial market, particularly in the last couple of years, has been very much driven by international buyers looking to position themselves in Miami ahead of the Panama Canal expansion completion, in order to benefit from the increased business it will steer our way. When I first started out, the majority of my clients were owner/users that had businesses or properties within a five mile radius of the subject property. That is no longer the case. As a result, the days of simply canvassing an area to find a buyer are over. Instead, the focus is on getting maximum exposure for each property via various websites, social media, and direct email campaigns.

 

4. What business book do you like to recommend to your colleagues? 

The Happiness Advantage: The Seven Principles of Positive Psychology that Fuel Success and Performance at Work. It’s a great read. I was turned on to this book by a TEDTalk, check it out: Shawn Achor: The happy secret to better work

 

5. What’s a fun fact that not everyone know about you?

I have coached numerous basketball teams that my eight-year old son has played on. I’m a pretty good coach and I’m passionate about it. Also, I am a true Florida native, born and raised here, and with no plans on leaving!

 

*All Sperry Van Ness® offices are independently owned and operated.

Bo Barron's Tips to Build Better Business Relationships

Bo Barron, Vice President of Organizational Development at Sperry Van Ness International Corp.
Bo Barron, Vice President of Organizational Development at Sperry Van Ness International Corp.

Commercial Real Estate is all about relationships. Getting face to face with prospects and clients is the most effective way to build relationships and to find and win business.

With the onset of new technologies, there’s a growing trend to use these advancements to replace this face to face interaction. I think this is a mistake. Social media like Twitter, LinkedIn and others cannot replace the effectiveness of face to face meetings. Social media can, however, enhance your ability to build relationships to be able to get those in person meetings.

I write about these issues on my professional coaching blog, theBarronBlog, on a regular basis and it’s a snippet of how I’m working with our team of Sperry Van Ness Commercial Real Estate Advisors across the country. Below are links to three recent posts that can help any real estate professional Level Up your practice.

The 17 Rules of Email Etiquette – Many of us work with or for large companies. We have access to large email lists.  Understanding email etiquette is so important to protecting the culture of an organization as well as guarding productivity.

My biggest beef with email is its ability to interrupt me.  The nature of my business requires me to be doing multiple things. I am not a natural multi-tasker. I much prefer to hone in on a task and focus all my energy on it. I rarely get to do this and am also easily distracted. The ding and notification that announces every email can cost me 5 – 60 minutes if I let it. I routinely get 200+ emails a day. That equates to 200+ opportunities to be distracted from what is important to what is less important but potentially urgent.

Review:  Platform – Get noticed in a Noisy World – This is the book that started it for me. This past May, Michael Hyatt published his New York Times bestseller Platform:  Get Noticed in a Noisy World. My professional coaching blog was built on what I learned in this book. (Note that Michael Hyatt will be one of our featured speakers at our National Conference in Miami this February!).

As I write this post, I have 2,677 followers on Twitter; 1,502 business connections on LinkedIn; and 2,698 ‘friends’ on Facebook.  I don’t share this to boast. I simply want you to know what is possible. I am certainly not a celebrity. What I have done is execute a plan, and it has worked.

My Tools to Manage Twitter in 15 Minutes a Day – One of the most frequent questions that I get as I speak to groups is how I manage twitter. No one believes that it only takes 15 minutes or less a day.

There is so much developing in the world of technology that there is no way that I can keep up with it all.  What are some of the tools and technology that you use to connect most effectively with your clients and prospects?

Bo Barron, a former Sperry Van Ness franchisee, is our new Vice President of Organizational Development.

 

*All Sperry Van Ness® offices are independently owned and operated.

 

Self storage: Q4 2012 Report and Outlook for 2013 by Nick Malagisi

Nick Malagisi
Nick Malagisi, Self Storage Council Chair

As chair of the Sperry Van Ness® Self Storage Product Council, I am pleased to provide this quarterly report on the self storage industry. This report is intended for owners, operators, vendors who service the self storage industry, investors in this particular product sector and the over 800 Sperry Van Ness advisors serving clients in 175 markets across the country.

As most of you already know, this investment product sector is a niche industry with the real estate value dependent on the operating business component. The stronger the management, the better results one should see to the bottom line. In that regard, our industry is very similar to the hospitality industry.  However, the self storage industry has not yet found a way to “flag” the facilities and create brand awareness. Its time will come.

This past year has seen a continued and  healthy improvement in the sector, led by the four public REIT’s that have had seven consecutive quarters of increased occupancies and revenue after nine consecutive quarters of losses beginning in 4Q 2008.  Public Storage remains the industry leader in  number of facilities across the country including its European division bought from the absorption of Shurgard operations some six years ago. Public Storage is also the leader in stock price at a high value this year at $130 price per share or three times the value of the next competitor, Extra Space. Public Storage stock was included in the S&P 500 and Dow Jones Industrial Average a few years ago, replacing such household names as Sears & Roebuck.  The 3Q earnings reports have just been announced and all four of the self storage REIT’s continue to perform well.

New development of the product has been at a virtual standstill these past four years, which has helped supply catch up with demand in most markets as the industry doubled in size from one billion to two billion square feet from 1995 through 2006.  The dearth of new construction has created an opportunity for the larger operators to gain market share by having the capital to purchase existing facilities, especially in the top tier markets.

Cap Rates in the top tier markets are in the 6.5-7.5% range while the rest of the country is seeing 7.5-9.0% Cap Rates. The coming year should be very interesting as those facilities that were financed with 10 year debt in 2003 will be coming to the market for either refinance or sale.  It remains to be seen how many of those properties have retained their value and will qualify for refinancing without a recapitalization.

The Sperry Van Ness organization has self storage specialists located across the country who can become a valued resource for you.  If you are interested in the investment opportunities in this area, reach out to the SVN advisor in your market and watch for opportunities to buy and sell as they become available.

Nick Magilisi,  Self Storage Council Chair, Sperry Van Ness/Commercial Realty

 

*All Sperry Van Ness® offices are independently owned and operated.

 

 

Five for Friday with Ryan Imbrie, Sperry Van Ness Imbrie Realty LLC

Every Friday here on the Sperry Van Ness® blog, we’ll be spotlighting one of our commercial real estate advisors who is game to answer our Five for Friday questions. 

We start off with Ryan Imbrie, from Sperry Van Ness/Imbrie Realty, LLC  in Portland Oregon.

Ryan Imbrie, Sperry Van Ness Imbrie Realty LLC
Ryan Imbrie, Sperry Van Ness Imbrie Realty LLC

1. What is your geographic market and product specialty?

I am based in Portland, Oregon and focus on retail investment sales in Oregon and Southwest Washington.

2. What’s your latest best practice tip that you can share?

Although it is common sense, the best practice that has been fruitful for me in the past year is re-engaging with past clients.  I have been reaching out to clients I have represented in buying or selling property in the past and asking what I should be working on for them.  This practice has led to several new listings as well as uncovering quite a few buyer needs.

3. What’s been the biggest change over on how you run your business in the past decade?

I don’t quite have a decade in the business (only 8 ½ years) but the biggest change has been building a strong team in the office.  When I started my career in 2004, I took the one-man-team approach.  Now, sellers want to hire a team of agents rather than one individual.

4. What business book do you like to recommend to your colleagues?

A book I just read has helped me re-focus on my goals in business and life: Train Your Brain for Success by Roger Seip

5. What’s a fun fact that not everyone knows about you?

In my free time (not that I have much with three daughters – ages 7, 5 and 1) I am an avid woodworker.  Some of the projects I have completed are a sleigh bed, bedside table, dresser, buffet table, hope chest, bookcase, picture frames as well as several jewelry boxes.

*All Sperry Van Ness® offices are independently owned and operated.

Commercial Real Estate Office Properties Q4 2012 and Beyond

John McDermott Sperry Van Ness
John McDermott, Office Product Council Chair, Capital Partners | SVN

Going forward, there are a lot of reasons to be excited about the commercial real estate brokerage opportunities in the office property arena. Of the leading property types, office property by its very nature requires those dedicated to the product to be true advisors to their clients. Whether pursuing landlord representation or tenant representation on the leasing side or traditional investment brokerage of the asset class; the extreme “added value” role has never been more critical to the process and valuable to the client.

The Sperry Van Ness® difference and our competitive advantage in smaller secondary and tertiary markets as well as our suburban footprint coincide perfectly with the shift of investor interest to those markets and sub-markets for office properties; both for tenancy (less commuting with $4 and $5 gas prices) and investments (suburban office sales volume YTD 2012 are up 29%). Improving financing options, low interest rates and the on-going hunt for trophy assets outside the CBD continue to be fueling the office marketplace. The sale prices for office product in tertiary markets saw a 30% surge so far in 2012 and are likely to remain strong in 2013 and beyond.

On the brokerage side, it comes back to the most fundamental realities of our business and that is clients only become active when they either have a problem or see an opportunity. Office is a product that has both in a very big way.

Understanding these factors, identifying them and acting upon them will provide significant earning opportunities for you at SVN, particularly in the next two to five years.

Problems in this market include:

  • Vacancy
  • Shifting demographics
  • Lingering rent rollover risk
  • Weak health and financial well-being of many tenants
  • Lack of demand for traditional space
  • Lack of funds for tenant improvements and leasing commissions to fill vacancy

Additionally there may be a lack of reserves to stay competitive and improve a property to increase tenant retention; too often a capital stack on the property that is either burdensome or unable to be refinanced without a significant cash infusion; and the competition of bank owned or distressed product in the marketplace.

Opportunities in this market include:

  • Lack of any significant construction in more than three years
  • Suburban and main street office investments in secondary and tertiary markets are offering 120 bp to a full 200 bp return advantage over the major or gateway markets
  • Price per foot acquisitions are well below replacement cost without the costly lead time of construction and absorption

Additionally, many investments offer vacancy upside where the investor can be the “low cost provider” in a region or sub-market and capture more than their fair share of tenants who are looking and tenants who perceive they are getting a bargain, are taking space “as is” or with minimal improvements, often at their own expense in exchange for a small rent abatement or deferral.

In the end, the advisor who is aware of these problems and opportunities will be able to get “in the middle of deals” in 2013 and beyond. Whether helping clients to reposition their existing assets, add value to a newly acquired asset or dispose of an existing asset; commissions, property management fees and asset management fees will be earned. Pay special attention to medical office space, open and first generation space and in fill spaces, particularly the smaller spaces.

– John P. McDermott, Product Council Chair | Office Properties, November 2012

 

*All Sperry Van Ness® offices are independently owned and operated.

 

Finishing Well by Kevin Maggiacomo

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The following are excerpts from a note I sent to the SVN Advisor base this morning. I thought that others may find some of the content useful, and I am posting herein as a result. Enjoy.

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SVN Advisors and Staff:

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While having the courage to start something is an admirable quality, having the tenacity, the dogged determination, and the sheer will to finish well is a quality possessed by all true champions. Let’s cut to the chase – entering the race is easy, fast starts are a dime a dozen, but finishing victorious as a champion is what everyone strives for but few achieve. My question is this: where will you be at the finish line in 2012?

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The interesting thing about a year in time is we all have the exact same opportunity – 365 days. If you break down the 365 days, you’ll see you also have the same 24 hours, 1,440 minutes, and 86,400 seconds in a day your peers and competitors have. The question you need to answer for yourself is this: are you satisfied with what you’ve accomplished this year?

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The realization I’d ask you to consider is a simple one: While summer is over, the year is not – you still have more than 90 days to compete and win business. So, will you finish well, or just stand on the sidelines and cede opportunity to your competitors? One of the greatest myths in the commercial real estate business is if a deal isn’t scheduled to close this year by now, it simply can’t happen. Let me say this as clearly as I can – THIS IS A NOT TRUE. Based on my having observed 12 years of pipeline activity at SVN, I can guarantee you between now and the end of the year all of the following things can occur:

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1. Some of the deals you hope to close by year-end won’t. You can either mourn the inevitable, or work hard to ensure there’s enough volume in your pipeline to more than offset any year-end slippage that occurs.

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2. Not all deals that die remain dead. Transactions previously considered dead opportunities can have life breathed back into them, but only by those Advisors who remain engaged.

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3. New opportunities will go full lifecycle from list to close by 12/31/2012. You can either find and win this new business, or let one of your competitors do so.

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Stay engaged, don’t quit, and keep working. Those who stay focused on items #2 and #3 above won’t need to spend time mourning losses covered under point #1 above.

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A trusted advisor of mine has always told me great companies beat their competition to the future, because their leaders understand how to pull the future forward. I would encourage you to build a 90-day plan in which you both beat your competition to the future (go win new deals), and in which you pull the future forward (pull deals from Q1 ’13 into Q4 ’12). To that end, I offer the following suggestions to help power your plan:

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The most successful Advisors help clients reach their goals by using their experience, knowledge, and work ethic to close transactions, not explain why they can’t close them. New listings will be acquired, and transactions will be closed before year’s end – will your deals be among them?

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With less than 30 days remaining before we enter Q4, what are you going to accomplish with the last 90+ days of the year? It’s been said that mediocrity rests while excellence remains in tireless pursuit of the objective. Will you stay the course and finish well, or will you let others win the prize? It’s your choice – choose wisely.

– Kevin Maggiacomo, CEO & President, Sperry Van Ness International Corporation.

 

*All Sperry Van Ness® offices are independently owned and operated.

 

The Year Ahead – 2012 by Kevin Maggiacomo

As we look forward to a new year, I am pleased to share my thoughts on the very memorable 12 months past, and to offer my outlook for the commercial real estate market in 2012. Before I do, I would be remiss if I did not thank the Sperry Van Ness clients, Advisors, staff, and fellow brokers for their contributions in driving us forward in spite of the unpredictable times. I know that I speak for all SVN Advisors and staff when I wish you a prosperous New Year.

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A Year of Fits and Starts for Commercial Real Estate

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During a year of extraordinary economic and political uncertainties, commercial real estate held its position as a crucial safe haven for investors in 2011. Investment into the sector reached a peak in the second quarter, supported by CMBS conduit originators and more active life company and bank lenders. Even as economic and employment trends fell short, leasing activity for well-positioned assets strengthened. During this period, investment into segments of the market that had lagged during 2010, including commercial properties in secondary and tertiary markets and value-add opportunities, showed signs of firming, as well.

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In spite of the rising momentum, commercial real estate investors revealed they were not entirely immune to the obstacles facing the wider recovery in business confidence. As I suggested in my New Year’s message one year ago, this has been a period of fits and starts. Over the summer, renewed disruptions of capital and credit that were largely unrelated to the property sector threw the conduit into disarray and slowed the pace of transaction activity more broadly. For many borrowers, lending sources pulled back once again, with the result that a larger share of pending sales has struggled to reach closing.

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While sales volume in the third and fourth quarters will not match the spring’s flurry of trades, the shifts in the market must be understood in the context of a turbulent economic and political environment. Where investors have retrenched, it is often under the force of external pressures. It nonetheless remains clear from the current diversity of investors and lenders that commercial real estate is high on the investment hierarchy. In fact, many of the last twelve months’ most notable and most visible deals only came to fruition as the year drew to a close. The fundraising activities of the major REITs support this assessment, as well. US REITs raised $37.5 billion in equity in 2011, a new record that easily surpasses the previous high of $32.7 billion set in 1997. They raised another $13.8 billion in unsecured debt.

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A Persistent Imbalance

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In the final tally, investment sales in 2011 will easily surpass the $120 billion benchmark set in 2010 and will roughly triple the record lows set in 2009. As a wider range of buyers and sellers have reengaged, pricing in the most actively traded markets has exhibited the sharpest improvements. In the extreme, some highly coveted trophy properties have prompted aggressive bidding by domestic and cross-border buyers and have ultimately sold at higher prices than during the market peak in 2006 and 2007.

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While the most visible investments affirm institutional investors’ confidence in the sector, they offer only one perspective on the market. As I pointed out at this time last year, the headline statistics do not fully convey the unevenness of the recovery or the diversity of its investors. The market for assets that do not dominate their respective cities’ skylines is necessarily recovering along its own trajectory. In the current market, that has meant a balance of tailwinds and headwinds that has weighed in favor of the latter.

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Core investors whose scope may be limited to a subset of metropolitan areas have argued that rising prices and falling cap rates will inevitably spill over into other segments of the market. In one respect, this is correct. Yields on mid-cap investments are higher than for any trophy property. But that assessment also overlooks the uniqueness of the market for small- and mid-cap commercial properties and the very different makeup of the investor and lender base. Understanding these differences is crucial to assessments of what the next year will hold for commercial real estate.

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The Economy, Jobs, and the Political Deadlock

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As in previous cycles, the recovery in small- and mid-cap property investment is proving more sensitive to underlying drivers of cash flow than the market for the largest properties. This inevitably means that a strong economic recovery will be one of the requisites for more robust investment. While companies have seen their profits rebound, surpassing their previous peaks from 2007, an environment of extraordinary economic and political uncertainty has constrained decision-making and investment in new tools and people.

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In the first days of 2012, the employment outlook looks brighter. For commercial real estate – and for millions of families across the country that have struggled with unemployment – this is the critical missing link to a more balanced recovery. Although the data on job creation in 2011 only shows a modest improvement over the prior year, leading indicators of firm hiring have turned more positive. Job openings have been trending up consistently over the last year. More recently, first-time applications for unemployment insurance have fallen back to their lowest levels since early 2009. Further, employment gains in temporary help services have picked-up over the past 5 months, which lends well to permanent job creation. Even though single-family housing shows no definitive signs of an inflexion, other metrics indicate that marginally stronger growth in 2012 will support a healthier pace of private sector job creation.

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Regrettably, an environment of political dysfunction qualifies the outlook, both at home and in Europe. In fact, the latter presents one of the most credible threats to global growth. In the United States, the uncertainties presented by unusually intrusive policymaking may resolve over the next year, given the need for all parties to clarify their political positions and objectives as Election Day approaches. Needless to say, a business environment where the rules of the game are more predictable is more conducive to growth and job creation.

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Investment Sales and Financing

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As much as it depends on a stronger economic trajectory, the outlook for small- and mid-cap investment also relies on buyers’ access to financing. In financing their investments, large REITs may offer shares or issue unsecured bonds; trophy investments have also been supported by favorable lending terms from life companies and large international banks. These scenarios are not reflective of the market for smaller assets where the sources of risk and its mitigating factors can be very different. Given the historically dominant role of regional banks and CMBS lenders in facilitating this segment of the market, these lenders figure prominently in the assessment of what the next year will hold.

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Although the CMBS market has struggled to reassert itself since last summer’s interruption, plans for new issuance in the first quarter of 2012 indicate a gradual increase in conduit origination activity. Surprising as it may seem, stability in global bond markets is an important condition for well-functioning CMBS markets, since the spreads on the latter’s bond yields are influenced by corporate bond market trends, as well. In the first half of 2011, more than half the CMBS loans securitized had origination balances of less the $10 million. It remains the case that a more active CMBS market is required for the small and mid-cap segments to flourish, in particular, as a large number of seasoned CMBS loans mature over the coming year.

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Outside of the apartment sector, where generally improving fundamentals and the contributions of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac are facilitating both sales and new development, commercial property investors are dependent on bank financing given an absence of other debt sources. For the last several years, that has presented a problem. Banks have been preoccupied with the management of their distress portfolios and have hesitated to extend new credit, even in the best of cases. The most recent data show those priorities changing. Banks’ default rates on their commercial and apartment loans have fallen consistently over the last year. Coinciding with the stronger performance of the legacy balance sheets, many banks are accelerating the liquidation of bad loans and real estate-owned. A growing minority are lending again, increasing their exposure in segments of the market where an absence of competition and low interest rates are affording opportunities to extend credit. Improvements in bank lending and CMBS issuance will have a disproportionately positive impact on the mid-cap market. Access to historically low-cost credit in 2012 and the likelihood of higher interest rates in 2013 signal an unmatched window of opportunity for acquisitions over the next 12 months.

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Conclusions

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The economic and jobs outlook is improving. With so many of the underpinnings of a stronger recovery in place, we can afford a degree of optimism. Politics and the possibility of external shocks, primarily from Europe, still qualify that optimism.

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While prices in the largest markets have recaptured a significant share of their lost value, other assets have lagged the headline measures. Combined with historically low borrowing costs, there is tremendous upside potential for borrowers with access to financing who can identify well-positioned assets.

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While the process has been frustratingly slow, more banks are moving distress off their balance sheets. This process has the potential to accelerate in 2012, given banks’ stronger positions generally, an evolving regulatory environment, and the potential for distress from maturing CMBS. That will create some pressures on the market, but it should also deepen the pool of distressed assets and notes for sale.

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Attention will necessarily turn to the small and mid-cap market as the economy improves and financing options broaden. Given our experience in this arena, we are anticipating a high volume of advisory work to identify and market investment opportunities before consensus firms. Timing will be the crucial differentiator in this market – the intersection of low-cost financing and first-mover advantage demands that we act deliberately.

Kevin Maggiacomo, CEO & President, Sperry Van Ness International Corporation

 

*All Sperry Van Ness® offices are independently owned and operated.

 

The Radicalization of the Norm by Kevin Maggiacomo

With less than 100 days remaining in 2011, I want to pose the following question: “What will YOU do differently in 2012?” You cannot simply repeat your 2011 performance in 2012 and expect the outcome to be any different. My message is a rather simple, yet important one – the market doesn’t matter, but YOUR actions do! Accepting the norm accomplishes little more than sentencing yourself to mediocrity, while radicalizing the norm creates opportunity even when markets don’t seem to be sympathetic to your cause.

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While commercial real estate markets are certainly not static, I’m always surprised at the numbers of people who operate as if they were. As the landscape around them changes, rather than understanding and adapting to new market drivers, many just prefer to pretend as if it’s business as usual. However, it is those who adapt to the fluidity of the market who become innovative market leaders, and who thrive during even the toughest of market conditions. Likewise, it is those who refuse to change with the times that push themselves into irrelevancy, and eventually become self-inflicted casualties of the weeding-out process.

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What is not so obvious is that during times of adversity come the greatest opportunities. Those who thrived during the past few years understood this principle, and as a result, they will likely be the ones who lead the way in 2012 as well. Successful companies adapt their business models, re-engineer their business practices, and implement new strategies and tactics while their peers sit on the sidelines wondering what went wrong.

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Rather than talking about constricted capital markets, successful companies seek out the investors and lenders still doing deals, and restructure transactions to fit the changing guidelines of active capital partners. Rather than complain about transaction bottlenecks, the smart players work with institutions and special assets groups to work around and through the logjams. Rather than work with brokers replete with excuses about why they’re not successful, they find brokers who focus on outcomes and not excuses. They key to success in down markets is to participate in the present while looking toward the future, but refusing to allow yourself to live in the past.

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So some chest pounding now – not to advertise, but because I think it’s relevant:

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At Sperry Van Ness we’ve led the charge to radicalize the brokerage industry. Since our inception we’ve done business differently than other brokerage firms. From pioneering an open-source brokerage model, to being the first brokerage firm to mandate 100% social media adoption, to being the first to have an in-house auction firm, to being the first to adopt a cloud-based business platform, we have focused on doing business based upon where the market is headed, not where it’s been.

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At Sperry Van Ness, we realized several years ago that traditional business models could not service non-traditional markets. When our competitors were cutting back as they adopted the bunker mentality of watch and wait, we were growing, and we did it based on a debt-free, profitable business model. It was clear to us that we needed to continue to adapt to the needs of our clients, and that together, we would not only survive the challenges of changing markets, but we would thrive amidst them.

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My encouragement to you as we enter 2012 is to refuse to buy into the negative rhetoric. Don’t settle for working with advisors who offer excuses, engage professionals whose work demonstrates they value your relationship as much as they say they do. Don’t tolerate brokers who embrace the status quo, but look for those who shatter it. Look for business partners rather than vendors. Find those firms willing to serve you, regardless of whether a commission exists or not. Look for those willing to embrace change, those who innovate, and those who radicalize the norm.

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If you haven’t experienced working with a brokerage firm that embodies the ethos I’ve described above, then I invite you to contact us and experience the Sperry Van Ness difference for yourself.

Kevin Maggiacomo, CEO & President, Sperry Van Ness International Corporation

 

*All Sperry Van Ness® offices are independently owned and operated.

 

Technology Enabled Collaboration by Kevin Maggiacomo

The impact and the power associated with mobilizing people for a purpose are rooted in fundamental economics – they are nothing new. From electing a government official, to spreading word of and organizing an “Aquarian exhibition” of 500,000 people at Woodstock in 1969, ideating among a critical mass of people, sharing and sourcing information while leveraging the power of numbers and virality have always been present in society. Aligned crowds, we call them “smart mobs” today, are driving virtually every major trend in the global economy.

What’s new, and ever evolving, is the technology which is enabling crowds to be catalyzed, assimilated, and leveraged like never before. If we examine only the past five years, we see how rapidly the speed and power of group collaboration has increased to create value to stakeholders in ways that were previously thought unimaginable. “Technology enabled collaboration,” as its been dubbed, is in full force and effect in almost every industry on the planet. From Restaurants to Travel, and from Yelp to Orbitz, people and businesses are organizing, collaborating, sharing and peering for the purposes of lowering costs, improving quality, saving time, and even curing disease.

Another fundamental shift that has taken place over the last decade is the move from proprietary to transparent, from closed architecture to open source, from a world controlled by scarcity to one opened up by sharing. The power in business is no longer generated by those who control something, but by those who share it. I recall a friend of mine saying: “business has never been about addition or subtraction – it has always been about multiplication.” No greater multiplier exists than creating an impassioned, intentional movement based upon meeting a market driven need.

The following statement may seem counter-intuitive to many still clinging to their old-school ways, but businesses today need to understand they probably cannot control the marketplace by the uniqueness of a product or service, therefore their only choice is to empower the marketplace by adding value. Sage advice then, would be to not get sucked into the frivolity of attempting to control a market – be disruptive by opening it up.

Sustainability for businesses will be found in how quickly businesses can embrace sharing, not how long they can hold a market hostage. Few people will argue with the fact that business has, and will always be, about relationships. We can debate positional variances between qualitative, quantitative, and relational impact, but the market has ended one debate – you don’t control relationships you empower them.

Despite this movement, and hitting a bit closer to home, the commercial real estate industry seems to have been immune to the collaborative trend, and continues to operate much in the same way as it has for 20-30 years. When my firm (Sperry Van Ness) broke from the industry standard approach more than 25 years ago by adopting a set of core covenants, which gave birth to our ethos of compensated cooperation and participation with the entire brokerage community to market our inventory, we were looked at as heretics among our peers. I’m certain as time has evolved our “heretical” approach is now seen as having set the chinning bar for how the industry should operate.

The problem is that while the marketplace recognizes the benefit of the aforementioned model, the brokerage industry as a whole continues to operate with much of the same opacity, often times at the expense of the client and to the benefit of the brokerages. “Quietly” marketing properties, offering zero fee incentive for other brokers to help sell a listing, inserting eyeball roadblocks like overused registration and confidentiality requirements are still par for the course. Has any other industry been more immune to the advancements of technology enabled collaboration than commercial real estate?

When will our industry as a whole to come out of the shadows, cease with the ethereal and mercurial, embrace fundamental economic concepts like supply and demand and operate in the light of day? In the future, the market will simply not tolerate anything less than an authentic and transparent approach to business.

What say you?

Kevin Maggiacomo, CEO & President, Sperry Van Ness International Corporation

 

*All Sperry Van Ness® offices are independently owned and operated.

 

Freemium by Kevin Maggiacomo

How do you feel when you get something for free? Does the hair stand up on the back of your neck as if you’re being set-up for a bait-and-switch, or do you feel like you’ve received something of value at no cost for which you’re appreciative? If you’re anything like me, I’ve experienced both of the aforementioned scenarios. In my opinion there is definitely a right and a wrong approach to “Free.” In today’s post I’ll examine “Freemium” offers and how they might play a part in redefining the commercial real estate industry.

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The reality is that nowadays most of us are accustomed to receiving certain services (information and data) free of charge, and on the surface, with no strings attached and for nothing in return. Not a marketing gimmick like “Buy two get one free” (which is often the same as marking down a 2x marked-up product by 50% if you buy two), or the classic ad supported online newspaper and content model, but an increasingly important economic model whose genuinely free offerings are changing the ways in which consumers use (and purchase) products and services.

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Coined “Freemium,” by venture capitalist Fred Wilson (@FredWilson), the word is a portmanteau, which combines the words “Free,” and “Premium,” to describe a business model which follows one basic principle: Give a core product away for free to a critical mass of consumers, and sell a small percentage of them a premium product.

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Not Gillette, which practically gives their blades away for free, charging through the nose for their razors, or cell phone companies “giving” away the phone and charging for a data plan and two year commitment, but something, which, according to Peter Froberg (@PeterFroberg), a growth consultant with whom I work, “can be used in and of itself, without necessarily buying something else.” He likens the model to the fruit stand operator who offers free, sweet, sliced apples to entice his customers not to buy apples, “that’s fake free,” he says, but to buy pears instead.

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For most, the Freemium model best resonates when discussing Skype. To date, Sykpe’s free VoIP product has provided more than 1B downloads, and provided more than 16B call minutes of “Skype-to-Skype” calls. During that same time period, “Skype-Out” call minutes, Skype’s premium product, has accounted for only 2.2B of those minutes. A low percentage, of paying users, indeed, but enough to generate $21M in operating profit in 2010 (a big swing from their $352M growth related loss of 2009). Other emerging Freemium companies which feature ten’s of thousand’s of users include Evernote, Boardsuite, Linkedin, Pandora, Google (not exactly an “emerging” company), and more.

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Closer to my (industry) home, we find that LoopNet has been operating with a Freemium model for years – Free to post, free to search but with a paywall over Premium Search (access to newly listed properties), and Premium Lister access, which features more prominent portal placement and access to leads. Like them or not, the Freemium model has served them well…they are a profitable, $750M company recently acquired by CoStar.

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Hundreds of businesses, most of which are in technology or in the Web 2.0 space are utilizing Freemium models to generate profits – giving something away for free, and charging for another, often completely different product in the process. And in the course of my researching the Freemium space, it occurred to me that commercial and residential real estate brokers alike have for years been operating with a Freemium model.

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Peruse any national brokerage’s website, and you will find an abundance of free, well written subject matter, like market overview’s, reason’s to buy, reason’s to sell, and so on (at SVN, we just released our annual “Top Market’s To Watch” report). For some of the same reason’s I’m blogging, which include strengthening my personal brand, establishing credibility by demonstrating my ability to think critically, these companies work to create valuable content and strengthen their brands in the hopes that the reader will buy something else – their premium products.

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However, just as Freemium is emerging as a legitimate business model supported by empirical data, I’m hearing more about the brokerage best practice of charging for everything one does – no more free advice, abstracts, surveys and reports. So for those of us who are CRE practitioners, I ask you – Is the aforementioned “best practice” yet another example of the brokerage industry operating in the stone ages…a little slow on the uptake, or does the Freemium concept represent what leadership and strategy advisor Mike Myatt (@MikeMyatt) refers to as a “next practice” capable of creating a disruptive change in an industry prone to herd mentality? While I believe there to be truth in the old saying “free is a very good price,” I’d be interested your opinions – please do share.

Kevin Maggiacomo, CEO & President, Sperry Van Ness International Corporation

 

*All Sperry Van Ness® offices are independently owned and operated.

 

The Good News…

Recent events in the market, including the drawn out debate over the budget ceiling, Friday’s downgrade of the US credit rating and today’s downgrade of Freddie & Fannie by Standard & Poor’s, coincide with new data that show the broader economic recovery has slowed in recent months. Bet I’m not telling you anything that you didn’t already know.

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These developments, alongside heightened volatility in stock markets, have obviously prompted concerns about the resilience of the commercial real estate recovery. In assessing what all of this means for the investment outlook, our clients are looking to us for leadership and a more balanced, long-term assessment of the future. Along those lines, and while I could certainly fill this post with a summary of the downside risks stemming from recent events which have recently imbued the blogosphere, the following is a different but pragmatic take on the road ahead – the market is currently sensitive to the downside risks, but it is also prone at this juncture to discount positive information. There is some good news, which stands apart from the cacophony of recently sounded panic alarms.
Continue reading “The Good News…”