"Cracking
the Code" of Corporate Real Estate Benchmarking
Benchmarking is one of the most
powerful and enduring tools for improving
organizational performance. Its full value to the
corporate real estate industry is only now beginning
to be realized. With the explosive growth in new and
powerful database technologies and consultative
analytical processes, benchmarking is delivering
real results to corporations.
From its initial beginnings in the
1980s as a tool for measuring corporate performance
in virtually every aspect of a company's operations,
benchmarking allowed measurement against
best-in-class practices in manufacturing,
distribution, sales and marketing, and business
administration. While learning how companies compare
against their competition might be interesting to
some, the real goal of benchmarking was to establish
parameters by which companies could improve their
competitive performance.
Until recently, corporate real
estate services and facilities management executives
often found themselves up against the proverbial
wall when it came to obtaining the same kind of
in-depth, actionable benchmarking results that were
available to other critical functions of corporate
performance, such as accounting, sales and
marketing, manufacturing and distribution.
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BENCHMARKING: The
systematic comparison of practices, work
processes and management performance along
established metrics, between your company
and others, usually in the same industry.
from Benchmarking for
Competitive Advantage, by Robert Boxwell,
Jr.
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Mark Mundahl |
"Corporate real estate people were
really at a disadvantage when it came to getting
benchmarking results that were more than
one-dimensional, such as showing how their company's
gross occupancy costs measured up against the
average for their particular industry and/or
geographic area," says Mark Mundahl, director of
operations, United Properties Corporate Real Estate
Services Group.
Knowing a company's rank in the
universe of corporate occupancy costs might have
been useful, but what companies really needed was
meaningful data to enact plans to improve the
overall performance of their corporate real estate
assets. Since corporate real estate costs are
typically the second highest cost of doing
business—exceeded only by employee costs for most
companies—the C-level
executives are pressuring real estate directors to
put better management controls on overall corporate
real estate property services and facilities
management areas.
BRINGING BEST-IN-CLASS CAPABILITIES TO THE CORPORATE
REAL ESTATE WORLD
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Kevin Farrell |
Companies committed to the process
of continually improving their corporate performance
in all aspects of their business were particularly
interested in gaining more control over the real
estate area.
Recent advances, driven by the
advent of new technology and the wider availability
of corporate real estate information, are
transforming companies' ability to more meaningfully
benchmark their corporate real estate property and
facilities management services. This new
benchmarking approach helps companies utilize the
full value of their corporate real estate assets.
The new approach includes both quantitative and
qualitative factors, enabling companies to more
directly compare their corporate real estate
management and facilities costs, service levels and
process with those of other companies with similar
real estate.
"We've really cracked the code on
how to accurately benchmark corporate real estate
performance on a peer-to-peer basis in recent
years," says Kevin Farrell, executive managing
director, United Properties Corporate Real Estate
Services Group. At United Properties, for example,
accurate benchmarking processes can be established
in four critical real estate performance areas:
Building Operations, Occupancy and Workplace
Services, Business Administrative Support, and
Employee Services.
QUALITATIVE APPROACH ADDS VALUE
TO THE BUSINESS ENTERPRISE
Using the new benchmarking tools,
companies can then identify and assess those aspects
of their corporate real estate operations that merit
more detailed investigation. In one such recent
example, a multinational company with a large
corporate campus wanted to know how it could improve
the performance of its building maintenance
operations. The first phase of the benchmarking
study revealed a below-average ratio of "wrench
time" to staff hours worked. By digging deeper for a
more in-depth understanding of the company's
maintenance process, the benchmarking experts
determined that the most significant way to improve
the process was by reengineering the way work was
scheduled. Once this issue was solved, the company
was able to upgrade the performance of its
facilities management processes to best-in-class
status. That correlated with the company's overall
business objective to be best-in-class in all
aspects of its corporate operations.
In another example, a company had
established a business objective of attracting and
retaining the best employees in the industry. In
looking at all the ways to improve performance in
this area, the company discovered through employee
satisfaction surveys that the quality of the
corporate cafeteria services was a key factor for
the high performing employee population that it
sought to recruit. By benchmarking the company's
internal food service operations against the
best-in-class standards in comparable industries,
the company determined that the cafeteria services
lacked the kind of trendy, upscale menu choices that
appealed to this group. In this case, the outside
benchmarking team contracted with a food service
partner—one with best-in-class credentials of its
own—to help the company spice up the cafeteria menu
in such a way as to meet the culinary approval of
the targeted group of employees.
"It makes it easy for companies to
see where they rank in terms of best practices among
companies not only in like industries, but also with
like uses of their real estate facilities," says
Mundahl. "Companies could learn a lot about what was
taking place in the corporate real estate world," he
says. "What they were often missing was the ability
to translate that knowledge into meaningful data for
developing action plans to improve the performance
of their corporate real estate assets."
APPLES-TO-APPLES COMPARISON
PREVIOUSLY UNAVAILABLE
Companies also struggled to obtain
such detailed, peer-to-peer specific data in the
past. Without such detail, the information derived
from benchmarking was apt to result in a reactive,
rather than proactive, report. For example, research
and development driven companies can now obtain
detailed analysis of how their real estate practices
and processes match up against the world of
research-driven companies. "In the past, we just
couldn't get to this same level of detail for many
companies," says Mundahl. "The new trend is to make
benchmarking more of a proactive, problem-solving
process for companies."
For companies that engage in the
solutions-oriented benchmarking process, the return
on investment can be substantial. Many of the
companies that United Properties has worked with on
benchmarking programs have seen returns of three to
10 times their initial investment, says Mundahl.
"Quantitatively speaking, it's not
uncommon for companies to realize savings of $1 to
$4 per square foot in gross occupancy costs," says
Farrell.
Qualitatively, companies can see
equally impressive gains, as measured by criteria
such as higher productivity, greater efficiency in
the workplace and more efficient use of corporate
real estate assets, as well as improved employee
satisfaction and retention rates.
Almost every company with corporate real estate
assets to manage can benefit from a benchmarking
study. Among the kinds of companies that have seen
the greatest gains, however, are those with
corporate portfolios, including:
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multiple campuses in different
geographic areas;
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companies that have undergone a
transformative event such as merger and
acquisition activity;
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companies experiencing significant
recent business changes involving expansion or
contraction; and
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those companies experiencing a
change in leadership or a change in corporate
strategies.
Most importantly, any company without a clearly
defined corporate real estate strategy that aligns
with its core business strategies is a benchmarking
candidate.
"Bottom line, companies are using
the new benchmarking capabilities to improve their
competitive performance in the marketplace," says
Mundahl. "That's the best argument of all for
implementing a new corporate real estate
benchmarking strategy today."