The sweet life for office
renters - executive-suites industry - Industry Overview
Nation's Business, May,
1996 by Lynn Woods/
findarticles
An executive
office suite can offer
a convenient, cost-efficient alternative to traditional
Manhattan office space.
Almost a year ago, Martin Cohen,
a New York City business consultant, traded in the commercial
office space he was leasing
in a business
center on Madison Avenue
for a Large
Private office space on
Park Avenue.
The new office came with a
receptionist, a phone-answering and -forwarding service, conference
rooms, and an on-site New
York business center that
provided the equipment and staff for desktop publishing, word processing,
faxing, photocopying, videoconferencing, and other services.
Using the on-premises support
staff means he does not have to hire full-time help, pay insurance benefits,
or worry about whether the receptionist will show up late for work,
because a replacement will be provided.
And he routinely holds meetings
with important clients in one of the building's three conference rooms--at
no extra cost beyond his monthly space-rental rate.
The result? A 40 percent increase
in business since his move. "Because of the professional setup,
my business is geared to larger clients," explains Cohen. "And
the amount of support services means I can respond more quickly"
to new opportunities.
The concept of virtual offices--or executive office suites, as they are more commonly known--was
introduced in 1967, when San Francisco-based HQ Business Centers, the
world's largest provider of executive
office suites, opened its
first location.
In the past decade, the executive office suite industry has expanded tremendously,
says Jane Booras, executive director of the Executive Suite Association,
a trade organization in Plano, Texas. She says the occupancy rate for
the 500 members of her organization is approximately 80 percent--up
about 10 to 15 percentage points in five years. There are between 3,500
and 4,000 executive
office suite companies
in the U.S., Booras says.
Typically, a dozen companies
now compete in booming markets in cities with strong commercial areas
downtown--including Washington, New York, Chicago, and Atlanta.
Suburban locations are also
popular. Booras says that 90 percent of business owners who lease serviced office space from her organization's members live
within five miles of the business
center.
The boom in serviced
offices, Booras says, is
largely a result of corporate downsizing, which has led many big companies
to close expensive traditional
office space in some cities
and instead hire regional representatives. But she says a steady 30
percent of the serviced
office market consists
of entrepreneurs--mainly professionals, such as accountants, attorneys,
financial and public-relations consultants, and people in real estate.
Executive suite
office space can offer
entrepreneurs numerous benefits. Rather than having to commit to a long-term
commercial lease, hire employees, and buy or lease a full array of office
equipment, small-business people can simply pay a single monthly fee
for a furnished office in an attractive location, complete with business
services and facilities as well as a receptionist who not only greets
clients but also answers the phone in the company's name.
Shared office
space companies can provide
as much or as little as a business needs. It might be simply bare-bones
mail service-without office space--for about $50 a month. Or it could
be a "business identity" package consisting of just mail and
telephone-answering service. Another option is an unfurnished or furnished
office available by the month, day, or even hour.
On the other hand, some small-business
tenants say they actually pay less for long-distance phone service,
office supplies, and overnight mail service than they would on their
own because of the discounts passed on by the executive-suite company,
which can use its volume of business to negotiate lower prices with
vendors.
Yet another advantage is the
opportunity to network with other companies in the building. "When
you're on your own, you get in your own little world and lose sight
of what's going on," says Mark Lenart, owner of a Cleveland construction
company who rents an professional
furnished office space
from HQ. "Here you can share war stories."
John Hardisty, who runs an
international consulting firm in Washington, has been an executive office suite renter for 12 years, presently with
Metro Offices. He has considered relocating to his home, where he has
a fully equipped office in the basement.
But all things considered,
his downtown location, along with the flexibility of being able to leave
the office early and know his phones are covered, are perks that would
be hard to give up.
"The whole thing is convenience,"
he says. "There's a certain value to not worrying about things."
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