Home » Blog » Blog » real estate
Bob Phibbs' Retail Sales Blog

Archive for the ‘real estate’ Category

Retailers Look For Cotenancy Clauses In Your Leases

With many malls losing customers and major players, now is the time to pursue rent reductions from your landlord. The legal jargon “cotenancy clauses”, are common in retail leases, they let tenants demand cuts in rent — or even a penalty-free pullout if key tenants or a specified numbers of stores leave the center.

It won’t save your store if you are about to close, but it could provide leverage to reduce rent or, if things get bad enough with closed Mervyns, Macy’s and other anchors dark, a chance to escape to a better center.  The Wall Street Journal had a great story about major players like Williams Sonoma and GAP who are already pouring over their documents.  Why shouldn’t you?

Have a lawyer take a look, this could save you thousands.

To Find Good Retail Locations: Check the Trash

22_suburbia1“Is now a good time to open a retail business?” I get questions like this a lot. If you have the money, the intelligence and desire to make it work -yes. Much like deciding to have a child or get married, it is your conviction that makes the difference.

If you want to open a retail business because you, “think it will be fun,” “want something to do,” or feel a need for “a change,” don’t do it. It would be like going into a bar at closing time, finding the worst possible person for you and then marrying them. If you think a divorce could be messy, wait until you see what happens to get out of a five or ten-year lease!

Part of your retail success will come in choosing a location; you don’t want to be 100 yards from success. Rent could be cheaper around the corner, on the backside of the development or in an older center but there’s a reason rent is cheaper – less traffic and visibility.  You’ll have to advertise more to get people to just find you so there rarely is any savings.

When I was helping select locations for a franchise, new franchisees would pitch me why a development was so good, “… and it’s surrounded by million dollar homes.”  After awhile, I began to question just how many “million dollar homes” an area could afford.

Now we know – few. In fact many of those homes are still vacant or being rented. Here’s a tip for you looking at locations with leasing agents who might be selling you on a bill of goods about an area: check the trash.

WasteManagementRecycling

With so many abandoned homes in major markets like California, Florida and the like, you want to know how many customers you could actually count on in your two-mile trade area.

Here’s how: Find out the trash collection days and times for your intended area.  Go and observe how many have put their trash out prior and you’ll have a good indication of how dynamic your neighborhood really is.

Is now a good time to open a retail business? It can be if you use tricks like these to make sure you aren’t sold a bill of goods.