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How to Lease Up Retail Properties?
Manage episode 401067519 series 2557320
How to canvass tenants for retail properties? What are some techniques to get a new tenant? Who to target? Beth Azor, the "Canvassing Queen", CRE leasing coach, developer, investor, author/speaker, and CEO of Azor Advisory Services shares her knowledge.
Read this entire interview here: http://tinyurl.com/2jdstyra
How to canvass tenants for retail properties?
Canvassing is when we knock on doors to find tenants to lease spaces in our vacancies. I was taught very early in my career not to sit around and wait for the phone to ring, go out, and knock on doors. If you think about what would qualify as a great tenant, it would have other locations, someone that's paying another landlord rent. How easy is it? This is why I love retail, It's just great to be able to go within 1 to 2 hours from your property and knock on doors of retailers to see if they're interested in expanding or opening in your shopping center.
Canvassing tips and examples:
- I was sitting at a red light, and there was a van across the way from me. On the bottom of the van, there was a plumbing supplies company, and they had five locations listed. What I always tell my students or my leasing agents who work for me is this: if someone has one location, it's a 50/50 shot if they want a second; if they have three, four, or five, they want more – they're in the expansion business. That is why I took a picture of that van, saying, "Hey, everyone, open your eyes, this is a business; they have five locations, here are their locations." Now, I know that one of my shopping centers was a hole in their doughnut of locations. I called the place, and they said they weren't interested in my area, but they gave me two other areas, and I have no friends that own properties there, so I sent my friends the information.
- There are prospects everywhere. There are prospects on bus benches, where you're driving down and it reads "Hey, have a smoothie!" and they list multiple locations under the bus bench. I love getting the little magazines that they hand out at doctors' offices or pediatrician offices, where it's the little community magazine. I grab those, and then on the weekend, I go through them, and I have found tons of prospects, because what does it tell you if they're advertising in a magazine? They've got money because we know the first thing that goes, if attendance is not doing well, a business isn't doing well, is marketing. They have another location, and they have money to spend on marketing, so I'll call them.
- I just did a deal with a men's clothing store that I found an ad in a magazine and called them up. I said, "Hey, I've got this property; we'd love to have men's clothing," and they were very interested. Within 90 days, they opened in one of my properties.
- I have an assignment that I'm working on in Cleveland, where I took over a 15% occupied mall and we have signed 49 leases in two years. I've met over 1800 businesses in Cleveland personally in two years. That's how you sign 49 leases. I realized that because the property was in downtown Cleveland, with lots of office buildings around and the food court had only two or three tenants, but because we got their sales, we knew that they were doing very well. I created a flyer that showed a picture of the nine available food court spaces. I said, "Food court spaces are available. I think it's a great rate, utilities included." Then I asked, "Which ones had hoods and which ones had refrigeration?" And I went and handed it out to 50 restaurants like fast-casual restaurants. Within 90 days, we leased five of them. Flyers—where the guy can come into the store and the gatekeeper goes, "Oh, this lady dropped this off, but it's got nine food court spaces; this one has a hood, this one doesn't have a hood." This is better than a business card.
- The last thing I want to say, which is the most important, is when you walk into a retail space, never ask for the owner. I know there has been decades of sales training that says, "Get to the decision maker," but I promise you, if you walk in and say, "Is the owner here?" you're going to shoot yourself in the foot. It's just a terrible thing to do because they'll immediately think, "Why doesn't she think I'm the owner?" and they might even lie and say, "No, the owner's not here."
Beth Azor
www.bethazor.com
www.twitter.com/bethazor1
www.instagram.com/bethazor
211 эпизодов
Manage episode 401067519 series 2557320
How to canvass tenants for retail properties? What are some techniques to get a new tenant? Who to target? Beth Azor, the "Canvassing Queen", CRE leasing coach, developer, investor, author/speaker, and CEO of Azor Advisory Services shares her knowledge.
Read this entire interview here: http://tinyurl.com/2jdstyra
How to canvass tenants for retail properties?
Canvassing is when we knock on doors to find tenants to lease spaces in our vacancies. I was taught very early in my career not to sit around and wait for the phone to ring, go out, and knock on doors. If you think about what would qualify as a great tenant, it would have other locations, someone that's paying another landlord rent. How easy is it? This is why I love retail, It's just great to be able to go within 1 to 2 hours from your property and knock on doors of retailers to see if they're interested in expanding or opening in your shopping center.
Canvassing tips and examples:
- I was sitting at a red light, and there was a van across the way from me. On the bottom of the van, there was a plumbing supplies company, and they had five locations listed. What I always tell my students or my leasing agents who work for me is this: if someone has one location, it's a 50/50 shot if they want a second; if they have three, four, or five, they want more – they're in the expansion business. That is why I took a picture of that van, saying, "Hey, everyone, open your eyes, this is a business; they have five locations, here are their locations." Now, I know that one of my shopping centers was a hole in their doughnut of locations. I called the place, and they said they weren't interested in my area, but they gave me two other areas, and I have no friends that own properties there, so I sent my friends the information.
- There are prospects everywhere. There are prospects on bus benches, where you're driving down and it reads "Hey, have a smoothie!" and they list multiple locations under the bus bench. I love getting the little magazines that they hand out at doctors' offices or pediatrician offices, where it's the little community magazine. I grab those, and then on the weekend, I go through them, and I have found tons of prospects, because what does it tell you if they're advertising in a magazine? They've got money because we know the first thing that goes, if attendance is not doing well, a business isn't doing well, is marketing. They have another location, and they have money to spend on marketing, so I'll call them.
- I just did a deal with a men's clothing store that I found an ad in a magazine and called them up. I said, "Hey, I've got this property; we'd love to have men's clothing," and they were very interested. Within 90 days, they opened in one of my properties.
- I have an assignment that I'm working on in Cleveland, where I took over a 15% occupied mall and we have signed 49 leases in two years. I've met over 1800 businesses in Cleveland personally in two years. That's how you sign 49 leases. I realized that because the property was in downtown Cleveland, with lots of office buildings around and the food court had only two or three tenants, but because we got their sales, we knew that they were doing very well. I created a flyer that showed a picture of the nine available food court spaces. I said, "Food court spaces are available. I think it's a great rate, utilities included." Then I asked, "Which ones had hoods and which ones had refrigeration?" And I went and handed it out to 50 restaurants like fast-casual restaurants. Within 90 days, we leased five of them. Flyers—where the guy can come into the store and the gatekeeper goes, "Oh, this lady dropped this off, but it's got nine food court spaces; this one has a hood, this one doesn't have a hood." This is better than a business card.
- The last thing I want to say, which is the most important, is when you walk into a retail space, never ask for the owner. I know there has been decades of sales training that says, "Get to the decision maker," but I promise you, if you walk in and say, "Is the owner here?" you're going to shoot yourself in the foot. It's just a terrible thing to do because they'll immediately think, "Why doesn't she think I'm the owner?" and they might even lie and say, "No, the owner's not here."
Beth Azor
www.bethazor.com
www.twitter.com/bethazor1
www.instagram.com/bethazor
211 эпизодов
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