Office Archives | Page 18 of 105 | CREtech
Workplace experience platform Lane today announced the rollout of its new tenant engagement service, Lane Perks.
Designed to support CRE firms in their mission to attract and retain tenants, Lane Perks provides audiences with exclusive access to deals, savings, and special offers from premium brands around the world.
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Whether you own or manage commercial propertiesāor work with investors looking for healthy returnsāyou understand the need for an open, transparent relationship with tenants. Data from the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, going back more than 25 years, shows that only about 45ā50 percent of private-sector businesses survive their first five years of operation, regardless of the economy. Busi...
Investors including
Digital life reaches far beyond our screens into the real world. That means we must figure out how to live with the impacts of technology in our backyards.
London-based
As businesses start to reopen their offices, many are planning for a hybrid model that will see more employees working remotely all or part of the time. But this return to a semblance of normal working life could be more disruptiveāand potentially more damagingāthan the initial pivot to all-remote work in 2020.
The events of the past several weeks have changed the world of work for today, and into the foreseeable future.Ā Ā Since March of 2020, the majority of office-occupying industries have been working from home, while sheltering in place. This abrupt shift in workplace operations has resulted in significant behavioral changes that may have a lasting impact on workspace design and use, while simultane...
Jamie Dimon, billionaire banker, adviser to presidents, leonine master of the financial universe, had FOMO.
Mohammed bin Salman, the brash upstart who had come out on top in a ruthless Game of Thobes at the House of Saud, was eager to announce his primacy on the world stage.
The modern downtown business districts of many large American cities were created through subtraction: First residents left the center city, then the craftsmen and wholesalers, then the museums, theaters and smaller retailers, and ā the final blow ā the department stores.