The commercial real estate industry is at a turning point. In a market defined by technological disruption, stringent sustainability mandates, and a "flight to quality" among tenants, the old ways of operating a building simply don't work anymore. For too long, our industry has relied on a "run-to-failure" mindset - fixing things only after they break. It’s a gamble that masquerades as cost savings, but the data proves otherwise: reactive maintenance is almost universally the most expensive way to operate a building . To address this, I am proud to announce the release of two major resources developed in partnership with BOMA International:
The Strategy: The High-Performance Blueprint First, we released a Deep Dive white paper to set the stage. The High-Performance Blueprint for Modern Building Operations explores the "New Operational Mandate" facing property teams today. In this paper, we break down the financial and operational realities of modern management:
This white paper is the argument for why we must change. But knowing why isn't enough; you need to know how. The Execution: The New Building Maintenance Manual To execute this strategy, you need a single, authoritative source of truth. That is why we have released the all-new BOMA International Building Maintenance Manual: Industry Standards, Best Practices, and Innovations. The book, authored by me and extensively peer-reviewed by leading operations professionals, is a 250+ page guidebook that is designed to be the "playbook" for the modern building engineer and property manager. In the Guidebook, we move beyond basic theory to provide a practical, tactical toolkit:
A New Era for Operations Optimizing building systems is no longer optional - it is the foundation of asset value and tenant retention. Whether you are a property manager looking to protect your NOI or a building engineer aiming to sharpen your skills, these resources define the new standard of care.
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In the world of commercial real estate, there are often two distinct worlds of management. There's the "boots-on-the-ground" world of property management - a fast-paced environment of tenant calls, vendor contracts, budget variances, and operational fires. Then, there's the "30,000-foot-view" world of asset management - a strategic realm of investment goals, market positioning, capital planning, and portfolio-level returns. For decades, a gap has existed between these two functions. But in today's increasingly competitive and data-driven market, owners and investors no longer see them as separate. They need property managers who don't just maintain an asset, but who actively drive its value. This is the central challenge (and opportunity) explored in Marc Fischer's new book, Thinking Like an Asset Manager: A Strategic Guide for Property Managers in Commercial Real Estate. It serves as an essential bridge, providing property managers with the mindset, skills, and language to become indispensable strategic partners. Here's an overview of what this comprehensive guide offers. Part 1: The "Why" — Building the Asset Management Mindset The book begins by tackling the most crucial element: the mindset shift. It re-frames the property manager's role from an "asset babysitter" to a "value creator." This section clearly defines the difference between property management (focused on efficient day-to-day operations) and asset management (focused on maximizing long-term value and investor returns). It establishes that every operational decision—from handling a maintenance request to renewing a lease—has a direct financial impact on the asset's "big picture" goals. This part lays the foundation by introducing the key performance indicators (KPIs) that asset managers live by, such as Net Operating Income (NOI), Capitalization (Cap) Rates, and Value Creation. Part 2: The "How" — Mastering the Core Skills Once the "why" is established, the book dives into the "how," dedicating entire chapters to the core hard skills every strategic manager needs. This section is the technical manual for speaking the language of asset management. Key skills covered include:
Part 3: The "Application" — Strategic Daily Management This is where the rubber meets the road. Part III connects the high-level mindset and skills from the first two sections to the daily functions of a property manager. It provides a blueprint for applying an asset manager's lens to everyday tasks. Topics include:
Part 4: The "Payoff" — Communication and Career Path The final section focuses on the payoff for this new mindset: effective collaboration and career growth. It’s all about communication.
Who Is This Book For? Thinking Like an Asset Manager is an indispensable guide for a wide range of CRE professionals:
EXPLORE THE BOOKHere are a few chapters from the book for you to enjoy! INTRODUCTION: Your browser does not support viewing this document. Click here to download the document. Chapter 1: What is CRE Asset management? Your browser does not support viewing this document. Click here to download the document. Asset managers and property management (PM) leaders - are you truly confident that every asset in your portfolio is being managed to the highest standard? In today's dynamic market, simply trusting your partners or internal teams isn't enough. A robust property audit is a foundational element of effective risk management and maximizing asset value. INSPIRE's "Trust but Verify" Audit Program INSPIRE provides independent, expert property audits designed to give both asset managers (confirming PM companies are executing) and property management companies (confirming internal teams are compliant) the certainty they need. This isn't about finding fault; it's about validating performance, identifying hidden efficiencies, and mitigating exposure before small issues become major liabilities. The Value Proposition Our comprehensive audits systematically uncover issues that erode value and increase risk:
The INSPIRE Advantage
Our team brings deep industry expertise, providing an objective lens to confirm that your teams are properly managing the properties in their portfolio. By establishing a clear audit trail, we help PM companies demonstrate operational excellence and help asset managers confirm that due diligence is being performed. Ready to turn operational risk into validated performance? Let's discuss how INSPIRE can implement a scheduled audit program for your portfolio! Attention commercial real estate (CRE) tenants and occupiers - your landlord should send you operating expense pass-through statements in the first quarter of 2026. This mechanism allows the landlord to recoup operating expenses at your property - and it can be a critical moment for your bottom line!
What are Operating Expense Pass-Throughs? Operating expense pass-throughs are a standard component of most commercial leases. They allow the landlord to recover their costs of operating the building, including property taxes, insurance, utilities, maintenance, and property management fees. This mechanism transfers the risk of rising operational costs from the landlord to the tenants. Tenants pay a pro-rata share based on the space they occupy. The Costly Truth: Errors are Common The simple fact is that these pass-throughs can be complex calculations - involving base years, expense caps, gross-up provisions, and multiple line-item exclusions - and are prone to errors. We frequently see:
These oversights can compound year after year, resulting in significant overcharges. Partner with INSPIRE for Validation Don't just pay the bill. As Ronald Reagan famously stated, it is imperative that you "Trust but Verify" the documents provided by the landlord. INSPIRE offers specialized advisory services to help CRE occupiers meticulously review and validate every line item in your reconciliation statement. Our team ensures you're billed the right amount by confirming that:
Prepare now to engage an expert! By partnering with INSPIRE in Q1 2026, you can secure cost certainty, recover past overcharges, and protect your company's long-term financial health. Click this link to schedule a free initial consultation: https://outlook.office365.com/book/[email protected]/?ismsaljsauthenabled=true In commercial property management, the moment you believe you've perfected operations is the moment you start falling behind. The landscape of commercial real estate (CRE) is in constant flux – tenant expectations evolve, technologies advance, and market pressures never cease. It is easy to get caught in the rhythm of daily tasks – collecting rent, handling work orders, and managing vendors – and mistake stability for optimization.
However, top-tier property managers understand that their role is not just to maintain the status quo; it is to pursue improvement across every facet of the asset relentlessly. This proactive, investigative mindset is what separates a building manager from a true asset performance champion. It is about constantly asking, "What can we do better?" across three critical domains:
True excellence is not a destination; it is a continuous process of refinement. The best managers are always on the lookout for that next opportunity to enhance value, no matter how small it may seem. Hiding in Plain Sight Some of the greatest threats to Net Operating Income (NOI) are not in the boardroom; they are “hiding in plain sight” within your day-to-day operations. These small, often-overlooked inefficiencies act like a silent tax on your portfolio. They drain resources, frustrate tenants, burn out your team, and slowly erode asset value. The difference between a good property management team and a great one lies in their ability to hunt down and eliminate this "operational friction." Here are some of the most common inefficiencies we frequently encounter in property management operations, along with actionable recommendations to address them. 1. The Reactive Maintenance Cycle
2. Decentralized or "Relationship-Based" Procurement
3. Manual Lease Abstraction and Critical Date Tracking
4. The Annual Operating Expense Reconciliation Scramble
5. Inconsistent Tenant Onboarding & Communication
6. Passive Energy Management
7. "Institutional Knowledge" and Lack of Standard Practices
8. Overlooked Service Contract Audits
9. Inefficient Accounts Payable (AP) Processing
10. Generic, Non-Actionable Property Reporting
Eliminating these inefficiencies requires a deliberate, strategic approach. By transitioning from reactive problem-solving to proactive system-building, you can unlock significant value, improve tenant satisfaction, and position your assets to outperform the market. Is your team equipped to find and fix these hidden issues? We specialize in operational audits and the development of best-in-class property management systems. Let's schedule a brief call to discuss how a fresh set of expert eyes can benefit your portfolio. In commercial real estate (CRE), we are experts in optimizing the visible: maximizing leasable square footage, reducing operating expenses, and enhancing tenant retention. But what if one of your property's most valuable untapped assets is entirely invisible? From an engineering perspective, every data center is a massive heat engine. For every kilowatt of electricity used to power servers, nearly another kilowatt is spent on cooling to remove the resulting heat. This thermal load is typically viewed as a liability – a costly byproduct to be vented into the atmosphere. But this perspective is slowly changing. Visionary developers are beginning to treat this "waste heat" not as a problem to be solved, but as a resource to be sold. By strategically co-locating energy-intensive tenants, we can create industrial ecosystems where the output of one operation becomes the essential input for another. The most compelling example of this is the pairing of data centers and modern greenhouses. The Symbiotic Relationship: Data Centers and Agriculture A data center requires constant, reliable cooling. A commercial greenhouse requires constant, reliable heating, especially in cooler climates. The synergy is obvious and powerful. Instead of paying to exhaust hot air, a data center can redirect that thermal energy – often via liquid-to-air or liquid-to-water heat exchangers – to a neighboring greenhouse. This creates a powerful trifecta of benefits:
Real-World Examples in Action Boden, Sweden: The city of Boden has become a hub for this concept. Genesis Digital Assets operates a 10-megawatt data center where the excess heat is used by a local consortium to warm a 300,000-square-foot greenhouse, contributing to Sweden's food self-sufficiency. Link: https://genesisdigitalassets.com/greenhouse-project Norwich, UK: A pioneering project by Start-up Deep Green installs small-scale "digital boilers" (compact data centers) at public swimming pools. The waste heat from the servers provides the majority of the heat needed for the pool water, resulting in a reduction of over 60% in the facility's heating bills. Link: https://deepgreen.energy Montreal, Canada: The city actively encourages data centers to capture and reuse their waste heat. The Heating with Bits program supports projects like the one where a data center's excess heat is used to warm a large urban greenhouse, supplying fresh produce locally. Link: https://www.theenergymix.com/waste-heat-from-quebec-data-centre-to-grow-80000-tonnes-of-veggies-per-year/ Beyond Greenhouses: The Broader Application of Thermal Asset Management The principle of harnessing waste energy extends far beyond the agricultural sector. We are starting to see creative applications across the CRE spectrum: District Heating: In dense urban environments, heat from data centers can be fed into municipal or campus-wide district heating loops, warming adjacent offices, residential buildings, and retail spaces. This is already common practice in several Scandinavian cities. Link: https://www.weforum.org/stories/2025/06/sustainable-data-centre-heating Aquaculture: Similar to greenhouses, fish farms require vast amounts of warm water. Co-locating an aquaculture operation with a data center or other heat-producing industrial facility is a natural fit. Link: https://www.datacenterdynamics.com/en/news/ecodatacenter-to-reuse-heat-in-fish-farms-and-greenhouses/ Link: https://www.theaquaponicsource.com/data-center-heat-reuse Industrial Pre-heating: Waste heat can be used to pre-heat water or materials for manufacturing processes in adjacent industrial facilities, lowering their energy consumption. Waste Cooling Synergy: The concept works in reverse. Liquefied Natural Gas (LNG) regasification terminals produce an enormous amount of "waste cold." A data center built nearby could use this cold energy to supplement its own cooling systems, creating a powerful energy-saving loop.
Link: https://www.veolia.com/en/our-media/press-releases/world-first-veolia-enagas-and-barcelona-city-council-inaugurate-first-cold-recovery-network-lng-terminal Link: https://techemerge.org/initiatives/harnessing-waste-cold/ The Future The future of high-performance real estate lies in seeing buildings not as isolated structures, but as nodes in a larger energy network. By applying sound engineering principles to intelligent real estate strategy, we can transform energy liabilities into financial assets, reduce environmental impact, and build more resilient and profitable portfolios. |
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I am internationally recognized as an innovative and dynamic leader in the CRE industry. Since establishing INSPIRE in 2015, I have helped businesses excel amid unprecedented and historical changes by empowering teams to deliver exceptional service to clients and tenants and through a laser-like focus on optimizing asset value.
In addition, as an accomplished author, a sought-after speaker, and a talented instructor, I thoroughly enjoy igniting a passion in others to become the best and brightest talent in CRE. Archives
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