| Managing Corporate Real Estate Assets:
Current Executive Attitudes and Prospects for an Emergent Management Discipline Author: Peter R. Veale
Start Page: 1
End Page: 22
Volume: 4
Issue Number: 3
Year: 1989
Publication: Journal of Real Estate Research
Abstract: In 1987 MIT conducted
a study of the management of buildings and land in large organizations not primarily in
the real estate business. Senior real estate executives at 284 large US corporations and
institutions were surveyed. The research shows that despite their great value, corporate
real estate assets are seriously undermanaged. One of the most significant factors in this
undermanagement is that many corporate real estate managers do not maintain adequate
information about their real estate assets. The study attempted to identify key factors in
the "effectiveness" of real estate management in various organizations. The
strongest factor appeared to be the attitudes of managers in regard to the importance and
value of the real estate function within their organizations. The corporate real estate
decisionmaking process is driven most strongly by the mission and operational needs of the
corporation. Corporate real estate management as a field has been inhabited by the low
prestige and priority accorded it in companies, in management consultant groups, and in
business schools. However, characteristics of a distinct management discipline are
emerging professional organizations, publications, and most importantly, the recognition
of real estate's potential for increasing company profits. Corporate real estate
management must move toward developing a strategic approach involving principles and
practices of general management to develop a proactive, comprehensive, and portfolio-wide
decisionmaking process.
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