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Occupier satisfaction and its impact on investment returns from UK commercial real estate

Danielle Claire Sanderson (Bartlett School of Planning, University College London, London, UK)
Steven Devaney (Cass Business School, London, UK)

Journal of Property Investment & Finance

ISSN: 1463-578X

Article publication date: 6 March 2017

1717

Abstract

Purpose

The purpose of this paper is to investigate the relationship between occupiers’ satisfaction with the property management service they receive and the financial performance of commercial real estate.

Design/methodology/approach

The study uses occupier satisfaction data for 240 UK commercial properties collected over a 12-year period and the annual total returns achieved by those properties. Various statistical techniques are employed to assess whether increasing occupier satisfaction leads to greater returns for investors. These include comparing excess returns and risk-adjusted returns with occupier satisfaction at each property to assess whether superior property management generates outperformance (“positive alpha”). The study also investigates whether the relationship between occupier satisfaction and returns is the same across all sectors and whether it is affected by market conditions.

Findings

A positive correspondence is found between benchmark outperformance and occupier satisfaction. The relationship is similar for all sectors of commercial property and is particularly strong during the Global Financial Crisis, indicating that paying attention to satisfying the needs of occupiers has particular benefits during periods when the supply of commercial real estate exceeds demand.

Research limitations/implications

The sample of properties was restricted to those for which occupier satisfaction data had been collected by RealService Ltd and whose owners permitted access to the financial performance results. This meant that the properties belong to only three landlords, all UK REITs that care sufficiently about occupier satisfaction to commission studies. Thus the findings might not apply to all commercial properties. The mechanism by which the positive relationship between satisfaction and financial performance occurs is not tested, but the conventional mechanisms of reputation and customer loyalty (the “service-profit chain”) are discussed.

Practical implications

The findings suggest that it is worthwhile for landlords, or property managers acting on their behalf, to understand the needs of their occupiers in order to deliver the level of service that those occupiers desire. Leases in the UK are generally “triple net” and the total returns used for this analysis are net of property management costs, so the positive relationship between satisfaction and performance is not the result of economising on service delivery. A further implication is that valuers should take more account of occupier satisfaction when assessing the capital value of a property, from which total returns are assessed.

Originality/value

Demonstrating the links between customer service, customer satisfaction and business profitability is rarely attempted because of the many confounding factors that affect profitability. UK listed real estate companies are typically reluctant to reveal the financial performance of individual properties, and information about occupiers’ satisfaction is not generally available. The authors were fortunate to be granted access to a time series of such data, and to be able to demonstrate that attention to delivering a property management service that satisfies occupiers is likely to bring financial rewards to the owners of the property.

Keywords

Acknowledgements

This research is an extension of research carried out as part of Danielle Claire Sanderson’s PhD, which was supported by a stipend from the Lord Samuel of Wych Cross Memorial Fund (administered by the British Property Federation) and by RealService and the RealService Best Practice Group.

Citation

Sanderson, D.C. and Devaney, S. (2017), "Occupier satisfaction and its impact on investment returns from UK commercial real estate", Journal of Property Investment & Finance, Vol. 35 No. 2, pp. 135-159. https://doi.org/10.1108/JPIF-10-2016-0077

Publisher

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Emerald Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2017, Emerald Publishing Limited

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