Dear Pedal,
There is a space in my neighborhood that has been vacant for, no joke, probably four years at this point. Definitely since before the pandemic. Season after season I watch the “For Lease” signs in the window fade and age, and it doesn’t look like there’s anything happening.
So, my question is this – why wouldn’t the landlord lower the rent to make the space attractive rather than just let it continue to sit vacant? It is seriously killing me… this space could be the home to some awesome local business instead of the nothing/ eyesore it currently is.
Yours truly,
Thoughtful Neighbor
Well, hi, Neighbor, and thanks for your excellent question. Here at Pedal, we get differ...
Let’s talk about landlords.
Often when we start considering retail spaces, Pedal Retailers express some version of this concern about large, corporate landlords: won’t they try to take advantage of us as a small business?
The image in their minds is that corporate landlords are like this:
While individual or mom-and-pop landlords are like this:
But having worked on more deals than any human should, we know that in many cases, the big corporate landlords can actually be like this:
And that mom-and-pop landlords can also be like this:
It makes total sense for small retailers (especially those navigating brick-and-mortar for the first time) to assume that corporate landlo...
Last month I got a question so good that I decided to write a whole newsletter about it.
The question was:
“A landlord is offering a space for a long term lease - would she lease it to me as a pop-up, for just six months or so?”
It is such a good question that I couldn’t pack a full answer into the end of our Q&A. Here’s what I said in the webinar: Don’t worry about what a landlord will or won’t let you do. Instead, stay true to YOUR business plan and make a plan that works for YOU.
But, let’s assume you’ve done just that and concluded that it does work for your business plan to pursue a short term deal. Would a landlord even be willing to entertain it?
The short answer is maybe. Deal...
Are Free Rent and TIs a Scam?
When I studied abroad in Florence, one of the very first things our professoressa told us about Italy was that "niente è libero" - nothing is free. (She also taught us that bottled water is more expensive than wine, and to always carry proper bus fare.)
All these years later, I still remember it, and I feel my "niente è libero" spidey senses tingling when I see an offer that seems too good to be true.
Like a free drink from a handsome stranger at the discoteca. Like a pair of very real looking Ferragamos selling for a fraction of MSRP. Like when a retail landlord offers TI ($$ towards your buildout) or free rent at the start of your lease.
Are landlord...