Pedal Retail Advisors was recently featured in the Washington Business Journal’s Small Biz Spotlight, highlighting our work helping independent retailers navigate commercial lease negotiations and retail real estate strategy.
The article focuses on a challenge we see every day: commercial leasing can be complex, high-stakes, and difficult for first-time retailers to navigate without in-house expertise.
Commercial Leasing Is a Structural Challenge for Small Retailers
The commercial real estate industry works well for established brands with internal real estate teams. It is far less intuitive for new and independent retailers.
Many founders enter lease negotiations without knowing:
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Last week we started our usual Monday morning meeting by asking our summer interns for their thoughts on our trip to Dallas for The Boutique Summit now that we’d all had time to let the Diet Coke leave our systems.

Intern Ollie remarked that the most notable moment from our trip was during the closing party when Abby and I tag-teamed a conversation with an important contact. We hadn’t expected this encounter and we hadn’t prepared at all; so when we executed a perfectly timed, super sharp elevator pitch it looked (and felt) like we were telepathically communicating.
It was fun to hear that the moment made such an impression, because when it was happening, it really did feel like Abb...
✨ Welcome to a four part series we’re calling “What makes Pedal so unique and effective in the retail real estate industry.” Otherwise known as “Why we need our own TV show pronto.” ✨
Today we’re discussing point #3:
We will not start touring spaces with Pedal Retailers until they can actually transact.
Fact: Touring potential spaces is the most fun part of the entire leasing process. Hands down. No question. 100%.

I know that may come as a surprise to some of you thinking, “oh no, Sheila, certainly it’s when you sign an LOI!” Nope. You’ve lost that loving feeling by then.
“What about when you actually sign the lease? That’s got to feel good." Yes, it does, but mostly
...✨ Welcome to a four part series we’re calling “What makes Pedal so unique and effective in the retail real estate industry.” Otherwise known as “Why we need our own TV show pronto.” ✨
Today we’re discussing point #2:
We know Pedal Retailers’ businesses inside and out.
When I started to draft this newsletter I went to Father Internet because I knew there was some quote about proximity and familiarity. Lo and behold, the first page of search results gave me just what I needed:
“Proximity bred familiarity, and familiarity bred comfort.” ― Nicholas Sparks, The Lucky One
Now first of all, I very much do not like Nicholas Sparks
...We’re going to try something different. Most weeks, we write about retailing, real estate concepts, processes, clients and cardinal rules…and I don’t think we’ve ever really made Pedal the center of the story.
Today and for the next few weeks, we’re taking center stage. Which, you may not be surprised to hear, is a perfectly happy place for us seeing as Abby honed her stage skills over many summers at theater camp, and Sheila won the top prize for her persuasive senior speech in 1999. Netflix! Call us!

Anyhow, here’s why we’re going to talk about us.
Pedal is the only commercial real estate brokerage that focuses on independent and start-up retailers. Seriously, Google it, ...
Some of the most successful Pedal Retailers are called to open their businesses because they can’t find what they’re looking for anywhere else. District Champagne, Merry Pin, and Jurisdiction Clothing all spring to mind. They knew there was demand for their business because they felt it themselves, and when they couldn’t take it anymore, they took action to create what was missing.

Jill Adams’ Pink Moon is one of these businesses that simply had to be born. As a Bethesda mother of three young children, Jill was painfully aware of her (and her friends’) struggle to find time and space to prioritize mental and physical health with a community of other mothers that was not only supportive...
I wrote a recent newsletter about why business plans written by a ghostwriter-for-hire, or AI, or anyone-but-you are a big ‘ol waste of money. To recap - they’re generic and boring and make you look lazy, which is absolutely not the look you need when you’re walking the red carpet of retail leasing, so to speak.

A business plan that doesn’t paint you in the most flattering light is embarrassing, but if that’s not enough to dissuade you from hiring someone to write your plan for you, there’s an even scarier issue with ghostwritten plans: they lack the specific information YOU need to find the right space, negotiate the best deal, and actually plan for successful operations…you know,...
Partnerships of all kinds are tricky, and we learn this fact of life young.
My daughter, Alice, went from an S+ to an S on “cooperates well with others” on her third grade report card this past trimester, and when I asked her about it, she said, “that’s because SARAH was my partner!”

Reality Show Candy GIF by Children's Miracle Network Hospitals
By the time we’re starting our own businesses, we’ve experienced challenging partnerships (both professional and romantic) many times over, and we know what qualities to look for in a potential business partner. But opening and running a business throws real challenges at even the most simpatico partnerships, and you know what can REALLY ...