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For both tenant and landlord, a lease renewal
should be treated like any other lease negotiation. This includes
a thorough search of the marketplace for suitable spaces and a good
understanding of which landlords would be most interested in bidding
for your tenancy.

Lease renewal time is also 'decision' time.
Consider this: Landlords raise rents because
they think they can
reasoning that the costs and inconvenience
of moving will keep most tenants from relocating.

The most effective strategy to combat a rent increase is to know
what other leasing opportunities are available and use this knowledge
to negotiate lower rates (and other concessions) from your landlord.
It is the landlord's perceived threat of your vacating the building,
and the costs to replace your tenancy, that generates the leverage
necessary to renegotiate favorable terms and conditions.

Savvy business people, lacking the time and expertise to acquire
accurate information about vacancies (including vacancies in your
current building) and market conditions on their own, retain me
to do the research, advise them and represent their interests at
the bargaining table.

Many times landlords offer better deals
to new tenants.
Your current landlord should understand that, in order to retain
your tenancy, he/she will have to agree to extend to you the lower
of 1. The rates, terms and concessions they would offer to attract
new tenants or 2. Rates, terms and concessions equal to those you
could reasonably obtain from landlords of other buildings.

The landlord would be well-served to treat your request seriously,
for to lose you would mean they would have to re-tenant
your space.

'Re-tenanting your space can be quite expensive. In addition
to the immediate interruption of your income stream, a landlord
can expect to incur the following out-of pocket expenses to re-tenant
your space: Marketing costs, leasing commissions, legal expenses,
tenant improvement costs, concessions (free rent, reduced rent,
etc.) and an indeterminate period of vacancy.

You are reasonably entitled to offset a portion of these potential
expenses against your future rental obligations.

Start the re-negotiation process early.
Begin the process 6-12 months prior to the expiration of the lease
term and never reveal your potential leasing choices to either your
landlord, his/her agent/brokers or employees. This includes the
buildings property managers, cleaning staff and parking attendants.

Instruct your staff not to discuss your lease or your intentions
with anyone and always utilize the services of an experienced tenant
representative as your spokesperson..

Refer all inquiries from you landlord or his/her agents to your
designated leasing representative.

I invite you to call me at 480-998-7998 to learn more about this
service.

Remember...when landlords compete for
your tenancy you win!
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