The Nordic real estate landscape appears deceptively calm. Beneath widespread agreement on hybrid working and sustainability lies a fundamental divide. Companies viewing real estate merely as a passive cost are at significant risk, while those strategically leveraging it will secure a decisive competitive advantage.
Leaders must move beyond superficial trends and address three critical realities:
The “flight to quality” cliché masks an increasingly stark market polarization, clearly distinguishing winners from losers. The fundamental question is no longer where employees work but why they choose to show up at all.
The corporate real estate portfolio is now typically polarized: every square meter is either a high-value “destination” fostering innovation and collaboration or a low-value “commodity” draining talent and resources.
There is no middle ground—generic offices are now strategic liabilities.
Real estate research now highlights rental and value premiums for prime, ESG-certified, amenity-rich buildings, contrasted sharply by the expanding ´brown discount´ and rising vacancy rates in secondary assets. Occupying subpar buildings sends negative signals to talent and the market, damaging your employer brand and limiting appeal to top-tier talent.
A. Implement a Portfolio Purity Play: Aggressively audit each asset—retain only those qualifying as high-performance “Hubs.” Consolidate investments into fewer, exceptional properties that actively attract talent.
B. Quantify Experience ROI: Transition from traditional metrics like occupancy per square meter to measuring “collaboration density” and “employee engagement” post-visit. Prioritize measurable returns on experience (ROX).
C. Leverage “Third Spaces”: Build a curated network of premium flexible spaces and co-working venues to complement central hubs, offering quality without compromising choice.
Nordic leadership in ESG is a given. The next frontier is not just signing green leases, but actively demonstrating and monetizing their financial and human capital value.
Are you treating ESG as a compliance checkbox or actively leveraging it as a strategic asset? Passively approaching ESG results in missed opportunities for value creation.
Research confirms increasing market premiums for ESG-compliant buildings. Moreover, top talent—particularly Gen Z—prioritize environmental values in employment decisions. Your workplace is the physical embodiment of your corporate values and sustainability commitments.
A. Emphasize the “S” in ESG: While environmental standards (“E”) are mature in the Nordics, the social (“S”) component, encompassing wellness, inclusivity, and community engagement, is now pivotal in talent attraction and retention.
B. Demand Data, Not Just Certifications: Move beyond mere BREEAM certification. Require detailed metrics on energy consumption, indoor air quality, and occupant satisfaction from landlords to enhance lease negotiations and ESG reporting.
C. Integrate Real Estate into Carbon Accounting: Incorporate real estate energy usage into corporate Scope 1 and Scope 2 emissions reporting, leveraging your portfolio as a core component of your net-zero strategy.
The true value of Proptech and AI lies not in trendy applications but in transforming Corporate Real Estate (CRE) into a proactive, data-driven strategic business partner.
Without granular, real-time data on how your space is utilized, your real estate function is effectively operating blind, overspending on underused spaces and failing to deliver optimal environments.
CBRE research and case studies reveal significant gaps between assumed and actual space utilization. This discrepancy represents substantial opportunities for efficiency, cost savings, and enhanced employee experiences. Practical AI applications are increasingly mainstream, offering advanced lease abstraction, portfolio optimization, and predictive modeling capabilities.
A. Establish a Digital Nervous System: Mandate the installation of IoT sensors and real-time utilization tracking technologies. The insights generated will underpin intelligent portfolio management.
B. Appoint a Dedicated CRE Technologist: Assign a specialist to explore, pilot, and scale technology solutions, effectively bridging real estate, IT, and HR functions.
C. Reframe the Technology Investment Case: Highlight technology investments not merely in terms of cost reduction but emphasize their value in talent retention, productivity improvements, and enhanced strategic agility through rapid, data-driven decisions.