Far too many executives and business owners glaze over the lease review process. Even when a broker or attorney is involved, here are some provisions that you need to make sure get proper attention. This is by no means a complete list, if we had the time I am sure that we could go on for much longer, but these are some of the most pressing items that our Office Insider Team has experienced in doing deals in the Texas market. Today we have a special guest, Quinncy McNeal with Husch Blackwell, as well as our Office Insiders James Robertson and Ryan Roth.

About The Speakers

James E. Robertson, Jr.

Commercial Real Estate can be one of the most profitable investment vehicles available to business owners or just a space utilized to operate a business. For over a decade now, I have helped Houston’s business community buy, sell, and lease Commercial Real Estate all over the state of Texas. I have been blessed to learn from some of the best in the world about the art of getting deals done here and it is a passion to use my knowledge and experience to help my clients achieve their goals.

Ryan Roth

Related Posts

Table Talk about Office Leases with Attorneys and Brokers

Ryan Roth (Office Insider), Quinncy McNeal (Husch Blackwell), and James Robertson (Office Insider) discuss a few key provisions in Office Leases that are overlooked by both large and small businesses. This is part 1 of 2, if you want to see the whole thing long

Houston Police Department Data Center Case Study

We were honored to work with some of the City of Houston's best and brightest on this critical data center move. This is our story. It would not have been possible without the great team at the City of Houston.

What Does Diversity Look Like in Commercial Real Estate

What Does Diversity Look Like in Commercial Real Estate The most important color in business is green. I think that is the primary color that has driven much of the efforts in Diversity and Inclusion on a national level recently. What Diversity looks like in this

Negative Rents

Landlords in the Houston market should be concerned. Before COVID, Houston was dealing with a soft office market, with stagnant or declining rental rates in certain submarkets, large enterprise-level companies passing on Houston and migrating to other major Metro areas, low new construction, and historic levels of concessions.

2021-05-04T19:16:50+00:00
Go to Top