Tag: Bewirtschaftung

  • From shopping centre to property platform

    From shopping centre to property platform

    Shoppi Tivoli Management AG has changed its name to Tivoli Real Estate Management AG. According to the company, the name change reflects a strategic expansion of its field of activity. In addition to managing the shopping centre in Spreitenbach, the company intends to manage other commercial and residential properties in the Limmat Valley.

    The first project under the new company name is the management of the Tivoli Garten residential park. According to the company, 445 rental flats have been created in the “new lively and colourful district in the heart of the Limmat Valley” with more shopping facilities in the adjacent Shoppi Tivoli as well as extended sports and leisure facilities. The advantages also include the connection to the city centre and short distances to the countryside.

    According to its own information, Shoppi T ivoli is the largest shopping centre in Switzerland in terms of floor space. “With Tivoli Real Estate Management AG, we are retaining our identity and origins in the name, while at the same time making it clear that we are broadening our positioning in order to continue to be there for customers and partners in a reliable, competent and future-oriented manner,” reads a press release.

    Tenants and suppliers will continue to have the same contact persons, and contracts and processes will remain the same. The offices will also remain at Shopping Centre 9 in Spreitenbach.

  • Achieving success even more efficiently with digital tools

    Achieving success even more efficiently with digital tools

    In the current market situation, efficiency in marketing and management processes is more important than ever for property professionals. A quick letting or sale means lower costs. With optimised digital operating and communication processes, estate agents and property managers also gain valuable time to focus on the essentials: looking after tenants and owners. The new digital solutions from SMG Real Estate offer the ideal support to save time and money in the property business while improving the quality of customer communication.

    Automation and artificial intelligence (AI) are two important new details that SMG Real Estate is using to support its business customers in making the marketing process more efficient. New tools based on these technologies significantly simplify and speed up the listing process. All you need to do is enter the address and some specific data about the property and the advert is created automatically. The software accesses IAZI’s extensive database.

    In a matter of seconds, concise and appealing property texts are also created that optimally present the specific advantages of the property. The new AI solution is conveniently integrated into the Business Manager user interface and is available as an option.

    Strengthen customer loyalty through fast and professional communication

    Communication with potential prospective tenants is now much easier thanks to the Flatfox tools, which are also integrated into the Business Manager. The Flatfox Messenger enables efficient management of the entire rental process. From scheduling viewings to online application management and the automatic generation of rejections – everything can now be done with just a few clicks. This simplification creates space for the essential tasks, such as intensive support for owners and tenants. A particularly useful feature is the digital reference check, which allows quick access to all relevant information on prospective tenants and thus increases the chances of swift rental agreements.

    In addition, improved lead qualification ensures that all contact enquiries contain all the necessary information to qualify customers, including relevant financial aspects. Property professionals thus receive all decision-relevant information at a glance, which increases the chances of success in the letting process and facilitates faster deals.

    Last but not least, it provides access to a comprehensive digital ecosystem that includes numerous other partner services. Customers can now access all SMG Real Estate services via a single login. This means that they can access the entire SMG Real Estate ecosystem with just one login, including daily updates in the Business Manager and third-party services – all available in a centralised and user-friendly way.

    There has already been a lot of positive feedback from existing and new customers who have tested SMG Real Estate’s digital tools in a practical check. The numerous pieces of feedback flow directly into processes that are used to further develop the solutions and services on offer and work on additional innovations. The aim is to enable property professionals in Switzerland to digitally let and manage their properties with maximum efficiency and professionalism.

  • Working together for attractive management

    Working together for attractive management

    Malicious tongues (and long-standing market observers) claim that the property business in Switzerland runs smoothly, in good times and bad, and without much help from the property sector. However, the example of property management shows that not everything always goes well. The favourite scapegoat of tenants and the media has to take the rap when the reference interest rate rises and interest-related rent reductions are reversed. Or when service charges rise because energy costs explode. Or when arguments between neighbours escalate because the barbecue season has started. Or when rents rise because supply cannot keep up with demand.

    Property managers – or more precisely, the majority of them – have an exciting and demanding task: they have to satisfy two very different categories of customers: their clients, usually private owners and asset managers, for whom they are responsible for maintaining property portfolios and optimising property income, and their tenants, who expect their concerns to be met unbureaucratically, defects and damage to be rectified quickly, annoying neighbours to be dealt with and service charges to be minimised.

    This challenging task becomes a burden when clients demand more and more services for less and less money in order to support their returns, and when tenants make ever higher demands because they assume that rising housing costs go hand in hand with a higher level of service and that “no” is not an answer.

    The burden has consequences. On behalf of SVIT Zurich, we conducted an online survey of active and former property managers between October 2023 and January 2024 to find out how active managers view the profession, where former managers have moved to and under what conditions they would return to property management.

    The answers are sobering. Although 80% of active farmers identify with their work, a majority are considering changing jobs (Figure 1). It is particularly worrying that two thirds of the “seniors” are considering whether they should turn their backs on farming, and that one in nine team leaders has applied for a job outside of farming in the past six months. The sector risks losing its most experienced top performers.

    We do not believe that the property industry can afford to lose experienced managers. Owners and asset managers are already complaining that knowledge is lost with every turnover and tasks are left undone. The attempt to ensure continuity in property management with asset managers who have previously worked in property management themselves is understandable – but counterproductive. A blurred division of roles and responsibilities almost always leads to friction, and micromanagement contributes to managers looking for other areas of responsibility.

    Tenants also have a lot to lose. It is already being criticised that it is becoming increasingly difficult to find personal contacts behind apps and web forms, and that staff changes are causing concerns to fizzle out. Even the tenants’ association, which likes to portray landlords as “rip-off artists” and urges tenants to challenge rent increases and service charge bills “rather once too often”, should actually know that Switzerland as a tenant country cannot function without knowledgeable landlords.

    As difficult as it may sometimes seem, it is possible to make property management more attractive again. We believe that property management companies, clients and industry associations can achieve a great deal with a concerted effort.

    Property management companies can do more to relieve the burden on property managers in their day-to-day business and in dealing with large portfolios. In many administrations, work processes could be formalised, simplified, standardised and properly digitalised. Digitalisation zombies could be disposed of more quickly and management deficits could be addressed more actively. Services offered could often be defined more clearly in order to manage expectations and avoid conflicts; if conflicts escalate, managers could often be better protected from hostility.

    Clients could become more aware that quality has a price and that property management companies do not have a patent remedy for reducing operating costs with the often elusive – and sometimes deceptive – digitalisation dividends. The fact is that property management has become more demanding and complex, and that maintaining and renewing the building stock requires more people and expertise. Control is undoubtedly necessary in this context, but constructive cooperation is also required. Investing in asset micro-managers is of little use if it creates additional work for the management and takes away necessary resources.

    Finally, service providers and industry associations can expand the training and further education programmes on offer to better prepare managers for changing tasks and working methods.

    The traditional training path from clerk to property manager assumes that property managers can do everything that could contribute to maintaining the value and optimising the income of the building stock, from handing over rental properties and property accounting to developing maintenance strategies and supporting tenant improvements and renovations, and that three years of professional experience and a specialist certificate are enough to lead a management team.

    In addition to traditional all-rounders, the real estate industry also needs specialists who know how the energy and emission intensity of existing properties can be reduced at a reasonable cost, how redensification projects can be implemented without a lot of background noise or how shopping centres can be revitalised. This requires training and further education paths that give lateral entrants and newcomers the opportunity to play to their strengths without having to internalise all of their management knowledge. And there needs to be an awareness that value creation in the portfolio increasingly requires a team effort, in which other experts make a significant contribution alongside traditional property managers.

    It is up to the players in the property industry to reward this contribution appropriately.

  • Two Swiss property giants about to merge

    Two Swiss property giants about to merge

    Cham Group and Ina Invest, a property company listed on the SIX Swiss Exchange, have signed a letter of intent for a merger. This is to be completed as a “merger of equals” by 2025. The merger would create a new, strong force in the property sector that would be one of the industry leaders.

    A first-class portfolio in key locations
    The combined portfolio of the two companies comprises high-quality properties and development projects in Switzerland’s strongest economic regions, including Basel, Cham, Geneva, Lausanne, Winterthur and Zurich. Particularly impressive: the residential share will be over 50% after completion, which emphasises the focus on sustainable and future-oriented living in urban conurbations.

    Sustainability and synergies as success factors
    Both companies attach great importance to sustainability and plan to consistently implement these standards in the development and management of the properties. The merger not only brings a larger portfolio, but also clear advantages: economies of scale, greater flexibility in project realisation and improved financing options.

    The talks are currently still at an early stage. If the negotiations are successful, a vote on the merger will be held at the general meetings of the two companies in spring 2025. A merger would realign the forces in the Swiss property market and create opportunities for a sustainable future.

  • Professionalisation of the management of residential and commercial properties

    Professionalisation of the management of residential and commercial properties

    Wincasa wants to break new ground in property management. The property service provider, which is part of Implenia, is splitting its corresponding services into the residential and commercial divisions, Wincasa announced in a press release. Employees will be trained in newly created functions and job profiles.

    The new Target Operating Model (TOM) is intended to professionalise the two areas and enable even more needs-oriented and use-oriented management of different properties. “The aim of the TOM project is to implement an operating model that covers today’s management requirements,” says Philipp Schoch, Head of Property Management at Wincasa, in the press release.

    As part of the project, Wincasa will set up 18 physical locations throughout Switzerland by the end of 2025 for the management of residential tenants and eight locations for the management of commercial tenants. The so-called walk-in locations in the residential sector can be used, for example, to clarify questions about the tenancy agreement or to report damage. In the commercial sector, on the other hand, “it’s about more complex properties, long-term tenancy agreements and vacancies that are more significant,” explains Schoch. Here, Wincasa wants to deploy qualified specialists “who provide highly professional support to commercial tenants in all phases of the management process”. Real-time monitoring of important key figures such as vacancy rates at the locations should show property owners the measurable success of the new management model.

  • Relevance of social sustainability in institutional real estate portfolios

    Relevance of social sustainability in institutional real estate portfolios

    Ms Zimmerli, you are developing criteria for assessing the social sustainability of institutional real estate portfolios. What are your motives?
    In recent years, many institutional owners have set climate targets that go beyond the legal requirements as part of their ESG strategies. After the “E”, the “S” is now slowly coming into focus. The problem is that nobody really knows what constitutes social sustainability. We observe that a lot is projected into the “S”, and the big social contexts are often pushed into the background. We have therefore decided to test with partners from academia, real estate associations and institutional investors on the basis of various portfolios what an operationalisation of social sustainability might look like. Our goal is to define a few clear, easily interpretable and comparable key figures for social performance, to create short checklists to complement them, and thus to give more room to competition for good ideas.

    Many portfolio and asset managers are currently busy preparing reliable energy and emissions data. What prompts you to develop key figures for social sustainability right now?
    It is true that the focus of the real estate industry is still on the collection of climate key figures at the moment. Thanks to the REIDA CO2 benchmark and the environmentally relevant AMAS key figures, there is now a clear orientation framework and good instruments. We want to take both the momentum and the focus on the essentials of these instruments with us, because we are convinced that the real estate industry simply cannot afford to reduce sustainability to environmental issues. The heated debates on the reference interest rate, housing protection and major development projects show that the public and politicians also expect sustainable real estate portfolios to provide answers to social questions.

    In the industry, there is currently no consensus on what is meant by the “S” or how societal-social sustainability should be measured. How do you see it?
    Against the background of the current political discussions, the “S” is not complicated: At the societal level, it is about providing housing to broad segments of the population, about socially mixed living environments and about well-functioning neighbourhoods and districts. For institutional owners, it is about how property portfolios are structured and how the available living space is distributed. For new construction and renewal projects, the question is what happens to existing tenants, for which target groups additional living space is created and how neighbourhoods and districts can be strengthened. Of course, there are countless other needs. However, we believe that key figures should refer to the major social levers and that the market should play a role in individual needs.

    How can and should the “social performance” of a real estate portfolio be effectively measured or assessed?
    We are guided by the philosophy of the environmentally relevant key figures of AMAS and REIDA: “Keep it simple”. In essence, social performance can be measured simply with hard-testable key figures: We are currently testing how data on the portfolio structure and on first-time lettings and re-letting can be collected and evaluated as simply as possible. In addition, we are developing questionnaires that owners can use in their tenant surveys to obtain reliable findings on satisfaction with the neighbourhood, flat or property management. Finally, we use classic key figures on fluctuations and vacancies, which are usually already collected and evaluated.

    The optimisation of ecological criteria often requires high investments. This creates incentives to sell properties with a poor ecological balance. Do properties with poor social ratings face the same fate?

    No, from our point of view there is no danger of stranded assets in terms of social sustainability. We are convinced that basically every property can be transformed in a socially sustainable way with reasonable effort. The most important levers here are renewal planning and management. Renewal planning determines when which properties are to be adapted to current needs and market prices. In management, decisions are made as to who will receive affordable or barrier-free living space. We have selected key figures that can be directly influenced by portfolio and asset managers. We understand social sustainability as the result of far-sighted portfolio and asset management and consistent marketing and management, and not as a property or location attribute. We are also convinced that properties with strong social qualities can compensate for environmental weaknesses.

    Many owners find it difficult that innovative ideas and approaches with which they want to stand out from competitors disappear in extensive checklists and indicator sets of sustainability labels. How can this be prevented?
    By separating obligation from freestyle. We pursue the same goal with social sustainability as REIDA does with ecological aspects: A few uniform key figures should make it visible and comparable how well a portfolio fulfils the mandatory programme. In addition, there are topics for which there are no standardised specifications. Fund management companies and asset managers should be free to decide and communicate how they want to ensure, for example, good neighbourhood care, good cohabitation or good tenant management. We see the “how” as a freestyle; this is where competition, creativity and innovation should play a role. In other words, we want more goal orientation and less micromanagement. In a highly regulated world, ESG should not be a tighter corset, but a springboard with which the real estate industry can prove what it can achieve with yield-oriented portfolios.

    Where do you stand with the key performance indicator set?
    We are currently working on concretising and validating our approach on the basis of four funds of our partners. We will present the findings and a first consolidated draft on 28 September 2023 at the symposium “Measuring social sustainability in ESG – what is it all about?” and discuss it with owners, managers and experts. Interested readers can register here . I would be pleased if we could welcome you at the HWZ in Zurich.

    Source: ssrei.ch

  • “No facial recognition in the stations”

    “No facial recognition in the stations”

    Why does SBB want to know its customers’ routes in the station?
    SBB wants to offer its customers safe and clean stations and the best possible service. This is what SBB employees work for every day, with heart and soul. Knowing the flow of people better helps us to fulfil our mission of guiding customers safely and comfortably through the station.

    SBB already measures passenger movements in the station. Why does it want to know more and procure a new system?
    Today we measure the number of station users with sensors at the entrance and exit of the station. Now we are evaluating which systems are available that show us and our tenants how individual customer groups behave, i.e. where exactly people pass through, where they stop, where there are accumulations. This is also because the contract with the current provider is expiring. Of course, we are looking for a solution that is state of the art. And this technology has developed rapidly in recent years.

    How does this help to improve the service?
    We can use the findings to further improve the quality of service and the quality of stay: with safety precautions for critical densities of people, signage along the walkways that is appropriate for the situation, with the intensity of cleaning that is appropriate for the situation, with construction projects for the correct dimming of the facilities if necessary, or even with a service offer that is geared to the flow of people. For example, if we know that 100 customers walk from platform 5 to platform 2 and have 10 minutes to spare, then we can ideally place the regional coffee supplier with croissants there. If we know that there are a lot of prams on a certain route, we can install a lift in the right place. We recognise group formations immediately and the security service can intervene.

    Dowe need facial recognition for this additional information, as the media write?
    No, precisely not. Because we don’t want to identify the individual persons. That’s why we don’t need facial recognition (for more on facial recognition, see box). We want to know how the subgroups of our customers behave in the station, for example people with prams, passengers with skis or bicycles. To do this, we don’t need to know who the individual people are or what their names are. That is none of our business and is simply irrelevant.

    Themedia and experts are asking whether this does not violate fundamental rights.
    The discussion shows that this is a sensitive topic, and I understand the concerns. Of course, we strictly adhere to data protection regulations. As I said, it is not about identifying individuals. In the tender documents, we explicitly require that the providers must ensure that they comply with the Data Protection Act and describe how they do so. And that is why we have been in contact with the Federal Data Protection Commissioner (FDPIC) for a long time and will of course comply with all demands before the new system is introduced (for the FDPIC’s current opinion on the SBB’s plan, see box).

    And what about the storage of data?
    Here too, data protection must be guaranteed in any case. Since we don’t collect any personal data, we don’t store any personal data. The data is stored in a cloud. The cloud infrastructure used must be located in Switzerland or the EU, according to the tender. Which cloud infrastructure will be used will only become clear after the contract has been awarded.

    What do we expect in the end, additional revenue?
    SBB and all its employees have done a good job when passengers and all visitors feel safe and comfortable in the station and are satisfied with our services or, in the best case, even enthusiastic about them. If the services we offer at the stations meet the needs of the customers, then the turnover is also good.

    What you’re saying here sounds very different from what the media have reported so far. Why?
    That’s true and it worries me. We failed to explain what we really want after the K-Tipp article was published. The story has taken on a life of its own in the media, false statements are circulating. But we also have to be self-critical: The SIMAP tender was formulated in a very technical way and in some places was simply misleading. We must do better in future. The crucial thing for me is that data protection is simply a given for us as SBB, something we adhere to. Full stop.

    SBB does not use facial recognition
    Facial recognition refers to a technology that uses biometric data to precisely identify a face or a person. Biometric features are special characteristics of a person’s body that can be assigned unambiguously and with almost 100% certainty to a specific person. For the customer frequency measurement system that SBB wants to use, it does not use facial recognition. It is about recording statistical information, such as gender, age or height, but without allowing conclusions to be drawn about individual persons.

    This is what the Federal Data Protection and Information Commissioner (FDPIC) has to say about the tender for the new measurement system
    “The SBB informed the FDPIC about this project in October 2022. They assured the FDPIC that the data will not be used in a personal manner and that they will carry out a data protection impact assessment on the project. The FDPIC will continue to supervise the project.”

  • Verit and Flatfox offer completely digital rentals

    Verit and Flatfox offer completely digital rentals

    Zurich -based Verit Immobilien AG , together with the rental portal of Bernese Flatfox AG , offers a fully digitized rental and rental process. According to a press release , this will conclude a pilot project lasting more than a year and extend the offer to all of Switzerland for the first time. From the application to the conclusion of the tenant deposit to the signing of the rental contract, the entire process is digital. That goes as far as ordering the name badges for the new tenant. It is not only the tenants who benefit from the time savings, according to the press release. For the owners, the chance of seamless follow-up letting increases

    Shortly before the end of the year, Verit Immobilien and Flatfox opened the first digital rental deposit as part of the electronic re-letting process, around a year after the first rental agreement was electronically signed by the tenant and landlord. The successful pilot project will now be offered at all Verit locations in Switzerland. After Verit started with Flatfox, ELCA Informatik , Skribble , Helvetia Versicherung , SwissCaution , FirstCaution and, for a rental deposit account, Hypothekarbank Lenzburg are now also involved in the offer.

    Verit Immobilien uses the Flatfox platform to handle the entire process. Martin Frei, Chief Digital Officer at Verit, is quoted as saying: "The entire process of re-letting takes place seamlessly digitally via the Flatfox platform – from the time a potential tenant becomes aware of an offer to the formally valid issue of the rental agreement . "Of course, this also applies to all intermediate steps such as initial contact, registration, deposit, credit check and ordering of tags."

  • Reinforcement of the PRIVERA management

    Reinforcement of the PRIVERA management

    As of January 1, 2022, PRIVERA will strengthen its management team. Andreas Wegmüller will be the new Head of Management Switzerland and a member of the PRIVERA management team.

    Andrea Wegmüller is a federally certified real estate trustee. He has a master's degree in real estate management and has been part of the PRIVERA team for 5 years. He is currently regional manager for management in the east.

    Andrea Wegmüller will continue to head the management region East directly and will also be responsible for the West region on an interim basis. The Central Region will continue to be headed by Nicole Kuhn. From January 1, 2022, Nadja Abdelrahim will be the new head of the Wallisellen branch. Ms. Abdelrahim is a real estate manager with a federal certificate and has been a team leader at PRIVERA Wallisellen for almost three years.

    About PRIVERA AG
    A company of the Investis Group – has its headquarters in Gümligen. It is the leading independent Swiss real estate service provider. PRIVERA AG covers all real estate services along the life cycle of a property and thus offers its customers the decisive added value. Thanks to the nationwide network of branches, PRIVERA AG has a high level of regional market competence and excellent local relationships.

    Media contact PRIVERA AG
    Alisha hero
    Communication specialist
    T: 058 715 63 32
    alisha.held@privera.ch
    www.privera.ch

  • Real Estate Award 2021: These are the nominees!

    Real Estate Award 2021: These are the nominees!

    Outstanding achievements are honored, regardless of the size of a company. The presentation of the awards as part of the Real Estate Award on June 21, 2021 is then also a special occasion where the real estate and construction industries meet. In the past few years, over 2,800 people have taken part in the Real Estate Award ceremony, making the event an important fixture on the real estate industry's agenda.

    The jury of real estate experts and economists made a pre-selection from all the applications submitted: Based on criteria such as vision, strategy, pioneering spirit, originality, scalability and special service, the jury nominated three projects in each category for the Real Estate Award 2021.

    In the category management:
    – Credit Trust – "The digital alternative to the debt enforcement extract – especially for managers"
    – VERIT Immobilien AG – "VERIT thinks the tenant onboarding process digitally through to the end"
    – PRIVERA AG «Tenant concerns intelligently automated – fast, lean, smart – IMOFIX» In the category

    Project development:
    – NEST Interiors AG – "Idyllic residential area on the Fischingerbach"
    – Felix Partner Architektur AG – "West-Log"
    – CCTM Real Estate & Infrastructure AG – "Swiss Life Arena"

    In the Marketing category:
    – Tend AG – "Bear Tower"
    – Marti Gesamtdienstleistungen AG – "Schäferhöhe – Get out of the stables"
    – LIVIT AG – "Guggachpark"

    In the conversion / conversion category:
    Felix Partner Architektur AG – "From the ruin to the zero-energy balance house"
    – Credit Suisse Asset Manag. – «Transformation Schwarzenburgstr. Liebefeld »
    – Marazzi + Paul Architects AG – «Schönburg Bern»

    In the Real Estate / Construction Digital category
    SV Group AG – "Stay KooooK"
    – Price Hubble AG – "Property Tracker"
    – SBB – "Smart City Lab Basel"

    The real estate and construction industry now has the final say: From May 1 to June 15, 2021, the www. realestateaward.ch online for the nominated applications.

    The winners will then be presented with the awards on June 21, 2021 at the Real Estate Award ceremony in Zurich. If this date is not possible due to any BAG regulations, the event will take place on August 30, 2021.

    The real estate personality of the year, chosen by the jury, will also be honored on this evening.

    At the same time as the Real Estate Award is presented, the SVIT Switzerland Award "Innovation in Real Estate" will be presented. https://realestateinnovation.ch/

    Order tickets for the Real Estate Award ceremony at: www.realestateaward.ch or SVIT – https://realestateinnovation.ch/

  • SVIT-Digital Day shows software for management of management

    SVIT-Digital Day shows software for management of management

    The Swiss Association of the Real Estate Industry (SVIT) is holding Digital Day 2020 on Monday, September 21 in the Kosmos in Zurich. From 11 a.m. to 6 p.m., visitors can collect information on the subject of digitization in the real estate world with free admission. On the digital day of the real estate industry, the organizing commission “SVIT Digital” is also launching a “Meet and Greet” for all visitors to the event on this day. They can discuss their digital concerns directly with proven professionals and other visitors at the big table and work out possible solutions, according to the announcement for the digital day.

    According to the organizer Pape Werbe AG from Weiningen ZH, more than 40 exhibitors will be present in the Kosmos and many lectures will be held on specialist topics such as "Digital Signature" or "The 3 Levels of Digitization in Property Management". During the entire event, it will be ensured that the current protection concepts due to the corona pandemic are adhered to.