flexiblefullpage
billboard
interstitial1
catfish1
Currently Reading

Thought Leader: Boyd R. Zoccola, chair and chief elected officer of BOMA International

Thought Leader: Boyd R. Zoccola, chair and chief elected officer of BOMA International

Boyd R. Zoccola is Chair and Chief Elected Officer of BOMA International. A BOMA member since 1994, he has served on the Executive, Finance, Investment, and Medical/Healthcare Facilities Committees. An Indiana Real Estate Principal Broker and a board member of the Real Estate Round Table, he is Executive Vice President of Hokanson Companies, Inc., of Indianapolis, and has been involved in the development of $600 million worth of real estate. On a volunteer basis, Zoccola was president of Horizon House and a board member of Girls, Inc. He holds a BA in biology from Indiana University.


By By BD+C Staff | August 19, 2011
Boyd R. Zoccola is Chair and Chief Elected Officer of BOMA International.
This article first appeared in the August 2011 issue of BD+C.

 

BD+C: What are the chief initiatives for BOMA in the coming year?

Boyd R. Zoccola: Our theme for the year is achieving high performance through innovation. One area is recruiting young professionals into real estate management. We’ve got a lot of young people in university real estate programs that want to be owners and entrepreneurs but may not be aware of careers in the day-to-day operations of property management—asset management, interacting with tenants, setting budgets, etc.

Our industry has an aging management group, and we need to reach out to the young people who will be carrying the water in our business through 2025. Our Thought Leaders Symposium at Georgetown University November 10 (www.boma.org/about/bomafoundation) is designed to make them aware of property management as a career.

Another area is benchmarking tools. We’re coming up on the end of the BOMA 7-Point Challenge, to make buildings 30% more efficient than the mid-level (50) building in Energy Star. It’s been a great success, with more than 3,000 buildings and 800 million square feet sharing their data with BOMA. Members like CBRE and USAA are already well beyond the 7-Point Challenge. BOMAStars is a tool to share the data, which will allow us to talk objectively to legislators or mayors about the positive strides we’re making.

BD+C: What national issues will BOMA be pursuing in the coming year?

BRZ: From a tax standpoint, the 15-year timeline for depreciating leasehold improvements expires at the end of the year; left unchanged, it reverts to 39 years. We think 15 years is a more realistic picture of the marketplace, and we want it to be made permanent.

We’re also concerned about an EPA initiative to require the removal of lead-based paint in office buildings. We don’t think there’s been enough study to justify that. The EPA is also considering treating stormwater runoff from office sites. We don’t think buildings are point sources under the Clean Water Act.

BD+C: What are the greatest concerns of BOMA members at this time?

BRZ: The economy is number one, of course. But, based on our research, we now know that work/life balance is number two. We didn’t even hear about that four years ago. All our members are being asked to do more with less, but there’s only so much time in the day, so how much time can they give to BOMA? That’s a concern for us as an organization.

Tenant retention is a big issue for members. It’s much easier to keep a tenant than to replace one. Having vacancies is the easiest way to decrease asset value. Our members are making improvements that tenants can see on a daily basis—common areas, restrooms, corridor finishes—to make sure their buildings are crisp and clean and don’t feel old. They’re making improvements with a two-year payback, but it’s the five- and 10-year paybacks where the overall cost just doesn’t make a business case, at least not without incentive dollars.

BD+C: How is the BOMA 360 program doing?

BRZ: BOMA 360 is about holistic best practices, how well you run your building with the systems that you have—standard operating procedures, emergency preparedness, Energy Star benchmarking, data sharing, etc. It’s just two years old, and we already have 300 certified buildings. Surveys are showing that 360 buildings are getting higher marks in tenant satisfaction than other buildings. When you look at the other designation programs out in the marketplace, we’ve exceeded all but one, LEED.

BD+C: When is the U.S. office market going to turn around?

BRZ: It’s kind of the haves and the have-nots. D.C., New York, San Francisco, Boston, they’re all doing very, very well. There are some other pockets, but for most BOMA members, our recovery is directly tied to jobs, and until we can reduce unemployment, we’re not going to see a turnaround in the office market.

Medical continues to be a strong sector across the country—MOBs, surgical centers, imaging, oncology, outpatient services. Mixed-use properties are becoming more prevalent, and we think they’re going to flourish.

BD+C: What’s your biggest business-related worry?

BRZ: From our company’s perspective, it’s how best to manage the inflation risk that we perceive as coming in the marketplace. We think it’s going to happen.

The other has to do with staff retention. Over the last three years, we asked people to go without raises and employer contributions to 401(k) plans. I believe that many BOMA members, large and small, are trying to manage their staff retention, to make up for the cuts of the last three years.

BD+C: How can BD+C readers—architects, engineers, and contractors—work more effectively with BOMA members as clients?

BRZ: From a personal perspective, I’m buying those services based on quality of service and ability to deliver on time; price is in third place. It’s all about timing, and you might be one of the three or four firms that I throw into an RFP process. I don’t shotgun out an RFP to 20 firms.

Now’s the time to market within your niche. Don’t try to be everything to everyone. We hear from a lot of firms who want to do medical buildings but have no experience, and they wonder why we don’t pick them.

Make sure that you’re marketing to multiple people within a company. If that one person at the top goes, you’re vulnerable. Make sure that if you have a transition in a client organization, you can survive a CEO change.

Finally, it’s the last 2% of every job that’s the most difficult, and that’s the time to finish strong. Don’t give your client any reason to make a change. BD+C

Related Stories

Multifamily Housing | Jun 28, 2023

Sutton Tower, an 80-story multifamily development, completes construction in Manhattan’s Midtown East

In Manhattan’s Midtown East, the construction of Sutton Tower, an 80-story residential building, has been completed. Located in the Sutton Place neighborhood, the tower offers 120 for-sale residences, with the first move-ins scheduled for this summer. The project was designed by Thomas Juul-Hansen and developed by Gamma Real Estate and JVP Management. Lendlease, the general contractor, started construction in 2018.

Architects | Jun 27, 2023

Why architects need to think like developers, with JZA Architecture's Jeff Zbikowski

Jeff Zbikowski, Principal and Founder of Los Angeles-based JZA Architecture, discusses the benefits of having a developer’s mindset when working with clients, and why architecture firms lose out when they don’t have a thorough understanding of real estate regulations and challenges.

Apartments | Jun 27, 2023

Average U.S. apartment rent reached all-time high in May, at $1,716

Multifamily rents continued to increase through the first half of 2023, despite challenges for the sector and continuing economic uncertainty. But job growth has remained robust and new households keep forming, creating apartment demand and ongoing rent growth. The average U.S. apartment rent reached an all-time high of $1,716 in May.

Apartments | Jun 27, 2023

Dallas high-rise multifamily tower is first in state to receive WELL Gold certification

HALL Arts Residences, 28-story luxury residential high-rise in the Dallas Arts District, recently became the first high-rise multifamily tower in Texas to receive WELL Gold Certification, a designation issued by the International WELL Building Institute. The HKS-designed condominium tower was designed with numerous wellness details.

University Buildings | Jun 26, 2023

Addition by subtraction: The value of open space on higher education campuses

Creating a meaningful academic and student life experience on university and college campuses does not always mean adding a new building. A new or resurrected campus quad, recreational fields, gardens, and other greenspaces can tie a campus together, writes Sean Rosebrugh, AIA, LEED AP, HMC Architects' Higher Education Practice Leader.

Standards | Jun 26, 2023

New Wi-Fi standard boosts indoor navigation, tracking accuracy in buildings

The recently released Wi-Fi standard, IEEE 802.11az enables more refined and accurate indoor location capabilities. As technology manufacturers incorporate the new standard in various devices, it will enable buildings, including malls, arenas, and stadiums, to provide new wayfinding and tracking features.

Green | Jun 26, 2023

Federal government will spend $30 million on novel green building technologies

The U.S. General Services Administration (GSA), and the U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) will invest $30 million from the Inflation Reduction Act to increase the sustainability of federal buildings by testing novel technologies. The vehicle for that effort, the Green Proving Ground (GPG) program, will invest in American-made technologies to help increase federal electric vehicle supply equipment, protect air quality, reduce climate pollution, and enhance building performance.

Office Buildings | Jun 26, 2023

Electric vehicle chargers are top priority for corporate office renters

Businesses that rent office space view electric vehicle (EV) charging stations as a top priority. More than 40% of companies in the Americas and EMEA (Europe, the Middle East and Africa) are looking to include EV charging stations in future leases, according to JLL’s 2023 Responsible Real Estate study.

Laboratories | Jun 23, 2023

A New Jersey development represents the state’s largest-ever investment in life sciences and medical education

In New Brunswick, N.J., a life sciences development that’s now underway aims to bring together academics and researchers to work, learn, and experiment under one roof. HELIX Health + Life Science Exchange is an innovation district under development on a four-acre downtown site. At $731 million, HELIX, which will be built in three phases, represents New Jersey’s largest-ever investment in life sciences and medical education, according to a press statement.

Sports and Recreational Facilities | Jun 22, 2023

NFL's Jacksonville Jaguars release conceptual designs for ‘stadium of the future’  

Designed by HOK, the Stadium of the Future intends to meet the evolving needs of all stadium stakeholders—which include the Jaguars, the annual Florida-Georgia college football game, the TaxSlayer.com Gator Bowl, international sporting events, music festivals and tours, and the thousands of fans and guests who attend each event.

boombox1
boombox2
native1

More In Category


Urban Planning

Bridging the gap: How early architect involvement can revolutionize a city’s capital improvement plans

Capital Improvement Plans (CIPs) typically span three to five years and outline future city projects and their costs. While they set the stage, the design and construction of these projects often extend beyond the CIP window, leading to a disconnect between the initial budget and evolving project scope. This can result in financial shortfalls, forcing cities to cut back on critical project features.



Libraries

Reasons to reinvent the Midcentury academic library

DLR Group's Interior Design Leader Gretchen Holy, Assoc. IIDA, shares the idea that a designer's responsibility to embrace a library’s history, respect its past, and create an environment that will serve student populations for the next 100 years.

halfpage1

Most Popular Content

  1. 2021 Giants 400 Report
  2. Top 150 Architecture Firms for 2019
  3. 13 projects that represent the future of affordable housing
  4. Sagrada Familia completion date pushed back due to coronavirus
  5. Top 160 Architecture Firms 2021