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Locating Your Business

Client Traffic

The location of your business can have a huge impact on where your customers come from, and how many come. If you’re opening a walk-in retail business, you want to be where people can easily reach you. Your space costs may be high, but you need a location that will get people walking through buying your merchandise.

If your business is a business-to-business professional service, you’ll need to locate near your customers, but you probably don’t need to worry about walk-in traffic. Because you will need to be near other businesses, your space costs may be high, but not as high as prime retail space.

If you have a business with very limited contact with clients, such as an online store or some other specialty business, you can save a lot of money on space since you can locate anywhere that has the telephone or Internet connections you need.

Manufacturing and industrial business have entirely different considerations, including zoning laws, access to transportation and environmental impacts, among others.

Leasing a Building

A business lease is a major decision for business owners. After you’ve decided if the location is right for your business, make sure the lease agreement is also good for your business.

Some specifics in the lease to look for are:

  • Does it specify total square footage of the space for lease?
  • How are utilities, maintenance and other expenses paid for? It is rare that they all are included in the monthly payment. If your business rents less than an entire building, make sure the expenses are appropriately divided among all the tenants in the building. For example, if you open a small book shop with limited hours and another tenant is a large, 24-hour light-fixture shop, you should not pay equal parts of the electric bill.
  • Does the lease specify that the landlord must justify any rental increases with a list of expenses, prepared by a CPA?
  • If the building is deemed unusable for some reason, such as fire or other event, does the lease define how the situation is remedied? For example, can the tenant cancel the lease if the building is unusable for an extended period of time, and is the rent abated for unusable time?
  • What are the consequences if the landlord does not meet his or her repair obligations? Can the tenant make repairs at the landlord’s expense?

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