|
| Lease
Tips |
|
Criteria
for Selecting a
Lease Audit Firm |
|
|
Many tenants are
retaining outside firms to audit their leases. Here are
some suggested criteria for selecting a lease audit firm.
Focus
Lease auditing as firm’s primary focus. As
with any industry or profession, firms that specialize in one
single area provide the highest level of service because their
entire financial success and reputation depends on it. Inquire
as to whether lease auditing is the firm’s primary focus
or whether it is a side business.
| No representation of landlords. It
is virtually impossible for a lease audit firm to be an effective
tenant representative when it also represents landlords because
it cannot advocate contradictory positions with equal conviction. In
addition, if a firm has a significant landlord client base
to which it must cater, it will likely want its lease audit
activities to stay “below the radar.” To
maintain their landlord client base, it will also likely
limit any lease audit findings to simple issues that do not
require any significant interpretation or advocacy. |
|
Firms
that represent both landlords and tenants
cannot advocate contradictory positions
with equal conviction. |
|
|
Expertise
Proper skill set. The more complex
the lease, the more likely it will be misinterpreted. In
order to be an effective, the lease audit firm must understand
complex leases to the level of being able to negotiate
them. The skill set required includes legal, accounting
and property management expertise. Find out if
the firm possesses these skills and whether they are
in-house or provided by a third party.
Business Approach. Lease audit issues
fall into two categories: issues
rooted in accounting that are based on lease language,
and issues that are based on underlying business fairness. The lease audit firm should demonstrate
that it can integrate technical legal and accounting
issues with the realities of business.
Ability to recognize when overcharges do not exist. Many
audit firms fall into the trap of objecting to charges
that are actually allowable given the proper analysis. It
is critical that the firm have the experience to recognize
when claims have no merit. Otherwise, it may unwittingly
pursue them and cause serious damage to the landlord-tenant
relationship.
Ability to resolve cases without litigation. The
incidence of litigation is a key metric in evaluating
the effectiveness of a lease audit firm. In
almost all cases, if a claim is valid and is properly
presented, the landlord will accede to it. The
audit firm should have the proven ability to successfully
negotiate with the most sophisticated landlords at peer
level and settle cases without litigati |
Alignment with
Client Needs
Sensitivity to client. The firm
should understand where lease audit activities fit within
the overall functioning of the real estate department and
demonstrate a willingness to follow the direction and accommodate
the needs of the client. This should be verified
with client references.
Sensitivity to landlord-tenant relationships. A
business’s ability to function in a space and maintain
a positive working relationship with its landlord are
very important. At the same time, the numbers must
be right. A lease audit firm should be able to
do what is necessary to verify and correct the numbers
without adversely affecting the relationship. |
|
The
firm must understand where lease audit
activities fit within the overall functioning
of the real estate department. |
|
|
Confidentiality / ethics / non-solicitation
of other tenants. Part
of proper behavior and of maintaining good landlord-tenant
relations is giving landlords the confidence that settling
a claim for one tenant will not result in a floodgate of
claims from others. The
audit firm should be readily willing to agree to keep all
information confidential and have a policy of non-solicitation
of other tenants in a building based on your results.
Focus on both long-term and short term impact. Many
audit claims relate to fundamental misinterpretations of lease
language. Correcting
systemic errors can yield long-term savings even though the actual
cash recoveries may be minimal. The lease audit firm should understand
how to manage these issues so as to maximize the overall benefit
to the client.
Capability
Depth and breadth of service. A
company with multiple locations should verify that the firm can
manage and perform a multiple audits concurrently, and that it
can timely address all locations in the portfolio, regardless
of size or geographic location. This is especially important
given the time sensitivities in many leases.
Dedicated in-house staff. Because lease auditing is intensive and intimate
it is important that the audit firm provide a consistent, dedicated
staff with a single point of contact. There should be a defined, proven
process for prioritizing the audits, obtaining documentation
and developing and resolving claims.
Reporting / technology. The firm
should produce regular status reports, and ideally, have on-line
reporting so that the client can check the status of work in
progress and generate reports. This will help in compliance
with Sarbanes-Oxley and other corporate governance requirements.
Longevity / viability. The firm
should be able to demonstrate its extensive experience and commercial
viability. This should be verified through client references
and financials.
Value / Fees
ROI. Lease audit fees should always be
significantly less than the savings generated. The
firm should be willing to guarantee this by tying its fees to
its success. Determine
if the firm is willing to waive its fee if it is unable to generate
actual savings. Find out if you can guarantee the
ROI of your lease audit investment by retaining the audit firm
on a contingent fee basis (i.e., a percentage of the actual recovery).
Flexibility. Circumstances
can arise in which a tenant must give up a lease audit claim
in order to preserve the overall business relationship with its
landlord. If the
lease audit firm is retained on a contingency fee basis, be sure
that you have the flexibility to drop a claim, and whether there
would be an audit fee due in such a case.
Conclusion
There
are a number of issues that must be addressed when considering
retaining a lease audit firm. The
most important is to ensure that the goals of both client and
provider are aligned and that the firm has the proper focus,
skill set and ethical standards. |