eBooks & Guides

Lean Government - How Federal Agencies Can Strategically Freeze and Reduce the Footprint

Issue link: https://resources.tangoanalytics.com/i/1534110

Contents of this Issue

Navigation

Page 2 of 10

Part 1: Bringing portfolio insights to real estate decisions While space utilization rates are a vital component of optimizing a real estate portfolio, they can't be the only consideration, or else agencies will miss better opportunities. Tango Portfolio Strategy is a standalone predictive real estate solution that empowers agencies to explore and forecast how specific decisions will impact the entire portfolio or Lean Government particular segments of it, as well as analyze locations in relation to others and put them in the context of your real estate data and strategic options. It lets you understand likely outcomes before you commit to decisions. Here's how it helps you reduce and freeze the footprint more strategically. 01 Get a holistic view of your real estate data Utilization data shows how well a space is currently being used. But stakeholders need to recognize that an underutilized building represents underutilization within the portfolio —it doesn't necessarily mean that this building should be on the chopping block. Tango Portfolio Strategy can help agencies normalize broader strategic planning by providing better visibility into high level real estate data, both for individual leases and the portfolio as a whole. Occupancy data and utilization metrics are pieces of the puzzle, but costs, lease dates, capacity, and even qualitative data like a building's importance to the agency should all influence what type of opportunity underutilization presents. While getting rid of the building may look like the easiest way to reduce square footage, the best solution may be to repurpose the building to eliminate other, costlier facilities. For example, perhaps an underutilized location is more affordable to operate than one or more well-utilized locations. You could increase the savings by consolidating these locations into the underutilized one, and then offloading the more expensive (and now vacant) buildings. Incorporating lease dates into the decision may reveal that a building still has years before it's up for renewal, whereas other nearby buildings in your portfolio may be up for renewal this year—so choosing to remove this building means delaying the reduction in square footage and costs, when repurposing it could provide similar benefits much sooner. In Tango Portfolio Strategy, you can import all of this data from spreadsheets or wherever it's stored, and add qualitative data like the building's importance to the portfolio—if your headquarters, sensitive locations, or historically significant buildings are off the table, including these details helps inform the possibilities you'll see. 2 Copyright © 2025 Tango. All rights reserved.

Articles in this issue

Links on this page

view archives of eBooks & Guides - Lean Government - How Federal Agencies Can Strategically Freeze and Reduce the Footprint