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Insight

The Future of Work Survey 2024

JLL’s biennial Global Future of Work survey has been exploring the evolving world of work since 2011 and is recognized as a leading industry publication on the emerging CRE trends. This year, we draw on the experience of over 2,300 CRE decision-makers and the perspectives of JLL experts, highlighting the key areas of focus and strategies CRE leaders should be prioritizing over the next 12-24 months and beyond. Future of Work 2024 is part of JLL’s Future Vision program, a scenario-led exploration of the future of Real Estate. 

Corporate real estate must transform to deliver enterprise value

Companies are planning to expand in the coming years and many are ready to invest, but not at any cost: their CRE teams are acutely focused on proving ROI, and on demonstrating the value that comes from smart, responsible decisions. While 65% of decision makers are expecting their Corporate Real Estate (CRE) budget to expand by 2030, 62% also believe they will have to achieve a better utilization of their CRE portfolio.

To achieve this ambition, CRE Leaders realize they have some challenges to overcome - their functions are often perceived to be cost centers rather than driving value; their teams don’t necessarily have the skills and capabilities required for the future and there is an opportunity to transform and develop new operating models and more strategic partnerships – both internally and with external organizations.

Drawing on the Future of Work 2024 survey results, JLL has identified three key priorities required for the CRE function to become a powerful agent of transformation within organizations.

Reconcile short- and long-term priorities

CRE executives have hard decisions to make, with short-term and long-term priorities often pulling in different directions. For instance, supporting business growth and innovation is important. But so is delivering efficiencies, or even cost-cutting. Similarily, continuously-changing working patterns present another tricky challenge, with employees spending more time in the office than two years ago, right-sizing will be a core priority. But it’s not yet clear what the right size will be.

Business leaders believe the areas where CRE can add the most value include the following: supporting business growth (41%), driving organizational efficiency (38%) and reducing operating costs (37%). Yet, environmental, social and governance (ESG) initiatives also remain key to the roadmap that many CRE leaders are expected to develop in the future.

Beyond the general trend, there is some variance across regions and industries. Organizations in the Americas region are more likely to expect CRE to support business growth, innovation and efficiency. Companies in Asia Pacific are more focused on digitization. There is a greater expectation on delivering sustainability through the CRE function in EMEA – as the only region with environmental impact as a top-five priority.

Reposition CRE as a value driver

CRE decision-makers find it difficult to focus on long-term goals: due to the changing organizational landscape, 41% report challenges with thinking and investing for the long term. Flexibility, agility and resilience are now perceived as the second most important skill for CRE to deliver value.

This difficulty is compounded by the perception of CRE as a cost center, rather than a value driver, cited by 41% of the survey respondents. CRE leaders struggle to report the right metrics to demonstrate business value. In this context, increasing access to relevant data will allow CRE teams to communicate with the C-suite more effectively and identify areas for investment. Better partnership with the other business function will also be key to ensuring a coordinated approach, greater alignment and the ability to respond quickly to changes in business priorities. If CRE is more integrated with and aligned to the wider business, it is also more likely to gain C-suite sponsorship.

Shifting towards being influencers rather than simply implementers also requires new skills: 46% of CRE leaders say influencing and leadership will be critical in the future. Consequently, more CRE decision-makers expect to report to business transformation or technology by 2030, while fewer will report to finance or operations.

Other key skills cited by at least 45% of respondents are: creative and analytical thinking and scenario planning. The demand for these skills, alongside holistic problem solving and entrepreneurial mindset, reflects the need for being smart and agile in a changing environment.

The sheer number of diverse skills required to transform the CRE function means more businesses are looking to tap into specialist external expertise. Across a range of activities, from workplace strategy to lease administration, 40% of CRE decision-makers report that a mix of in-house and outsourced resource is the most likely model over the next five years, compared with 25-30% who had adopted a blended approach in 2022. A further 20-25% are considering mainly outsourcing their CRE activities by 2030, to access the skills they cannot find internally.

Four recommendations for corporate real estate professionals

  • Evolve from operational implementation to becoming a change catalyst.
    Bring smart and innovative approaches to bear on business challenges and develop influencing skills to have a voice in key strategic business discussions and decisions.
  • Strengthen relationships with the C-suite, business leaders and functional partners.
    Advocate workplace innovation across enterprise leadership including the C-suite by leveraging data to deliver the meaningful metrics senior leaders and the wider business need for critical decision-making and investments.
  • Combine internal upskilling with external strategic partnerships to become future-fit.
    Perform a skills audit on your team, train and recruit where necessary. Build strategic partnerships to improve your performance across the entire real estate value chain.
  • Embark on the AI journey.
    Adopt a ‘test & learn’ mindset, map the CRE activities that can be carried out by AI and develop strategies to develop the needed AI-enablement training programs and manage the associated risks.

The CRE function now has an opportunity to become a valued, trusted partner to business leaders, embracing technology to become an agent of transformation that enables smart, data-based decision making that sustains a high-performance workplace.

A ‘future fit’ CRE team should focus on core, high value-add tasks internally, while automation, robotics and AI begin to take on routine and repetitive tasks and outsourcing partners are brought in for specialist tasks and individual projects.