Real Estate Bias & How to Avoid It
Discovery Park Ventures and its early-stage life science fund (Image by Stuart Thomas Photography)

Real Estate Bias & How to Avoid It

Bias in business can be a killer. It is the barrier to innovation; it leaves us blind to changes in our environment and leads us to repeat the same mistakes. Yet it is something we rarely discuss.

Implicit Bias and Stereotype Threats?are probably the biases we know best. These are the unconscious attitudes or stereotypes that influence the choices we make. They are especially dangerous in recruitment when we favour candidates who look like us. In real estate, this is how agents and developers think about tenants. They favour the tenants that look like their other tenants, overlooking the tenants that come in a different shape or with challenging requirements.

The first step in addressing this bias is recognising it exists.?

Let’s work through an example. According to 2021?ONS?data, there are 6,548 businesses operating in the UK life sciences sector. These businesses employ 282,000 people and generate £94.2bn in turnover. Now, where do you think most of those 282k jobs are located?

Well, I’ll be surprised if you didn’t say Cambridge, Oxford or a combination of the two. This is an amazing region. The so called ‘Oxford-Cambridge Arc’ is home to the most productive Life Sciences cluster in Europe, with more than 400 companies contributing £2.9billion to the UK economy according to the same?ONS data.

But hang on.?400 companies amount to around 6% of all firms. It is 3% market share by turnover. So, while it is undoubtedly an impressive cluster, it represents a fraction of all the life science opportunities.

Where is the Bias in this?

In?Cushman and Wakefield’s?most recent review of supply and demand for this sector, they say?“the life sciences sector continues to experience unprecedented demand,”?in fact, it is one of the fastest growing employment sectors in Britain, along with logistics. However,?“limited supply remains a persistent issue. Cambridge and Oxford are grappling with acute availability challenges.”

So, despite the Oxford- Cambridge Arc representing a small share of the national life science scene, it has the greatest pressure on space for these growth firms. Bias in action.

The second bias is?Confirmation Bias.?People seek information that confirms their existing beliefs and ignore information that contradicts them. Continuing our life science example, developers, investors and employers having chosen the under supplied/ over demand Oxford-Cambridge Arc, they only see information that reinforces their decision.

Then everyone gets in on the act. An article by?a real estate law firm?asking the question ‘Is the life science sector running out of lab space’ quotes property firms that make the same assessment: “Bidwells’ latest research shows that there was close to zero lab space available as of June this year, with Savills and JLL both reporting similar trends.”

This reinforces or confirms the bias. It may be correct for the Arc, but not for all life science property.

Our final bias is?Cognitive Dissonance Theory.??Here we strive for internal consistency in our beliefs. It is no surprise that the Arc’s lab shortage has led to rent inflation that will make your eyes water. That reinforces the assumption that when something costs more, we associate higher prices with higher quality or value.

While there can be instances where higher prices are justified by superior quality or features, this assumption doesn’t always hold true in real estate. In fact, in addition to the eyewatering rent increases in the Arc, landlords can insist on long leases and limit crucial flexibility for employers at an early stage of the business.

The Arc situation has fuelled residential costs as employees are drawn to an area that already has a significant housing shortage. The employees’ higher rents fuel salary rises; that in turn means less of investors’ stakes are spent on the actual groundbreaking work that will deliver future value that they intended to invest in. In other words, a higher cash burn.

We all need to recognise our own biases. We can all reflect on our beliefs and consider alternative perspectives to reduce cognitive dissonance.

If there is one bias we can address for Kent, it is sharing what makes our science parks at?Discovery Park,?Kent Science Park?and?Kent Medical Campus?world class. For a start, they have availability. Not something Cambridge-Oxford Arc can easily show.

They offer easy in and out terms and significantly lower rents. Despite the lower cost base, they have superior London and airport connectivity to the Arc, access to local and London universities, the UK’s most modern Medical School, a supply of local talent and an even better quality of life offering.

Julie Stevens FRSA

Executive Co-Creative Coaching for men navigating the complexities of midlife. Discovering uniqueness & redefining purpose to celebrate it and leverage it. Life Coaching for Christian men & women. UK & worldwide.

1 年

New adventures are always exciting - looking forward to hearing what you next adventure is going to be.

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Rebecca Smith MA MCIPD

CEO | Social Enterprise Kent

1 年

All the very best for your next adventure Simon!

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Catherine Barratt

Bringing people together outside | Street Furniture Owner at Furnitubes and Contracts Engineering | STEM Ambassador | Advocate for Female Entrepreneurship | Speaker

1 年

Thank you for all your support Simon and look forward to seeing what you do next!

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Veronica Fox

Senior HR Consultant at Eclipse HR Limited

1 年

Sending good luck best wishes for your next chapter ??

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Rob Robinson

Sustainable Business & Circular Economy Programme Manager at Kent County Council

1 年

All the very best Simon Ryan and thanks for the support over the past 5 years...

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