
Author: Nic Rapacz, SVP of Sales
Last week, the Maptician team attended the BOMA International Conference & Expo in Long Beach and if there was one theme that came up in nearly every conversation on the expo floor, it was this: property managers are done competing on square footage alone.
For years, Class A buildings won tenants with prestige addresses, marble lobbies, and skyline views. That playbook still matters, but it’s no longer enough. The property managers we spoke with, many overseeing multi-building portfolios in gateway markets, described a shift in what tenants actually expect from a landlord relationship. It’s not just space. It’s partnership.
Hybrid Work Broke the Old Leasing Math
Every conversation at our booth eventually circled back to the same tension: tenants are signing leases for offices they aren’t using at full capacity, and property managers are left justifying the value of the building itself.
Several attendees described a familiar scenario. A tenant renews a lease sized for a workforce that’s now operating on a three-day office cadence, and by month two, the CFO is asking hard questions about why the company is paying for empty desks. That pressure rolls straight uphill to the property manager, who suddenly has to prove that the building is doing more than just existing.
One thread came up repeatedly: tenants don’t just want space anymore, they want data. They want to know how their own teams are actually using the square footage they’re leasing, so they can make the case internally for right-sizing, renewing, or expanding. And increasingly, they’re looking to their property manager, not just their own IT or facilities team, to help supply that visibility.
“Partnership Value” Is Becoming Measurable
What struck us most was how concretely people are starting to define “partnership value.” It’s moving from a soft, relationship-based idea into something property managers can point to and quantify:
- Utilization transparency. Can the building operator show a tenant, floor by floor, how their space is actually being used? Not just badge-swipe counts, but real occupancy and presence data?
- Flexibility built into the relationship. Tenants want landlords who can help them adapt layouts or seating strategies as headcount and hybrid policies shift, rather than treating the lease as a static, decade-long commitment.
- Shared incentive around ROI. The property managers thinking furthest ahead are the ones treating tenant retention as a data problem, not just a relationship one. Using space and occupancy insights to proactively flag when a tenant’s needs no longer match their footprint, before it becomes a turnover risk.
This is a meaningful shift from the “amenity arms race” of a few years ago. Free coffee and a rooftop deck are table stakes now. What separates a good landlord from a great one is whether they can help a tenant answer the question their own leadership is asking: is this space actually working for us?
Where Maptician Fits In
This is exactly the conversation we built our platform around. Maptician gives property managers and their tenants a shared, real-time view of how office space is being used. Occupancy trends, presence data, seat and room utilization, all layered onto an interactive floor plan.
For property managers, that means being able to walk into a renewal conversation with data instead of guesswork. Showing a tenant exactly how their space is performing, and where there’s room to adjust rather than churn. For tenants navigating hybrid policies, it means finally having the visibility to make confident decisions about their footprint, instead of relying on hallway impressions of who’s in the office on a given Tuesday.
It’s a small shift with a big effect: the property manager stops being just the entity that collects rent and becomes a partner actively helping the tenant get more value out of the lease they’ve already signed.
What’s Next
If there was a single message from this year’s BOMA expo, it’s that Class A landlords who treat hybrid work as someone else’s problem are going to lose ground to the ones who lean into it. Tenants are watching their real estate spend more closely than ever, and the property managers who can offer real data, real flexibility, and real partnership are the ones building the relationships that survive the next renewal cycle…and the one after that.
We had great conversations about what this looks like in practice, and we’re continuing them long after the expo floor has been packed up.
If your team is thinking about how to bring more transparency and partnership value to your tenant relationships, we’d love to talk. Schedule a demo with Maptician to see how real-time space and occupancy data can change the conversation with your tenants.