How much of a role does a company's headquarters play in its overall success? To many CEOs, choosing the right place to base a company is as important as what it does and who it hires.
~6 |0 V/ ~1 h8 _' V* ]2 f# }Just look at Google (
GOOG), the top performer on BusinessWeek's
BW50, our annual list of the best performers from each of the 10 sectors that make up the S&P 500-stock index.
4 z5 T/ }# w7 D3 V; j$ JAfter outgrowing two other Silicon Valley sites, Google moved into to one of the area's biggest office parks in 2003, went public the next year, and purchased the property in 2006 for $319 million. The four-building, 978,000-square-foot Mountain View (Calif.) headquarters, known as the Googleplex, is renowned for its furnishings (giant rubber balls, dinosaur skeleton, SpaceShipOne replica) and facilities (free laundry, swimming pools, sand volleyball court, gourmet cafeterias). Who wouldn't want to work here?
: a$ D% G4 [/ t; `& W S1 L; EFollow the Talent"[In Google's case] it's all about recruiting talent," says Lou D'Avanzo, a broker at New York-based commercial real estate firm
Cushman & Wakefield. "They want to set something up so they can control their growth for the future. They are looking to create a culture, a place of their own."
* ^7 E3 n% b8 AAnd how they have grown. Just last year, Google doubled its staff to 10,000. It increased its revenue by 67%, to $10.6 billion. The search giant's market capitalization zoomed from $23 billion at the time of its IPO in 2004, to $136.7 billion by the end of 2006.
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If you're a company with plans for big growth, purchasing or building a "suburban campus" headquarters may be a better option than leasing a building in a city. "You don't want to be locked out of space," D'Avanzo says. "And as cities get more congested, there will be more people that look to suburban locations."
9 D8 r' X9 k( c( r& n& F" EBut to attract the right employees for your industry, you may need to be in a big city, or at least near one. The large and skilled workforce in New York City makes it a necessary location for many headquarters, especially for companies in banking and finance, and for those with European clients. California, on the other hand, is still the nation's high-tech hub because of its large number of engineers, research centers, and venture capitalists. Of the 50 companies on the BW50 list, 20 are based in New York or California, with 8 in New York City and 8 in the Bay Area.
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Moving the Call CentersThere are 3.8 billion square feet of office space in the U.S., with an annual average asking rent of $24.58 per square foot, according to El Segundo (Calif.)-based real estate corporation CB Richard Ellis (
CBG), which, coincidentally, is No. 16 on the BW50 list. Rents vary widely, from as much as $150 per square foot in Manhattan to $18 per square foot in Albuquerque, N.M.
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But the high price of office real estate in big cities like New York and desirable areas like Northern California is no deterrent for wealthy investment banks and high-flying tech companies, since having access to the right workforce is essential to their productivity. "Even though rents have risen, their revenues have risen by more," says D'Avanzo.
0 A6 e3 v/ ~0 b1 aTo cut costs, even deep-pocketed companies may keep their headquarters in a major center but move back-office operations elsewhere. "If you're a big New York bank, you're probably going to have your headquarters in New York, but you may put your call center operations in Fargo, N.D.," says Jeff Waters, senior managing director at CB Richard Ellis Consulting. Morgan Stanley (
MS) (No. 39 on the BW50) is based in midtown Manhattan but has offices in Atlanta, Salt Lake City, and West Conshohocken, Pa.