What You Can Learn At Costco
Posted by Lee Sterling | Posted in Carlsbad, Economics, Technology | Posted on 05-07-2010

Costco's Polish Sausage
I sitting alone at a table at Costco in Carlsbad, eating my Polish Sausage lunch (with soft drink, $1.63) the other day, and a nicely dressed gentleman asked if he could join me. There was plenty of room, so I said “of course.” He sat down, and his cell phone rang. Obviously, I couldn’t help but overhear his conversation, although I tried to avoid eavesdropping. He mentioned a fired employee, who had wiped out her hard drive, and they were now in process of having to retrieve and rebuild the hard drive information.
I mentioned to him that I had overheard his comment, and we discussed the need to do backups of computer hard drives every day. Not just because hard drives are going to crash (we’ve had it happen twice in the past 8 years), but because there might be that disgruntled employee who wants to disrupt your business. It can cost thousands of dollars to rebuild seemingly lost information. In our case, we not only physically lost a hard drive, but our in-house back-up system also crashed at the same time!
Now we use an in-house back-up system, and we use an off site backup system called Mozy.. Just go to Google and type in “back-up systems,” and you’ll be taken to lots of information. As a commercial tenant, you want to be sure not to lose your valuable computer data because of a hard drive crash OR because of a disgruntled employee!



In the past I’ve written about the SNDA clauses typically found in commercial leases: Subordination, Non-Disclosure, and Attornment. I’ve described the importance of the Non-Disclosure clause. The terms of the Subordination clause and the Attornment clause are equally important.
On Friday, July 10, 2009, we celebrated the opening of the new location for My Life Tees, Silk-Screen and Embroided Apparel, owned by Stacie and Paul Marotta. We helped them find the location and then negotiated the lease on favorable terms by being persistent despite the landlord’s reluctance. That’s Paul, Stacie, and me in the picture to the left. We’re having a delayed celebration of my turning the keys over to them for their new production and display facility.

Grubb & Ellis\BRE Commercial (“Grubb”) is one of the leading commercial real estate brokerage companies in the area representing landlords and commercial building owners. They put out research reports quarterly on the commercial real estate market. Their first quarter of 2009 report on the industrial market covers all of San Diego, but I’m most interested in what is going on in North County.
General Growth, the owner or manager of more than 200 malls in 44 states, which also owns office buildings and is involved in the management and development of master planned communities, filed the LARGEST real estate bankruptcy in U.S. history. So, what happens to its thousands of tenants in those malls and office buildings?


