| The
Office building business in Jakarta really
started to flourish when the Indonesian
government built the Bank Indonesia building
on Jalan MH.Thamrin in 1957. The economic
boom in the 1970s, due largely to the extraordinary
hikes in oil prices, made office compounds
expands towards Kuningan, Jl. Sudirman and
Jl. Gatot Subroto, an exclusive area now
known as the Central Business District (CBD)
Jakarta.
Banking deregulation that
soon followed also prompted the second economic
boom in Indonesia with many new office building
springing up in the CBD. This area therefore
has secured a firm position as a business
center and the chief supplier of office
space in Jakarta.
However the economic crisis
hit the country in 1997 and hurt the office
building business as well. Bank Indonesia
records show that the average occupancy
rate in those years dipped to 75 percent,
the lowest ever in the history of the office
building business in Jakarta.
Budget contraction reduction
in the number of employees and consolidation
in local as well as foreign companies, as
a result of the crisis were the main reason
for this low occupancy rate. This drop turned
the office space market into a tenant's
market building owners had to work extra
hard to lure the increasingly smaller number
of prospective tenants.
In 2003, the office space
market in Jakarta has shown a slight improvement
and the CBD remains in its position as the
leading supplier of office space in this
city. A market research report titled "Jakarta
Office Market Overview of Q2 2003"
issued by leading property consulting agency
Colliers International shows that the CBD
area contributed 71.6 percent or 2,992,502
square meters of a total of 4,176,682 square
meters of office space in Jakarta
Jl. Sudirman and Jl. MH. Thamrin
accounted for 65 percent, or 1,935,646 square
meters, of the total office space in the
CBD area. Next came Kuningan (23 percent
or 692,815square meters) and Gatot Subroto
(12 percent or 364,041 square meters). The
total office space available in the CBD
is estimated to rise by 110,000 square meters
in 2004, following the completion of the
new Wisma Mulia building.
In terms of building types,
which are usually determined based on the
quality of the physical aspect of the buildings,
the building management, facilities and
proximity to the CBD, premium grade buildings
took the lion's share (37.1 percent or 1,111,211
square meters), to be followed by grade
B building (32.1 percent or 959,543 square
meters) and grade A buildings (30.8 percent
or 921,749 square meters).
As for the average occupancy
rate in Jakarta, a property commercial survey
of the first quarter of 2003 conducted by
Bank Indonesia shows that it stands at 81.01
percent, an increase of 2.23 percent over
the figure recorded in the same period of
previous year. The CBD area enjoys a rise
of 2.01 percent, while non CBD areas registered
an increase of 2.84 percent.
This hike is yet to give peace
of mind to players in office space business.
Most of them are still worried about the
macro-economic situation of the country
and the threat to its security stability.
It is not surprising, therefore, that the
majority of building owners have continued
to focus themselves on maintaining their
present tenants by allowing them a discount
or other special incentives.
In fact, allowing a discount
is not the only way to survive during hard
times. Take, for example, CEO SUITES, an
office, service provider in Jakarta, located
at Wisma GKBI and the Jakarta Stock Exchange.
This company was set up in 1997 when Indonesia
was in its acute economic throes. Still,
applying its concept of fully integrated
serviced offices, this company has made
itself one of the main players by having
secured a sizable market niche in Jakarta
as well as in several countries in the region.
The company's president director,
Ms. Mee Kim, said that the key to their
success in competing with similar companies
and conventional office space owners was
the company's focus on the creation of a
great customer experiences. This, she said,
was based on the company's main business
philosophy, among others, being proactive
towards a tenant's needs and sparing no
effort or time to meet those needs, including
the availability of contingency and back-up
plans regarding all the facilities in the
building, total flexibility in lease duration,
space arrangement and room, design as well
as in the use of facilities. Their dedicated
and professional staff with years of service
industry experiences is also their plus
points.
"Thanks to this customer
oriented philosophy, CEO SUITE has developed
its services. You will find even the CEO
SUITE janitor speak fluent English. Usually
our staff members can speak other foreign
languages. Besides, we supply state-of-the-art
facilities, including IT devices, sophisticated
meeting rooms, and a wide range of office
facilities. In short, we wish to satisfy
all our tenants," Mee Kim said.
CEO SUITE has its own rather
unique view about the role that marketing
can play during hard times. While the majority
of such companies tend to reduce their marketing
budget, CEO SUITE goes in the opposite direction.
"In bad times, you must be more aggressive
in marketing than before," she said.
Cocktail parties, direct marketing and direct
emailing are some of the ways that CEO SUITE
has often used to get the word out.
As a result, CEO SUITE has
continued to make progress in this business.
It now has its own office centers in Singapore,
Kuala Lumpur and one opening in October
in Shanghai, China. "The key to the
success of CEO SUITE is its promotion by
word of mouth from satisfied customers",
she added.
In the final analysis, the
possibility for a company to score successes
is greater as long as it takes into account
what its customers really need, regardless
of whether it is boom or bust in the general
economic condition.
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