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June 23

Nobody Told the Computers Where They Were Going. And Nobody Thought to Ask.

June 23, 2026
Admin

Let me tell you something about moving an office.

Imagine you had to move a really big LEGO city.

Hundreds of pieces. Every single one has a specific place. Every single one has to arrive at the right time, in the right order, so the whole thing works when it is put back together.

Now imagine you handed that job to the person who makes the sandwiches.

They are really good at sandwiches. Excellent, in fact. But they have never moved a LEGO city before.

So the computers arrive before the desks. The phones do not work. The internet is not on. Nobody can find anything. And the whole office just — stops.

The result: 2.4 days of average downtime. Up to $45,000 in losses for a 10,000 square foot office. Not because the move was hard. Because nobody owned it.

This is what happens every single day to businesses across the country that treat their office relocation as a logistics problem.

It is not a logistics problem. It is a project management problem. And the distinction will cost you — or save you — more than you realize.

The sandwich maker is not the problem. The assignment is.

When businesses decide to move, the most common thing that happens next is this: the move gets assigned to whoever is closest to the problem.

The office manager. The facilities coordinator. The admin who keeps everything running. Sometimes the COO. Sometimes the owner themselves.

These people are not the problem. They are often exceptional at what they do. The problem is what they have been asked to do — on top of everything else they are already doing.

A commercial office relocation is not an administrative task. It is a cross-functional project with:

  • Vendor dependencies that must be sequenced in a precise order
  • IT infrastructure that has to be live before a single employee arrives
  • Compliance requirements that vary by building, city, and industry
  • Lease obligations at both the old and new space running simultaneously
  • Employee communication that determines whether your team stays or leaves
  • Budget oversight across a dozen categories nobody put on the original spreadsheet

The Project Management Institute has documented this pattern extensively. Lack of clearly defined roles and decision authority is one of the top drivers of project failure across every project category. A commercial move is no different — it is just one of the most expensive environments for that failure to play out.

What treating it as logistics actually looks like

Here is the version that plays out in real offices every week across the country.

The facilities coordinator manages the movers. But nobody told IT the move date until three weeks out. The cabling contractor shows up before the server room is ready. The internet is not activated because fiber installations take two to three weeks and nobody ordered it in time.

The build-out at the new space is running a week behind but nobody has told the landlord at the old space. The furniture vendor missed a delivery window. The AV contractor is waiting on a part that was never pre-ordered.

Employees find out about the new parking situation on the morning of the move.

This is not bad luck. This is what happens when a cross-functional project has no project manager. Every one of these failures was preventable with early sequencing and one point of accountability.

The downstream cost is not just the delay. It is the lease overlap while the old space is not yet decommissioned. It is the IT overtime. It is the revenue that stopped because the phones were not working. It is the employee who quit two weeks later because the move was the last straw.

The numbers nobody wants to see after the move

Industry research puts the picture in clear terms:

  • 2.4 days: average commercial move downtime
  • $45,000: potential loss per 10,000 sq ft office during that downtime
  • $10,000+: cost per hour of downtime reported by 78% of SMBs (Datto Research)
  • 80%: of companies underestimate total commercial move costs (Forbes Home, 2024)

These are not worst-case numbers. They are averages. They reflect what happens when a move is treated as a checklist rather than a managed project.

And here is the number that matters most: almost all of it is preventable.

What professional project management actually looks like

When Relocation Strategies manages your move, here is what changes.

One person owns the whole thing

Not a piece of it. Not the logistics of it. All of it. Every vendor, every workstream, every deadline, every dependency. You have one call to make when something needs an answer. You never wonder who is responsible.

IT goes first, not last

Data cabling, server migration, VoIP cutover, internet provisioning, AV installation — all of this gets initiated in the first phase of the project, not the week of the move. We sequence technology readiness as the critical path that every other workstream is built around. Your team should be able to work the moment they walk through the door.

Every vendor is on a master plan

We issue RFPs, evaluate bids, negotiate contracts, and manage scheduling across every vendor category. Movers, contractors, IT teams, furniture vendors, riggers, building management — every one of them is working off the same integrated timeline with the same single point of accountability. When one workstream moves, we adjust everything behind it.

The budget is real from day one

We build a detailed budget in the first phase of every engagement. Our competitive bidding process consistently produces cost savings against initial market estimates. You do not discover the real number when the invoice arrives. You know it before the lease is signed.

Your employees are not surprised

We build an employee communication framework into every move. Announcement timing, FAQ documentation, move-day logistics guides, parking and access information — all of it planned and delivered before anyone needs to ask. Your team should feel like the move was done for them, not to them.

Your old space gets handled, too

Decommissioning, furniture removal, cabling removal, patch and paint, final landlord walkthrough — we manage the exit from your old space with the same discipline as the entry into your new one. Your security deposit is protected. Your lease obligations are met.

Back to the LEGO city

Here is what a professionally managed office move actually looks like.

Your team walks in on Monday morning.

The lights are on. The computers work. The phones ring. The internet is live. Everyone knows where they are sitting. Nobody is looking for anything.

That is not luck. That is sequencing. That is project management. That is having one team who knows exactly which LEGO piece goes first — and makes sure every single one lands in the right place.

Your office manager should be doing their job.

Your relocation should have its own.

Frequently asked questions

What is the difference between a moving company and a commercial relocation project manager?

A moving company transports your physical items from one address to another. A commercial relocation project manager coordinates every aspect of the move — vendors, IT infrastructure, compliance requirements, employee communication, budgeting, scheduling, decommissioning, and landlord obligations — under one integrated plan. Relocation Strategies is a project management firm, not a moving company. We hire and manage the movers on your behalf as one of many vendor categories we oversee.

Why does my office move need a dedicated project manager?

Because a commercial relocation is a cross-functional project with interdependent workstreams, vendor dependencies, and real financial consequences when something slips. The Project Management Institute identifies lack of clearly defined roles as one of the top drivers of project failure in every category. An office move without a dedicated project manager almost always produces downtime, budget overruns, vendor failures, or all three. Industry research puts average commercial move downtime at 2.4 days and potential costs at $45,000 for a 10,000 square foot office.

How early should I bring in a relocation project manager?

Before you sign the lease. The most expensive decisions in any commercial move are made during the lease and build-out specification phase. Having Relocation Strategies involved before lease signing allows us to evaluate the operational feasibility of the space, identify build-out requirements and lead times, flag compliance issues, and ensure the lease terms support the move timeline. The earlier we are in the conversation, the better the outcome.

How much does commercial relocation project management cost?

Our project management fee is almost always recovered through vendor savings alone. We issue competitive RFPs across every vendor category and negotiate on your behalf — consistently producing cost savings against initial market estimates. Scope control and delay prevention save additional cost that typically exceeds our fee several times over. The more relevant question is: what does a poorly managed move cost you in downtime, lost productivity, lease overlap, and vendor overruns?

Does Relocation Strategies work with our existing real estate broker?

Yes — and we strongly recommend it. Brokers find and negotiate space. We execute the move. These are complementary and non-competing roles. Many of our engagements begin as broker referrals. We collaborate with brokers from CBRE, JLL, Colliers, Cushman & Wakefield, Lee & Associates, and independent firms across the country. The ideal scenario is for Relocation Strategies to be involved before the lease is signed so we can evaluate the space operationally before any terms become binding.

Planning a move? Talk to us first.

Relocation Strategies® manages commercial moves of every size and complexity across all 50 states. One team. One plan. Full accountability — from the first vendor RFP through move-in day.

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