Propmodo: Is Now the Time for Commercial Real Estate to Embrace Lease Automation?

The following article was originally published in Propmodo on Feb. 14th, 2019


Imagine using a desktop computer from 1993 to complete your work today. While you certainly could get some things done, it would not have the full capabilities needed to do your job, and certainly not with the efficiency you need to do it well. That’s what the lawyers and other professionals at commercial real estate companies are essentially asked to do when their company only offers traditional word processing software, which has remained relatively unchanged for a quarter of a century.

Commercial real estate as an industry has too long lagged behind while other industries use technological advancements like automation to improve business processes by making them more efficient and streamlined. As commercial real estate organizations solidify their strategic plans for the coming year, one thing is certain: continuing to rely on what worked yesterday no longer works today. Now is the time to bring the sector into a new era.

In order to do that, you must first consider what your employees are producing and the tools they currently use to complete their jobs. One of the common documents that a commercial real estate lawyer produces is a lease, for example. Leases are made up of hundreds of dependent clauses and calculations, where even one change requires updates to numerous places within the lease.

In their current form, as a document created by a word processor, leases are chunks of text strung together. While Microsoft Word might be great for writing and editing many types of documents because it offers flexibility for communicating abstract ideas, it falls short facilitating transactional and other procedural records, like leases, because there is no underlying logical structure that connects interdependent terms. Without this structure, the process of editing a drafted lease requires painstaking attention to detail to ensure that red-lined edits from tenant’s counsel are reflected in any number of places throughout the lease. For your in-house counsel, finding the time to commit that energy to such a monotonous task can be difficult and frustrating.

Even after the lease is closed, these antiquated processes continue to negatively affect your business. Paralegals and lease administrators are tasked with creating a lease abstract. This time consuming task requires pulling out key details and information from the lease and translating stacks of paper documents into actionable information. The data from an abstract must then be imported into enterprise resource planning software, databases, or other online programs for outside departments, like financial information for the accounting team.

A great deal of precious time and resources are spent on this important task, and the inefficiencies are staggering. It takes an average of 90 days to close a lease, a level of inefficiency that would not be acceptable in any other industry. But what if there were a better way to complete this process?

Enter: technology. Document automation and digital, data-driven technologies will not only increase the efficiency with which employees can do their work, but it will lead to greater outcomes for stakeholders, from tenants to your employees, and for your bottom line because you can more quickly leverage data to gain timely insights on key industry trends, projections, or outcomes.

If the dependencies can be mapped out and connected, software can automatically keep the entire lease up-to-date and reduce the amount of time it takes to edit. And while generic document automation improves efficiency in that it’s slightly faster than traditional word processors, commercial real estate can go even further by implementing automation technology that is built to handle the complexities inherent in certain processes, such as lease drafting and negotiation. General document automation that some companies use is essentially a questionnaire that may have loose ties to the underlying document. What’s missing is the document context that allows for necessary customization, which reduces the need to return to inefficient tools for the second, third, or umpteenth draft of a lease. Instead, commercial real estate companies should consider what we call context-aware automation, where there is a tight connection between automation and the underlying document itself. Because it allows for customization, this type of automation is applicable beyond leases and can in the future be applied to other types of contracts.

Technological improvements to contracts can also unlock the data within these documents. For leasing, this makes the slow abstracting process essentially obsolete. Currently, that data remains siloed until someone abstracts the lease, extracts that data and then manually takes the information and enters it into a readable format for other software. With the technological advancements available today, companies can automate these processes, cutting hours upon hours of work that leasing employees loathe, with the added benefit that the data within leases can instantly be used and processed by other software applications across other departments.

Ideally, your software vendors, such as MRI, VTS and others, should be able to “talk” to each other. That instantaneous transfer of data results in significant time and cost savings, and can easily be scaled as your company grows and completes more deals. Improving this process gives your leasing team members the chance to focus on tasks that cannot be completed by machines: creative, strategic work that requires critical thought to move your company forward. And we are talking about only one segment of your business. Imagine the benefits multiplied out if you use the right technologies for each task in every department, and what that extra time and money could mean for your business.

Automation is only the tip of the iceberg. Blockchain is another technological application that can and will impact the commercial real estate industry in the near future. While companies are generally experimenting with it now, the main benefit is transparency around data which will make commercial real estate comparable to other markets and allow investors to make knowledgeable, data-driven decisions about investing in real estate using accurate, reliable and publicly available information. While it can be fun to speculate about these types of technology, it will not happen if commercial real estate does not start to embrace technology like document automation that is available today.

Data shows that globally nearly 20 percent of commercial real estate firms are already using business process automation in a meaningful way today, while 43 percent are considering using automation within the next 18 months. The desire to improve antiquated processes exists. It’s no longer a question of if data-driven technology will change the industry, but when.

CTech: LeasePilot Establishes a Research and Development Outfit in Tel Aviv |

The Boston-based commercial real estate leasing startup set up shop at one of the city’s WeWork coworking spaces

The following article was originally published in CTech on Feb. 7th, 2019


Boston-headquartered real estate leasing startup LeasePilot Inc. has opened a research and development outfit in Tel Aviv, the company announced late last month. Located inside WeWork Sarona coworking space, LeasePilot’s new office will house a team of 10 engineers focused on front and back-end product innovation and quality assurance and testing. The Tel Aviv team will be headed by Eli Livshitz.

Sorona Complex in Tel Aviv
Sorona Complex in Tel Aviv

Founded in 2015, LeasePilot offers an online platform for documentation of commercial leases designed to simplify and expedite the real estate leasing process. In an interview with Calcalist Thursday, Gabriel Safar, LeasePilot co-founder and CEO, said that the company’s technology shortens the average time it takes to close a real estate leasing deal in the U.S. from 90 days to just 30 days.

“With the tools we develop we are creating a new world of data on commercial real estate leasing,” Safar said, adding that the Tel Aviv office will focus on developing two new products, one of which will be based on blockchain technology.

LeasePilot Announces Opening of New Research and Development Facility in Tel Aviv, Israel |

Expands talent base to support milestone growth

BOSTON & TEL AVIV, ISRAEL (January 31, 2019) LeasePilot, the only company bringing a scalable, digital future to commercial real estate leasing, today announced it has opened a new research and development facility in Tel Aviv, Israel.

The company has already hired a lead engineer and will more formally establish a presence in Israel with the opening of the new research and design office. Located inside WeWork Sarona Tel-Aviv, the office will house a team of engineers focused on front and back-end product innovation and quality assurance. Over the next six months, LeasePilot plans to grow aggressively, solidifying its commitment to establish a strong presence in this market.

“Israel’s abundance of top-tier engineering talent made it an obvious choice for LeasePilot’s new research and development center,” said Gabriel Safar, LeasePilot co-founder and CEO. “As technical recruiting continues to remain highly competitive, tapping into the country’s wealth of expert talent will allow us to more quickly scale our business and adapt to ever-changing market and customer demands.”

LeasePilot’s mission is to transform commercial real estate leasing by pairing innovative digital technology with tried-and-true legal industry standards, ensuring easier collaboration, greater transparency, and streamlined efficiency. In 2018, the company saw a 900 percent increase in annual returning revenue, more than 200 percent growth in platform transaction activity, and a 75 percent increase to its client roster, which currently includes industry-leading companies
JBG Smith and Oxford Properties.

For more information on LeasePilot, visit https://leasepilot.co/.

About LeasePilot:

LeasePilot was founded in 2015 by two seasoned commercial real estate attorneys who
recognized that commercial leases should close faster. LeasePilot is the only company creating a scalable, digital future for commercial real estate leasing. The company is accelerating the timeframe to close a commercial lease by pairing innovative technology with tried-and-true legal industry standards. By empowering customers through data-driven technology, LeasePilot is moving the industry away from antiquated paper documents and evolving leasing to meet today’s market expectations.

Media Contact: 
Christine Lewis 
leasepilot@inkhouse.com 
781.966.4157

LeasePilot Experiences Milestone Growth in 2018

BOSTON (December 28th, 2018) LeasePilot, the only company bringing a scalable, digital future to commercial real estate (CRE) leasing, today announced substantial growth in 2018, including a 900 percent increase in annual recurring revenue, more than 200 percent growth in platform transaction activity, and a 75 percent increase to its client roster. The company also introduced new product features that enhance deal flow collaboration and drive customer efficiency.

LeasePilot’s mission is to transform commercial real estate leasing by pairing innovative digital technology with tried-and-true legal industry standards, ensuring easier collaboration, greater transparency, and streamlined efficiency.

“The leasing process is antiquated, where reliance on paper documents for legal contacts results in a 90 day average timeframe to close a deal, and wastes significant time, money and resources,” said Gabriel Safar, LeasePilot Co-Founder and CEO. “LeasePilot is bringing CRE into the 21st century by pairing innovative technology with tried-and-true legal industry standards, and allows legal teams to keep their eyes on the big picture and focus on what’s most important.”

LeasePilot’s 2018 milestones include:

Customer portfolio expansion

  • Over the past year, LeasePilot has begun automating leasing contracts for top real estate organizations across the country including Woodbury Corporation, CASTO, DLC Management, Hajjar Management Co., Keystone Property Group, Kite Realty Group, Urstadt Biddle Properties, and Oxford Properties.

Monthly transaction advancements

  • Monthly transaction activity on LeasePilot saw more than a 200 percent increase throughout 2018 as businesses continue to rely on document automation to accelerate contract closings. Annual recurring revenue also saw monumental growth in 2018 for LeasePilot, with a year-over-year increase of 900 percent. Rapid momentum is expected to continue into 2019, with a projected eightfold increase in leasing contracts generated monthly through LeasePilot software by the end of Q1 2019.

Innovative feature deployment

  • In October, LeasePilot announced the advanced release of its new GitHub-like collaboration platform for all lease stakeholders, ranging from lawyers to brokers. The platform includes advanced “context-aware” lease automation and specialized communications tools. New software features also allow for faster collaboration between counsel during negotiation phases and help to manage multiple rounds of revisions seamlessly through an intuitive interface.

To support the new features for its growing customer base, LeasePilot also expanded its customer success team. Director of Customer Success Nadine Ezzie heads up an innovative team of lawyers and paralegals, whose specialized perspective allows them to understand the pain points of the end-user and successfully transition customers from paper to digital.

About LeasePilot:

LeasePilot was founded in 2015 by two seasoned commercial real estate attorneys who
recognized that commercial leases should close faster. LeasePilot is the only company creating a scalable, digital future for commercial real estate leasing. The company is accelerating the timeframe to close a commercial lease by pairing innovative technology with tried-and-true legal industry standards. By empowering customers through data-driven technology, LeasePilot is moving the industry away from antiquated paper documents and evolving leasing to meet today’s market expectations.

Media Contact:

Christine Lewis
leasepilot@inkhouse.com
781.966.4177

Banker & Tradesman: Virtual Lawyers, Faster Transactions

The following article was originally published in Banker & Tradesman on Dec. 16th, 2018


Who: Gabriel Safar

Title: CEO, LeasePilot

Age: 42

Industry experience: 20-plus years

With his background as a real estate attorney, Gabriel Safar knows firsthand about the piles of paperwork that are generated by even the most routine lease transactions. That led to the idea for his Boston-based software startup, LeasePilot, which is designed to streamline much of the back-and-forth between landlords and tenants during negotiations. LeasePilot went live in March 2017 and now is helping process 100 lease transactions monthly. Its clients include Oxford Property Group, Washington, D.C.-based JBG Smith and Indianapolis-based shopping center REIT Kite Realty

Q: How did your background as a real estate lawyer influence your vision for a software product such as LeasePilot?

A: I spent 10 years at large firms like Bingham McCutchen when it existed, and Goulston & Storrs. I’ve been all-in on LeasePilot for four years now. It’s not a legal service provider– we’re a technology provider. Our mission is to pair innovative and scalable technology with legal customers to dramatically speed up the leasing transactions.

It takes about 90 days to go from understood and agreed-upon business terms to a closed lease. I quickly came to the realization that source of delays is not something any other industry would accept with their inventory. There are huge revenue and cost complications. The other thing that dawned on me is I recognized the lease is the sole source of truth in the commercial real estate business, and it’s locked up in paper documents. People are going through leases and trying to understand them. It’s a missed opportunity.

I’d been reading a book by Richard Susskind, a legal futurist, looking at the future practice of law, and identifying shortcomings and opportunities. Reading his book really inspired me. One thing I hear from customers all the time is that time kills deals. When you have a 90-day lag between the deal and getting something signed, there’s always the risk that transactions die.

Q: How does LeasePilot work?

A: We call the guts and heart of LeasePilot context-aware automation. What I mean is that LeasePilot pairs a technology platform while maintaining and recognizing legal customs and practices. A lease is an agreement with lots of dependencies and relationships. That’s the type of scenario where software shines. Part of our set-up involves modeling that lease and giving lawyers and non-lawyers a set of automation tools that allows them to free their minds when you think about changing provisions in the lease. The automation takes care of all that. The lawyers can free their time to think about how they can add value in the transaction.

We’ve seen scenarios where four hours of legal work is turned into 20 minutes of administrative assistant work. It might take a week for a lawyer to free up four hours. An administrative assistant can free up 15 minutes every day. You add that up and you find the time savings. But what I find extraordinary is the data element. By drafting a lease in our platform, we’re acquiring an enormous amount of valuable and untapped information about a landlord’s portfolio that’s locked up in the paper documents. All the information that runs a real estate operation’s other system, the CRM, needs information from the lease. How does the information get into the system? They have to read the lease, type in an abstract, and give it to another person. With LeasePilot, we eliminate that process.

Q: What’s the business model and fee structure?

A: It’s a software-as-a-service model. There are two ways we charge in our fee system: the first one is different solutions bundles, and the second is based upon transaction activity. LeasePilot is designed to align the value we deliver with the software pricing. The primary value is reducing that 90-day period as much as possible and making that data available to consume.

Q: Where are the savings to clients realized?

A: The first is by reducing that period. There are huge revenue implications. That’s what our customers are most interested in. You sign sooner, you collect rent sooner. The second element is that 90 days of back-and-forth does represent a lot of cost. Part of that is legal, the other is just opportunity costs for people in their organization who could be doing other things. The last is there’s an administrative cost of doing all of that.

Q: Where did LeasePilot get its initial funding?

A: We raised from friends and family to start and had a number of real estate lawyers as participants. Then we raised our first institutional round from Rose Park Advisors, which uses the research of Harvard Business School professor Clayton Christensen, author of “The Investor’s Dilemma.” They only invest in companies that are consistent with the principles of disruptive innovation. We can say we have the imprimatur of the people who wrote the book on it.

Safar’s Five Favorite Albums:

  1. Random Access Memories by Daft Punk
  2. Blues + Jazz by Ray Charles
  3. Goldberg Variations played by Glenn Gould (historic 1955 debut recording)
  4. Another Side of Bob Dylan
  5. Lullaby Sleep Baby – a signal to his two young kids that it’s time for bed.

Leasepilot Signs Latest Client Kite Realty Group Trust

Boston, MA, May 4, 2017 – LeasePilot®, a document automation platform specifically designed to streamline retail, office and industrial leasing, announces that Kite Realty Group Trust has signed on to use its flagship commercial leasing solution. This is the latest in a series of both public and private real estate companies to work with LeasePilot.

LeasePilot was founded in 2015 by commercial real estate attorneys, Gabriel Safar (CEO) and Jonathan Eskow (COO), and technology strategist, Itzik Spitzen (CTO). The product combines proprietary technology and deep legal expertise to quickly onboard a real estate company’s own lease forms and language. Using LeasePilot, non-lawyers are able to quickly and easily assemble accurate leases, while lawyers have the flexibility to customize leases to address unique deal terms and complex tenant requests.

Bob Solloway, Vice President and Lead Real Estate Attorney at Kite Realty, said, “We’ve been looking for an innovative way to increase the efficiency of our lease drafting process. With LeasePilot, we are excited to implement a platform that will help us achieve this. LeasePilot enables us to maintain more consistency across our lease forms and language. In addition, LeasePilot helps us turn around leases faster to tenants, which can lead to leases getting signed faster, increased revenue and shorter vacancy periods.”

Jon Eskow, Co-founder and COO of LeasePilot, said, “We are thrilled to work with Kite Realty to help them close leases faster, reduce transaction costs and risk, and increase the overall efficiency of their leasing process. The early results have been tremendously positive. The setup process went smoothly, and from day 1, LeasePilot has helped Kite eliminate bottlenecks by freeing up time for both lawyers and paralegals to spend on higher value time sensitive matters.”

About Kite Realty Group Trust

Kite Realty Group Trust is a full-service, vertically integrated real estate investment trust engaged in the ownership, operation, management, leasing, acquisition, construction, redevelopment and development of neighborhood and community shopping centers in selected markets in the United States. As of March 31, 2017, the Company owned interests in a portfolio of 120 operating, development and redevelopment properties totaling approximately 24 million total square feet across 20 states. For more information, please visit the Company’s website at www.kiterealty.com.

About LeasePilot

LeasePilot was founded in 2015 by Gabriel Safar and Jonathan Eskow, two experienced commercial real estate attorneys, who recognized that by injecting technology into the leasing process, the real estate industry would be able to close deals faster, reduce costs and manage risks. LeasePilot combines document automation, word processing and user-centric interfaces into a single web-based platform expressly designed to radically accelerate the entire process of drafting and editing commercial leases, from a letter of intent through lease execution.

 

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LeasePilot Receives $1.5 Investment from Rose Parks Advisors’ Disruptive Innovation Fund

Boston, MA, March 29, 2017 – LeasePilot®, a document automation platform specifically designed to streamline retail, office and industrial leasing, has received $1.5 million in seed financing from Rose Park Advisors’ Disruptive Innovation Fund. The company will use the funds to advance its technology platform and expand market reach.

LeasePilot was founded in 2015 by commercial real estate attorneys, Gabriel Safar (CEO) and Jonathan Eskow (COO), and technology strategist, Itzik Spitzen (CTO). The product combines proprietary technology and deep legal expertise to quickly onboard a landlord’s own lease forms and language. Using LeasePilot, non-lawyers are able to quickly and easily assemble accurate leases, while lawyers are able to customize leases to address unique deal terms and complex tenant requests.

“Many startups believe they are disruptive, but very few, in fact, have the right business model, in the right circumstances, to achieve disruptive success,” said Matt Christensen, co-founder and Managing Partner of Rose Park Advisors. “Gabriel and Jonathan have identified a true disruptive opportunity, and we’re very excited to pursue this opportunity together.”

Gabriel Safar, Co-founder and CEO of LeasePilot, said, “We could not be more thrilled to partner with Rose Park Advisors. Their investment affirms what we have known from the moment we founded the company: that LeasePilot will change the way the real estate industry leases space, and by doing so will unlock massive efficiencies while dramatically reducing transactional risks.”

About Rose Park Advisors

Rose Park Advisors, LLC (RPA) is a specialized investment firm that applies the theory of disruptive innovation developed by co-founder Clayton Christensen to invest in companies whose business models are well-suited to take advantage of industry change. RPA pursues disruptive opportunities across industries, geographies, and company size and stage.

About LeasePilot

LeasePilot was founded in 2015 by Gabriel Safar and Jonathan Eskow, two experienced commercial real estate attorneys, who recognized that by injecting technology into the leasing process, the real estate industry would be able to close deals faster, reduce costs and manage risks. LeasePilot combines document automation, word processing and user-centric interfaces into a single web-based platform expressly designed to radically accelerate the entire process of drafting and editing commercial leases, from a letter of intent through lease execution.

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Chain Store Age: CASTO takes flight with LeasePilot

The following article was originally published in Chain Store Age on May 24th, 2016


Doing deals with real estate development and services firm CASTO just got easier thanks to the roll out of a new Web-based software platform called LeasePilot.

LeasePilot was developed by Gadfly Legal Technologies to streamline the lease documentation process and helps owners manage valuable lease information. CASTO is currently using LeasePilot to create the first drafts of leases.

“We are thrilled to be partnering with the CASTO team given their commitment to innovation and reputation within the real estate community,” said Jonathan Eskow, co-founder of Gadfly Legal Technologies. “Creating leases using LeasePilot delivers standalone value, and together with additional features designed to complete lease transactions faster, LeasePilot is changing the way lawyers and real estate professionals interact with leases.”

LeasePilot is Gadfly’s first product and the firm bills the software solution as the only end-to-end lease documentation and lease information management platform designed for the commercial real estate industry. LeasePilot helps owners and law firms get deals done quicker, minimize risk, and provide visibility into lease terms and documents, according to Gadfly.

“We have been focused on leveraging technology to improve the legal function at CASTO for several years. When I met Jonathan and Gabriel of Gadfly, it was clear that they have the same focus but have taken the technology to the next level,” said C.H. Waterman, VP and director of legal at CASTO. “We have already experienced a dramatic decrease in lease preparation timeframes and anticipate realizing a number of additional efficiencies as the software continues to evolve.”

Casto Rolls Out Implementation of LeasePilot for its Commercial Leases

Columbus, Ohio, May 23, 2016 – CASTO, one of the Country’s leading real estate development and services firms, announced today the implementation of LeasePilot

LeasePilot is a web-based software platform developed by Gadfly Legal Technologies that streamlines the lease documentation process and helps owners manage valuable lease information. CASTO is currently using LeasePilot to create the first drafts of leases.

“We are thrilled to be partnering with the CASTO team given their commitment to innovation and reputation within the real estate community. Creating leases using LeasePilot delivers standalone value, and together with additional features designed to complete lease transactions faster, LeasePilot is changing the way lawyers and real estate professionals interact with leases,” stated Jonathan Eskow, Co- Founder of Gadfly Legal Technologies.

“We have been focused on leveraging technology to improve the legal function at CASTO for several years. When I met Jonathan and Gabriel of Gadfly, it was clear that they have the same focus but have taken the technology to the next level.” stated C.H. Waterman, Vice President & Director of Legal at CASTO. “We have already experienced a dramatic decrease in lease preparation timeframes and anticipate realizing a number of additional efficiencies as the software continues to evolve.” Waterman added.

About Casto

CASTO, a fully integrated real estate organization based in Columbus, Ohio since 1926, is a recognized leader in the ownership, management, 3rd party brokerage, tenant representation, acquisition and development of commercial shopping centers and multi-family residences. CASTOs portfolio currently includes over 23 million square feet of shopping centers and apartment communities located primarily throughout the Midwestern and southeastern United States. CASTO currently has more than three million square feet of retail in development. To learn more about CASTO, visit www.castoinfo.com.

About LeasePilot

LeasePilot was founded in 2015 by Gabriel Safar and Jonathan Eskow, two experienced commercial real estate attorneys, who recognized that by injecting technology into the leasing process, the real estate industry would be able to close deals faster, reduce costs and manage risks. LeasePilot combines document automation, word processing and user-centric interfaces into a single web-based platform expressly designed to radically accelerate the entire process of drafting and editing commercial leases, from a letter of intent through lease execution.

 

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