Workplace Strategy for Growing US Companies: When to Move, Refurbish, or Renegotiate.
Fast-growing companies face a workplace problem that established organizations rarely encounter: the office that was right 18 months ago is the wrong office today. The team has doubled, the culture has evolved, and the space that once felt generous now feels cramped, misaligned, or simply inappropriate for the organization you have become. The question is not whether to do something. The question is what to do, and when. This guide provides a structured framework for companies between 50 and 500 people navigating the move, refurbish, or renegotiate decision.
The Growth Trigger Framework
The right workplace action depends on which growth trigger the organization is facing. Different triggers point to different responses. Responding to the wrong trigger with the wrong action wastes time, capital, and organizational energy.
| Growth Trigger | Recommended Action | What to Do Next |
|---|---|---|
| Headcount at 80% of desk capacity | RENEGOTIATE / EXPAND | Initiate lease renegotiation for additional space or begin market search 12 to 18 months before lease event. Do not wait until you are at capacity. |
| Headcount has grown 30% or more since last build-out | REFURBISH OR RELOCATE | The existing layout was not designed for current headcount or working patterns. A workplace utilization study will determine whether refurbishment or relocation is the better answer. |
| Early termination option approaching within 18 months | ASSESS ALL OPTIONS | An early termination option creates a decision point that must be actively managed. Begin the assessment process now. Do not let the termination date pass by default. |
| Culture and team structure have changed significantly | REFURBISH | The office no longer reflects how the organization works. A targeted refurbishment can redesign the space for current working patterns without the cost and disruption of relocation. |
| Lease has 3+ years remaining with no early termination option | RENEGOTIATE OR REFURBISH | Relocation is not a practical option. Explore lease renegotiation for additional space or expansion rights, or invest in a phased refurbishment within the existing premises. |
| Talent acquisition is being affected by the office location or quality | RELOCATE | Workplace quality and location are now active factors in talent decisions. If the current space is materially affecting hiring, relocation may be justified even before a lease event. |
| The building no longer meets technical requirements | RELOCATE | Power capacity, ceiling height, floor loading, or MEP condition no longer supports the organization’s needs. Refurbishment cannot fix building-level limitations. Relocation is required. |
Office Space Planning by Company Size
Workplace strategy is not one-size-fits-all. The right space model, lease approach, and planning priorities change significantly as a company grows from 50 to 500 people. The framework below maps these dimensions across four growth stages.
| Company Size | Typical Lease Approach | Space Model | Planning Priorities |
|---|---|---|---|
| 50–100 | 1 to 3 year lease. Flexibility is the priority. | Open-plan workstations with basic meeting rooms. Limited variety in space types. | Focus on headcount growth trajectory. Size the space for 18 months ahead, not the current headcount. Negotiate expansion rights or a short lease with an early termination option. |
| 100–200 | 3 to 5 year lease. Beginning to commit to a longer-term workplace. | Mix of open-plan, enclosed rooms, and a designated lounge or collaboration area. Separate meeting room inventory. | Conduct a workplace brief to understand how teams actually work. Begin to design for work modes, not just desk count. Introduce booking technology. |
| 200–350 | 5 to 7 year lease. Workplace starts to reflect organizational identity. | Neighborhood model with defined team zones. Multiple space types. Premium café and social spaces. AV in all meeting rooms. | Workplace utilization study before design. Anchor days to manage hybrid attendance. Post-occupancy evaluation built into the project scope. |
| 350–500 | 7 to 10 year lease. Headquarters or flagship office investment. | Full ABW or neighborhood model. 5+ space typologies. Wellness features. Smart building technology. Possible multi-floor occupation. | Independent project management essential. Full MEP coordination, BIM on complex projects, phased delivery if multi-floor. TI negotiation is a strategic priority. |
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The Five-Step Workplace Decision Process
Growing organizations make better workplace decisions when they follow a structured process rather than reacting to immediate capacity pressure. The five steps below apply regardless of whether the eventual answer is move, refurbish, or renegotiate.
| The Workplace Decision Process: Five Steps for Growing Organizations | |
|---|---|
| 01 | Conduct a Workplace Utilization Study Before making any space decision, measure how the current space is actually used. Occupancy sensor data, booking system analytics, and employee surveys provide the evidence base for every subsequent decision. Assumptions about utilization are almost always wrong. |
| 02 | Review Lease Position and Growth Forecast Map the remaining lease term, early termination options, and expiry dates against a 24-month headcount forecast. The intersection of growth trajectory and lease timeline determines which options are available and when. |
| 03 | Define the Decision Criteria Before evaluating options, agree on what matters most: cost, flexibility, talent attraction, culture, or design quality. Different weightings produce different answers. Document the criteria before looking at buildings or renovation proposals. |
| 04 | Evaluate the Options with Independent Advice Renegotiation, refurbishment, and relocation all have genuine trade-offs that are difficult to assess without independent technical and commercial input. An independent PM can model total cost of occupancy for each option and provide a recommendation free of commercial bias. |
| 05 | Execute the Chosen Strategy Once the decision is made, move quickly. The organizations that struggle most are those that decide but delay execution, allowing the lease position to deteriorate further. Engage the project team, confirm the budget, and begin. |
Renegotiation: The Most Underused Option
Many growing companies default to a binary choice between staying put and moving, overlooking the option of renegotiating the existing lease. Renegotiation can deliver additional space, a TI allowance, improved lease flexibility, or a reduced rent, without the disruption and cost of relocation.
Renegotiation is most effective when:
- The landlord has vacant space in the building that is not moving quickly
- The tenant has a strong payment record and a long remaining lease commitment
- The tenant can offer a lease extension in exchange for improved terms or additional space
- Market conditions have softened since the original lease was signed
An independent project manager supports renegotiation by providing an objective assessment of the space requirement, a technical view of what build-out investment would be needed, and benchmarking data on what comparable tenants in comparable buildings are achieving on TI allowances and rent.
Refurbishment: Making the Existing Space Work Harder
For companies with 2 or more years remaining on their lease and a building that still meets their technical requirements, a targeted refurbishment is often the most cost-effective way to resolve a space planning problem. Refurbishment can reconfigure the layout for a larger team, introduce new space types for hybrid working, and refresh the environment to reflect the current culture.
The most impactful refurbishment investments for growing companies are typically:
- Introducing a neighborhood model to replace fixed assigned desks, which immediately increases effective capacity without additional square footage
- Adding focus rooms, phone booths, and quiet zones to support the concentration work that open-plan environments often underserve
- Upgrading the café, kitchen, and social spaces, which disproportionately affect how employees experience the office
- Implementing occupancy sensing and booking technology to provide the data needed for future space planning decisions
Relocation: When It Is the Right Answer
Relocation is justified when the existing building cannot meet the organization’s needs, when the lease position makes it viable, or when the talent and culture case for a new environment is compelling. For growing companies, relocation is rarely the first option, but it is sometimes the only one.
The organizations that relocate successfully treat the process as a 12 to 18-month program of work, not a last-minute response to running out of desks. Key decisions about location, building type, specification, and budget must be made well before the lease event, not after it.
Conclusion
The workplace decisions that growing companies make between 50 and 500 people have a lasting impact on culture, talent, cost, and operational resilience. The organizations that navigate this period most successfully do so with a structured decision-making process, independent advice, and enough lead time to make considered choices rather than reactive ones.
The worst workplace outcomes happen when companies wait too long, act under pressure, and select the option that is fastest rather than the one that is right.