Nick Romito

Founder & CEO at VTS
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Nick Romito is the Chief Executive Officer (CEO) of VTS. Nick started his career in commercial real estate almost 20 years ago as a tenant rep and landlord broker at New York City’s Murray Hill Properties. There, he expanded the U.S. presence of international companies while supporting the growth of the firm’s 8-million square-foot office portfolio. Nick went on to AM Properties, where he oversaw a 3-million square-foot office portfolio, before becoming the founder and CEO of Titan Advisors in 2009. While leading Titan, a full-service commercial real estate firm, Nick realized the need in the industry for a technology platform that could transform how strategic decisions are made and executed across the asset lifecycle. Today, VTS is the industry's leading platform for leasing management, tenant experience, data, and digital marketing. Nick has been featured in prominent publications such as The Wall Street Journal, The New York Times, and Entrepreneur Magazine. He has spoken at Harvard Business School’s Technology Cyberposium and real estate conferences around the world including Realcomm, Blueprint, and MIPIM.

Topics Nick can speak to:
• Market trends driving office demand heading into the new year nationally and locally (data available – please send a message to inquire on a certain city/market)
• How the tenant-landlord relationship will continue to evolve because of growing technology adoption
• Future of work / return to office trends and their impact on office demand
• Which office markets in the US are experiencing the highest and lowest levels of office demand from companies
• How are landlords and brokers marketing office space in the current economy
• Why it’s important to have clear visibility into the heath and movement of your office portfolio

Recent Quotes
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  • "The real estate market has been in a recession for many years, but a potential economic recession is helping the office market come out of a downturn. As unemployment goes up, a lot of the power goes back to employers, many of whom clearly want people in the office. That means return to the office goes up, a net positive for office buildings. Now you’ve got interest rates going down, which is also a net positive for the office market. I don’t think anyone’s ever seen a scenario like that, where a recession could potentially positively impact a big part of the market, the world’s second biggest asset class." - Nick Romito to TIME Magazine

Employment
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