Hey friends, happy Friday!
Welcome to another digest… a collection of highlights from April 2021 that you shouldn’t miss. This is designed to save you time and allow you to catch up on the whole month. Then you can dive deeper whereever you’d like.
Enjoy.
Here’s the recording from this week’s Member Gathering. Aaron Lapsley presented a unique framework for how he’s thinking about the IAQ landscape. I think Aaron crushed it and I loved the Q&A with all of you.
My top 3 takeaways:
Comment here with yours!
---
In case you missed it, members received one deeper dive this month:
My top 3 takeaways:
Comment here with yours!
---
This month, there have also been some fascinating LinkedIn and Connect conversations, in case you missed any of them:
---
John Petze on The Shiny Object Problem:
We had spinning fans that was, you know. Bitmap was first with data that would change… 74.2. Then the fan spins. Now it's 3d. Now it shaded from a 45 degree perspective, right?
What value have we increased? Right? We've increased the sales value, Wiz bang sizzle. But I would argue, in some cases we've diverted our tension intellectual focus away from what matters, which is good, sophisticated control and control sequences. Right?
And so that was the point I was making about, you know, the graphics being the tail that wagged the dog, and then development companies who are building these products would end up putting more engineers on the next version of a graphics package than on doing more control algorithms that would run better.
See the full clips here and add your reaction.
Leon Wurfel on why centralized O&M is inevitable:
There's a tipping point of scale at where it's just like, it's not even like a business case anymore. It's like an IQ test as to whether you've got that different operational model in place.
But I think what the technology is doing is. Lowering that barrier to entry that cross site, that tip over point about we're having a centralized operational model makes sense.
See the full clips here and add your reaction.
Arie Barendrecht on the dumb buildings become irrelevant (my words):
And of course COVID has served us this in a once in a lifetime trend accelerator, beyond our wildest imaginations. And what that means in real estate is that, we believe there's going to be this kind of bifurcated or polarized market, which will be underpinned by a flight to quality of tenants.
So we're moving to a situation quickly, you know—New York city now has 17% vacancy in commercial real estate, for example—where tenants have the power of choice, and tenants are going to. move to buildings where the building owner takes a real responsibility on providing fantastic experiences to their occupants.
See the full clips here and add your reaction.
---
In this past cohort of the Nexus Foundations course, we hosted several subject matter expert workshops. These were deep-dive presentations on specific topics: analytics 101, developing use cases, sustaining the business case, base building networks, and more.
These SMEs had so much fun teaching these workshops that I’d like to open this up to all of you. We’ll host one SME workshop per month and the video archive will be available to all Pro members on Connect.
Do you have a topic that you’d like to teach to the wider Nexus community? Hit reply and let me know.
Thanks for reading and thanks for being a Nexus Pro member. As always, I’d love if you hit reply and let me know how I can improve your membership.
—James
P.S. for all of you new members, here are some handy links:
Hey friends, happy Friday!
Welcome to another digest… a collection of highlights from April 2021 that you shouldn’t miss. This is designed to save you time and allow you to catch up on the whole month. Then you can dive deeper whereever you’d like.
Enjoy.
Here’s the recording from this week’s Member Gathering. Aaron Lapsley presented a unique framework for how he’s thinking about the IAQ landscape. I think Aaron crushed it and I loved the Q&A with all of you.
My top 3 takeaways:
Comment here with yours!
---
In case you missed it, members received one deeper dive this month:
My top 3 takeaways:
Comment here with yours!
---
This month, there have also been some fascinating LinkedIn and Connect conversations, in case you missed any of them:
---
John Petze on The Shiny Object Problem:
We had spinning fans that was, you know. Bitmap was first with data that would change… 74.2. Then the fan spins. Now it's 3d. Now it shaded from a 45 degree perspective, right?
What value have we increased? Right? We've increased the sales value, Wiz bang sizzle. But I would argue, in some cases we've diverted our tension intellectual focus away from what matters, which is good, sophisticated control and control sequences. Right?
And so that was the point I was making about, you know, the graphics being the tail that wagged the dog, and then development companies who are building these products would end up putting more engineers on the next version of a graphics package than on doing more control algorithms that would run better.
See the full clips here and add your reaction.
Leon Wurfel on why centralized O&M is inevitable:
There's a tipping point of scale at where it's just like, it's not even like a business case anymore. It's like an IQ test as to whether you've got that different operational model in place.
But I think what the technology is doing is. Lowering that barrier to entry that cross site, that tip over point about we're having a centralized operational model makes sense.
See the full clips here and add your reaction.
Arie Barendrecht on the dumb buildings become irrelevant (my words):
And of course COVID has served us this in a once in a lifetime trend accelerator, beyond our wildest imaginations. And what that means in real estate is that, we believe there's going to be this kind of bifurcated or polarized market, which will be underpinned by a flight to quality of tenants.
So we're moving to a situation quickly, you know—New York city now has 17% vacancy in commercial real estate, for example—where tenants have the power of choice, and tenants are going to. move to buildings where the building owner takes a real responsibility on providing fantastic experiences to their occupants.
See the full clips here and add your reaction.
---
In this past cohort of the Nexus Foundations course, we hosted several subject matter expert workshops. These were deep-dive presentations on specific topics: analytics 101, developing use cases, sustaining the business case, base building networks, and more.
These SMEs had so much fun teaching these workshops that I’d like to open this up to all of you. We’ll host one SME workshop per month and the video archive will be available to all Pro members on Connect.
Do you have a topic that you’d like to teach to the wider Nexus community? Hit reply and let me know.
Thanks for reading and thanks for being a Nexus Pro member. As always, I’d love if you hit reply and let me know how I can improve your membership.
—James
P.S. for all of you new members, here are some handy links:
Head over to Nexus Connect and see what’s new in the community. Don’t forget to check out the latest member-only events.
Go to Nexus ConnectJoin Nexus Pro and get full access including invite-only member gatherings, access to the community chatroom Nexus Connect, networking opportunities, and deep dive essays.
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