Facility management gets treated like plumbing.
No one sees it until something fails. Suddenly, everyone is reacting, pointing fingers, and wondering why no one planned. That’s the world Facility Managers operate in daily — and it costs companies dollars.
Here’s the truth:
Facility management is often the most overlooked strategic function within your business. It impacts every square foot of your operation, every employee, every tenant, and every dollar invested in your buildings.
Here’s what’s coming up:
- Why FM Is A Strategic Function (Not Just A Support Role)
- The Cost Of Leaving FM Out Of Big Decisions
- Where Facility Managers Deliver Real Value
- How To Bring FM Into The Boardroom Conversation
Let’s dig in.
FM Has Quietly Become A Trillion-Dollar Function
The numbers are wild.
The worldwide Facility Management market was valued at approximately $2.86 trillion in 2025. Just Facility Management. Not facility support costs. An actual industry.
And the practice continues to expand. FM has moved from the boiler room to the boardroom as it impacts business continuity, employee experience, and cost control.
Think about all the operational work FM covers on a typical property:
- Building maintenance and repairs
- HVAC, plumbing, and electrical systems
- Security and access control
- Cleaning and waste management
- Space planning and unit turnover
Property managers with residential portfolios also manage tenant move-outs and apartment cleanouts. When one of your units turns over, you need the space to be emptied, cleaned, and ready for the next tenant –quickly. Every day your unit sits vacant is money lost in rent.
And that’s why many landlords need to declutter quickly, contracting crews just to rip out old furniture, junk, and debris so that make-ready work can even begin. Easy peasy, right? Apartment cleanouts are one of the largest operational bottlenecks in multi-family FM.
Here’s the point:
None of this is discretionary work. Each impacts the bottom line. But often FM gets left out of the room when decisions like these are made.
The Cost Of Keeping FM Off The Strategy Table

When executives make strategy calls without FM in the room, bad things happen.
Here’s why:
Leadership selects a new office space without considering if the HVAC system can accommodate the headcount. Or they implement a hybrid work model without considering how it impacts cleaning schedules and utilities. Or they purchase a new investment property without accounting for apartment cleanouts and unit turnover costs.
The result? Nasty surprises later.
Per the JLL Global State of Facilities Management Report, 84% of FM leaders cited increasing operational costs as their biggest concern. It’s not because they’re slacking at work — it’s because they’re being asked to fix issues they didn’t get a chance to provide input on.
And it doesn’t stop at costs. FM decisions affect:
- Employee experience — messy or poorly maintained spaces kill morale
- Tenant satisfaction — delayed cleanouts and slow repairs push tenants out
- Compliance — safety violations and code issues come straight back to FM
- Sustainability — energy use, waste, and emissions all live in FM
When these things get treated as afterthoughts, they turn into expensive fires later.
Where FM Delivers Real Strategic Value
FM doesn’t just save the lights being on. Done right, it’s a powerful profit driver.
Cost Control That Actually Sticks
Facility expenses are typically one of the biggest budget items behind payroll. Strategic FM teams identify savings that no other department can reach — from renegotiating vendor contracts to reducing energy waste and increasing operational efficiency. And they accomplish these savings without compromising quality.
For apartment portfolios, that also translates into running lean apartment cleanouts between tenants. Quicker turnover equals less vacancy loss, which goes directly to the bottom line.
Better Employee & Tenant Experience
When your space is organized, it’s easier to work and live in. Everything just feels cleaner, quieter, brighter, nicer.
More than most leaders realise. Over 60% of FM leaders say digital transformation is critical to achieving their strategic objectives now – and much of this transformation involves improving the experience of those who use the buildings.
Happy people don’t leave. Unhappy people do. Whether that’s employees or tenants… It all boils down to math.
Sustainability & ESG Goals
Pretty much every company today has ESG goals. And you guessed it — FM delivers the vast majority of those goals.
Energy consumption, water consumption, waste disposal, cleanouts, recycling, indoor air quality… You name it. Facilities teams have it on their plates. If Facility Management isn’t involved in the strategy discussions, those ESG targets are DOA.
Risk & Business Continuity
When disaster strikes — burst pipe, security breach, fire — FM is on the front line. If FM is strategic, companies have a plan. If not, they are flat-footed and pay the consequences.
How To Bring FM Into The Boardroom

How do you earn FM the respect it deserves? Here are four steps to get you started:
Put it in dollars and cents. FM leaders must speak their C-suite peers’ language. That translates into assigning a dollar amount to every FM goal: dollar saved, revenue protected, risk mitigated. Soft metrics are useless. Quantifiable metrics lead to budget.
Involve FM early. Include FM on location decisions, expansion plans, workforce policy discussions. Don’t wait until the end to have FM “make it work.”
Purchase intelligent technology. Facilities management is data-driven these days. Whether you’re utilizing smart building applications, IWMS software, or IoT sensors, technology allows FM to become predictive instead of reactive. Executives listen to that kind of message.
Cultivate strategic partnerships. Organizations that involve vendors and service partners strategically (versus purely transactional suppliers) realize superior results. From apartment cleanouts to HVAC service to cleaning contracts — the right partner can make FM shine.
Bringing It All Together
Facility management should be involved in strategy because it is strategic already – it’s just not credited as such.
Leaving FM out of the conversation costs companies in three big ways:
- Higher operational costs
- Worse employee and tenant experience
- Missed sustainability and compliance targets
Involve FM early? Do that, and you upend all three. You transform FM from a cost centre into a profit lever. You transform unit turnover and apartment cleanouts into competitive advantage. And you transform building ops into a strategic business function that commands the respect of the C-Suite.
FM isn’t noise. It’s a trillion-dollar industry. Companies that learn to leverage it that way will dominate those who don’t.

















