Many owners ask for a pro forma and believe they have done their diligence. The pro forma is the output. A feasibility study is the work that makes the output trustworthy. It validates demand, tests the space and operating model, and stresses the numbers before a dollar is committed.
The pro forma is the output, not the diligence
A pro forma is a financial model. Change the occupancy assumption, the average rate, and the ramp curve, and the same spreadsheet can show a triumph or a disaster. That flexibility is exactly why a pro forma on its own is not diligence. The numbers are only as good as the assumptions behind them, and a pro forma does not validate its own assumptions. A feasibility study does.
What a complete study covers
A genuine feasibility and development assessment works through each assumption in order, so that by the time you reach the financial model, every input has been tested rather than guessed.
- Market and demand analysis: the trade area, the target customer profile, employment and small-business activity, and validated evidence that paying demand exists at the scale the project needs.
- Competitive positioning: who else serves flex demand nearby, at what occupancy and price, and where the gap is that this asset can credibly own.
- Space mix and design direction: the recommended ratio of private offices, shared desks, meeting rooms, and amenity space, tested against what the floor plate can actually deliver.
- Operating model: lease, management agreement, or owner-operated, with the staffing, technology stack, and systems each path requires.
- Financial pro forma: a full model with conservative, base, and upside scenarios, including launch costs, ramp, churn, and the complete operating expense load.
- Financing and risk assessment: the capital required, the realistic financing path, and the specific risks that could break the project.
Why each section matters
Every section exists to catch a different way projects fail. The market analysis catches the project with no real demand. The design work catches the floor plate that cannot deliver the unit mix the model assumes. The operating model section catches the owner who wants passive income from an active business. The scenario modeling catches the plan that only survives in the optimistic case.
| Failure mode | The section that catches it |
|---|---|
| No real demand | Market and demand analysis |
| Unbuildable unit mix | Space mix and design |
| No one to run it | Operating model |
| Works only if everything goes right | Scenario modeling |
| Undercapitalized | Financing and risk assessment |
The economics of doing the study
A feasibility study is a modest cost against the size of the commitment it informs. A flex conversion can run hundreds of thousands of dollars in buildout, furniture, and technology, plus the operating capital to carry the space through ramp. Against that, the study is cheap insurance. Its entire job is to surface the fatal flaws while they are still inexpensive to fix, or to give you the confidence that the project is real.
If you are weighing a conversion, do not start with a pro forma and call it diligence. Start with the work that makes the pro forma worth trusting.
Frequently asked questions
A complete study covers market and demand analysis, competitive positioning, recommended space mix and design direction, the operating model, a full financial pro forma with conservative, base, and upside scenarios, and a financing and risk assessment. Each section validates an assumption the pro forma depends on.
No. A pro forma is the financial model, one component of a feasibility study. On its own it can be made to support almost any conclusion because its inputs are assumptions. A feasibility study validates those inputs with market evidence, design reality, and operating discipline.
Because a conversion is a capital commitment, and the cost of a study is small relative to the cost of a project that fails because demand, design, or operations were never validated. The study is how you find the fatal flaws while they are still cheap to fix.
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