Article
Nexus Pro
4
min read
James Dice

March 2021 Digest & Recording

March 31, 2021

Hey friends, happy hump day!

Welcome to another monthly digest… a collection of member updates and ideas I’ve been thinking about and working on this month.

Enjoy.

1—Today’s Member Gathering Recording

Here’s the recording from this week’s Member Gathering. This was a super fun conversation with 6 panelists that are on the cutting edge of attacking the integration problem in our industry.

---

2—Deep Dives from March

In case you missed it, members received one deeper dive this month:

It’s been fun getting your comments and responses on this one.

This is great and couldn’t be better timed for the role I’ve taken on developing our smart building strategy. I’ll put this to use and send some feedback, thanks again!

Keep them coming!

Also, I’ve obviously been writing less than usual this month. That will change in April as the Foundations course winds down!

---

3—Fun Conversations

This month, there have also been some fascinating LinkedIn and Connect conversations, in case you missed any of them:

---

4—Who should build the CRE software platform of the future?

One of our Nexus Foundations students, Jack FitzGerald, asked me a super insightful question this month that’s been on my mind quite a bit. Jack identified three categories of software platform developers and asked me to weigh in on the best approach:

  • Category 1: Platforms developed by large OEMs: JCI’s OpenBlue, Honeywell’s Forge, etc.
  • Category 2: Platforms developed by independent software startups: Switch Automation, Facilio, Willow, etc
  • Category 3: Platforms developed by owners and/or developers of large real estate portfolios: Rudin’s Prescriptive Data’s Nantum, Lendlease’s Podium, EDGE Next, etc.

This is a fascinating question that took about 20 minutes to unpack, only leading to more questions:

  • Can Categories 1 & 3 actually build good software?
  • Can Category 2 get enough market share if these large owners don’t need them?
  • Which Category is best suited to create the app marketplace that we need but don’t have?

What do you think?

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:

Upgrade to Nexus Pro to continue reading

Upgrade

Upgrade to Nexus Pro to continue reading

Upgrade

Hey friends, happy hump day!

Welcome to another monthly digest… a collection of member updates and ideas I’ve been thinking about and working on this month.

Enjoy.

1—Today’s Member Gathering Recording

Here’s the recording from this week’s Member Gathering. This was a super fun conversation with 6 panelists that are on the cutting edge of attacking the integration problem in our industry.

---

2—Deep Dives from March

In case you missed it, members received one deeper dive this month:

It’s been fun getting your comments and responses on this one.

This is great and couldn’t be better timed for the role I’ve taken on developing our smart building strategy. I’ll put this to use and send some feedback, thanks again!

Keep them coming!

Also, I’ve obviously been writing less than usual this month. That will change in April as the Foundations course winds down!

---

3—Fun Conversations

This month, there have also been some fascinating LinkedIn and Connect conversations, in case you missed any of them:

---

4—Who should build the CRE software platform of the future?

One of our Nexus Foundations students, Jack FitzGerald, asked me a super insightful question this month that’s been on my mind quite a bit. Jack identified three categories of software platform developers and asked me to weigh in on the best approach:

  • Category 1: Platforms developed by large OEMs: JCI’s OpenBlue, Honeywell’s Forge, etc.
  • Category 2: Platforms developed by independent software startups: Switch Automation, Facilio, Willow, etc
  • Category 3: Platforms developed by owners and/or developers of large real estate portfolios: Rudin’s Prescriptive Data’s Nantum, Lendlease’s Podium, EDGE Next, etc.

This is a fascinating question that took about 20 minutes to unpack, only leading to more questions:

  • Can Categories 1 & 3 actually build good software?
  • Can Category 2 get enough market share if these large owners don’t need them?
  • Which Category is best suited to create the app marketplace that we need but don’t have?

What do you think?

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:

⭐️ Pro Article

This article is for Nexus Pro members only

Upgrade to Nexus Pro
⭐️ Pro Article

This article is for Nexus Pro members only

Upgrade to Nexus Pro

Are you a Nexus Pro member yet? Join now to get access to our community of 600+ members.

Join Today

Have you taken our Smart Building Strategist Course yet? Sign up to get access to our courses platform.

Enroll Now

Get the renowned Nexus Newsletter

Access the Nexus Community

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 Connect

Upgrade to Nexus Pro

Join Nexus Pro and get full access including invite-only member gatherings, access to the community chatroom Nexus Connect, networking opportunities, and deep dive essays.

Sign Up