FEATURE
STORY
| Inside the Mind of America’s
Most Ambitious Real Estate Executive |
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It
takes a rare personality to undertake the project of marketing
and selling the largest privately financed Real Estate development
in the history of North America. Such a project requires not
only a visionary, but also a master organizer and executer
of intricate game plans.
Meet Tony Dennis. After winning
what he calls the “beauty contest” of candidate
selection, Tony became the executive vice president overseeing
development, marketing, sales and operations for the condominium
and condo-hotel residences at CityCenter, MGM Mirage’s
$7.4 billion city-within-a-city currently under construction
on the Las Vegas strip. He is now in the process of filling
the approximately 2,650 residences within CityCenter’s
four distinct, luxury properties: Veer Towers; Vdara Condo
Hotel; The Residences at Mandarin Oriental; and The Harmon
Hotel, Spa and Residences.
The residences will open for
capacity in the fourth quarter of 2009. Two years away from
occupancy, Tony’s team has already sold 91 percent of
the condos at The Mandarin Oriental. Also, The Harmon saw
more than a quarter of its 207 residences sold within two
weeks of entering the market in September of 2007.
The man who accomplished
such a feat is a fourth-generation developer. Tony’s
great-grandfather immigrated to Canada from Eastern Europe
and began a modest housing business. Tony’s grandfather
inherited the business and expanded it from home construction
to apartment construction. His philosophy was “Build
the best, build for quality, and build to last.” When
Tony’s father took the reigns of the business, he further
expanded it to include commercial Real Estate, building and
operating three boutique hotels in Toronto.
Because
Tony is descended from three generations of developers, he
spent his childhood absorbing industry knowledge around the
dinner table. He says that listening to family business discussions
“colored [his] world” and laid the foundation
for future successes.
After Tony went off to Cornell
Hotel School, he shifted his thoughts from inheriting the
family business to building his own legacy, thanks in part
to the “no nepotism” policy implemented by his
father.
Upon graduating from Cornell,
Tony relearned the hotel industry from a consulting point
of view by working for an accounting firm. Then he took the
step he was destined to make: he built his own business.
Tony’s first enterprise
was a restaurant which he built from scratch, or, in his words,
“from soup to nuts.” He learned that he liked
creating businesses more than operating other people’s
creations.
Once he realized his passion
for creating, he went back into development, an industry dedicated
to creating buildings and neighborhoods. He learned the ropes
as a clerk for the executive vice president of development
for one of Toronto’s top developers. The ‘80s
market slump was in full swing, which taught Tony both the
discipline and the philosophy required to navigate the stormy
seas of a down cycle.
Relationships
with customers are key to beating the most difficult markets,
according to Tony. It’s easier to do best by the existing
customers than to try to find new ones, particularly when
the market produces so few buyers. Developers must earn the
trust of their clients not only by building quality architecture,
but also by continuing to service the customers even after
their warranties expire.
In 2001 Tony brought his business
philosophy to the United States by way of Scottsdale, AZ.
Four years later he found himself talking to an executive
recruiter for MGM Mirage who asked him to create and write
a vision for its new project, CityCenter, as an audition for
an executive position. He essentially wrote a business plan
from scratch.
His business plan landed
him the opportunity to enter the market with the most important
development in the world. He now brings four generations of
business philosophy to Las Vegas as the executive vice president
for CityCenter’s Residential Division.
The ability to navigate
a down cycle has pushed CityCenter at full speed through the
market headwind. In the first three quarters of 2007, CityCenter
sold $1.5 billion in residential space. “If you ask
us,” he says, “the market is great.”
Tony’s ability to
attract clients to CityCenter increased greatly when Dubai
World, the holding company that manages and supervises the
portfolio of businesses and projects for Dubai government,
invested $2.7 billion in CityCenter and an additional $2.4
billion in its parent company, MGM Mirage. While Las Vegas
has traditionally catered to travelers from the Western Hemisphere,
Dubai World maintains a client list that spans the world,
including the formerly underrepresented Asian continent. With
the Dubai investment, Tony has gained direct access to a huge
list of international clients without having to travel to
places like Hong Kong and Mumbai.
Tony
can maintain relationships with the world’s most exclusive
clientele because he understands their needs. In an age when
consumers are increasingly demanding “green” living
spaces, CityCenter is seeking LEED certification and will
be one of the largest environmentally sustainable communities
in the world when it opens in 2009.
In addition to sustainable
living, Tony says that CityCenter’s clients are demanding
a hospitality-at-home feel. Their time is valuable, even on
vacation or in a second home, so they look to CityCenter to
provide as many services as possible.
For instance, CityCenter’s
Vdara Condo Hotel is a boutique hotel that combines residence
with hospitality to produce an overall attitude of service
within an exclusive residential atmosphere. MGM Mirage’s
resort expertise combines with Tony’s residential development
experience to offer a pampered lifestyle unparalleled in the
world today.
In order to keep the idea
of service fresh on the company’s collective mind, Tony
has branded the philosophy of ExProServe, which stands for
experience, product, service. The first tenet to selling a
condo is the buyer’s experience of interacting with
the seller. The second tenet is to offer an extremely high
quality product. The final tenet is to maintain the anticipatory
service throughout the duration of the relationship, which
may span decades or, in some cases, generations.
Tony’s four generations
of Real Estate development knowledge has prepared him for
the awesome challenge of marketing the hemisphere’s
largest Real Estate development. His demand for quality blends
with his highly personal way of maintaining relationships
with clients in order to create a fountain of opportunity
for MGM Mirage and for all of Las Vegas.
Photography: Britt
Pierson
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