Selected commercial property introductions
I make a named introduction after both the property connection and the information that can be shared are set out.
Who this service is for
- A landlord introducing one property to an operator whose format matches its physical constraints.
- An acquisition client seeking contact with the owner or instructed agent of a selected site.
- An owner making a discreet first approach to a named buyer.
What's included
- The authority and represented side recorded.
- Existing agent and relationship checks.
- A short property summary and disclosure limit.
- The introduction, response and next contact owner.
How the work runs
The same four stages—define, search, compare and contact—are explained once on How we work.
What to send me
- Who Rivermark represents.
- The property and party to contact.
- The specific property connection.
- Existing agents and earlier conversations.
- Information that can be named or withheld.
Examples
- A padel operator introduced to a club that has approved a site conversation.
- A landlord introduced to an operator after reviewing the use and lease outline.
- A developer introduced to a landowner after the site is selected.
Common questions
Will you share the property without approval?
No. The client approves the target and the information before I send the first message.
Does an introduction mean either party is interested?
No. It opens a conversation; each party decides whether to continue.
Who handles negotiation?
The parties and their appointed advisers handle terms and diligence unless a separate Rivermark service is agreed.
Related
Property types and guides
Contact Rivermark
Need an introduction?
Send the property, location and timing.