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Development Associate – U.S. Development Firm


Frequently Asked Questions about the Development Associate Role at a U.S. CRE Development Firm

A Development Associate helps manage the real estate development process from start to finish. This includes site selection, underwriting, entitlements, construction oversight, and lease-up/sale. According to Josh Lau, CRE is a field where you eventually want to “be the one that had the vision” and execute it through development.

Many Development Associates come from diverse fields such as civil engineering, construction management, finance, or architecture. Josh Lau’s path, for example, began in civil engineering and moved through construction estimating and project management before pivoting into development via a master’s degree.

A common reason is the desire to move from executing others’ visions to creating and leading projects themselves. As Josh Lau said, “I was just always executing somebody else’s vision. I wanted to be the one that had the vision.”

Key skills include financial modeling, communication, organization, and the ability to work with cross-functional teams (e.g. architects, construction managers, legal). Craig Cadwallader emphasized: “Communication is essential. Organization is essential. And really being able to dig in on what makes sense.”

Very important. Several CRE professionals, including Craig and Josh, pursued the A.CRE Accelerator specifically to develop this skill. Josh shared that it took him from “knowing nothing about real estate to now being confident enough to underwrite like an analyst.”

Yes, especially if you’re pivoting into CRE. Josh Lau enrolled in Cornell’s Baker Program in Real Estate after gaining construction and estimating experience. A graduate program can bridge industry gaps and provide access to CRE networks and internships.

Projects may range from student housing, mixed-use redevelopments, and market-rate housing to office and industrial. Josh Lau’s case competition experience included redeveloping a suburban retail mall into mixed-use student housing.

It’s an iterative process. Josh shared that in underwriting development: “You’ve got to go back to your architects, your design team, and try to figure out where you can change things to be able to hit that IRR that you need.”

Be humble, keep learning, and take initiative. Josh Lau advises: “Be humble, be respectful, and be curious… These people wouldn’t have gotten to where they were if they were overconfident.” Craig emphasized, “Help others as you can. Don’t be stuck in your ways.”

With deliberate steps. Both Craig and Josh emphasized long-term planning. Josh noted: “I’m not the kind of person that likes to sit and leave my fate up to the unknown. As much as I can, I like to take control of my fate.”