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Who Should Be on Your Internal Move Committee? Roles, Responsibilities, and Best Practices

Learn who should be on your internal move committee, their roles, meeting cadence, and governance structure for a successful office relocation.

December 9, 2025
Who Should Be on Your Internal Move Committee?

An office relocation is one of the most complex projects a company will undertake. It touches every department, every employee, and every system in the organization. Yet many companies approach their move without a formal internal team to manage it, relying instead on a single office manager or facilities director to handle everything. The result is predictable: missed deadlines, budget overruns, communication breakdowns, and a demoralized workforce.

The solution is an internal move committee: a cross-functional team with clearly defined roles, decision-making authority, and accountability for every aspect of the relocation. At Business Moving Group, serving Orange County and Los Angeles from our Buena Park, CA headquarters, we have partnered with hundreds of move committees and have seen firsthand what separates successful relocations from chaotic ones.

This guide covers who should be on your committee, what each member is responsible for, how to structure meetings and decisions, and how to avoid the most common pitfalls.

Why You Need a Formal Move Committee

Before we discuss who should be on the committee, it is worth understanding why an informal approach fails:

  • No single person has the knowledge: An office move involves real estate, construction, IT infrastructure, furniture procurement, employee communications, vendor management, budgeting, and logistics. No one person is an expert in all of these areas.
  • Decisions are interdependent: The IT team's cabling requirements affect the construction timeline. The furniture layout affects the moving sequence. The communications plan affects employee morale. Without a committee, these interdependencies create conflicts that are discovered too late.
  • Accountability gaps: When one person owns the move, everything becomes their problem. When a cross-functional committee owns it, each member is accountable for their domain, and gaps are identified early.
  • Institutional buy-in: A committee with representatives from every major department ensures that the move plan reflects the needs of the entire organization, not just the facilities team's perspective.

Companies that form a dedicated move committee are significantly more likely to complete their relocation on time and within budget compared to those that assign the project to a single individual.

The Essential Members of Your Move Committee

The ideal committee size is 6 to 10 members, depending on the size of your organization. Larger companies may need subcommittees for specific workstreams. Here are the essential roles:

1. Executive Sponsor (C-Suite or VP Level)

Attribute

Detail

Typical Title

COO, CFO, VP of Operations, or CEO (in smaller companies)

Time Commitment

2-4 hours per week during active planning; available for escalations

Decision Authority

Final budget approval, timeline approval, strategic direction

Key Responsibilities:

  • Approve the overall relocation budget and authorize spending above the project manager's threshold

  • Resolve cross-departmental conflicts that the committee cannot settle internally

  • Communicate the strategic rationale for the move to the organization

  • Remove organizational obstacles (e.g., convincing a reluctant department head to cooperate)

  • Serve as the final decision-maker when the committee is deadlocked

Why this role matters: Without executive sponsorship, the move committee lacks the authority to enforce deadlines, approve expenditures, or resolve disputes. The executive sponsor does not need to attend every meeting, but they must be available, engaged, and visibly supportive.

2. Move Project Manager (Committee Chair)

Attribute

Detail

Typical Title

Facilities Manager, Office Manager, Operations Manager, or dedicated Project Manager

Time Commitment

Near full-time during the 3-6 months before the move

Decision Authority

Day-to-day decisions, vendor selection recommendations, timeline management

Key Responsibilities:

  • Chair all committee meetings and maintain the master project plan

  • Serve as the primary liaison with the moving company, general contractor, and other vendors

  • Track the budget and provide regular financial updates to the executive sponsor

  • Manage the

    move timeline

    and hold committee members accountable for their deliverables

  • Coordinate the

    move scope of work

    document

  • Escalate issues that require executive intervention

This person is the engine of the entire relocation. Our

step-by-step office moving checklist

is designed to support the project manager with a comprehensive task list organized by phase.

3. IT/Technology Lead

Attribute

Detail

Typical Title

IT Director, IT Manager, CTO (in smaller companies)

Time Commitment

8-15 hours per week during active planning and move execution

Decision Authority

All technology-related decisions: network, phones, servers, AV, security systems

Key Responsibilities:

  • Audit all existing technology assets and determine what moves, what is replaced, and what is decommissioned

  • Design the network infrastructure for the new space (cabling, Wi-Fi, server room)

  • Plan the server and cloud migration, including cutover timing and rollback procedures

  • Coordinate with the landlord and general contractor on low-voltage cabling and power requirements

  • Manage the phone system transition (VoIP migration, number porting)

  • Plan and test the technology setup at the new location before move day

  • Ensure data security during the move, including proper handling of storage devices and sensitive equipment

Expert tip: The IT lead should visit the new space at least three times before move day: once during the design phase to validate infrastructure plans, once during construction to verify installation, and once before the move to test every system.

4. HR/People Operations Representative

Attribute

Detail

Typical Title

HR Director, HR Manager, People Operations Lead

Time Commitment

5-10 hours per week

Decision Authority

Employee communications, seating assignments, workplace policy updates

Key Responsibilities:

  • Develop and execute the employee communication plan using our

    office relocation announcement template

    as a starting point

  • Manage employee concerns, questions, and feedback throughout the process

  • Coordinate seating assignments with department heads

  • Update employee handbooks and policies to reflect the new location (parking, commute benefits, building access procedures)

  • Plan the new employee orientation for the new space

  • Address commute impact: identify employees whose commute will significantly change and develop mitigation strategies

  • Ensure compliance with

    OSHA

    workplace safety standards at the new location

The human element of a move is often underestimated. Our guide on

the psychology of a smooth office move

explains why employee mindset management is critical to a successful transition.

5. Finance/Budget Manager

Attribute

Detail

Typical Title

Controller, Finance Manager, CFO (in smaller companies)

Time Commitment

3-6 hours per week

Decision Authority

Budget tracking, invoice approval, financial reporting

Key Responsibilities:

  • Establish and maintain the relocation budget using our

    office move budget template

  • Track all expenditures against the budget and flag variances early

  • Process vendor invoices and manage payment schedules

  • Identify tax deduction opportunities related to the move (the

    IRS

    allows certain business relocation expenses to be deducted)

  • Negotiate with vendors and review contracts for cost exposure

  • Manage the insurance and

    Certificate of Insurance (COI)

    requirements

  • Plan for hidden costs, which our guide on

    hidden costs of moving a business

    covers in detail

6. Department Representatives (2-3 Members)

Each major department or business unit should have a representative on the committee. In a mid-size company, this typically means:

  • Sales or Revenue team representative

  • Engineering or Product team representative

  • Marketing or Creative team representative

Key Responsibilities:

  • Communicate their department's specific space, technology, and proximity requirements

  • Serve as the communication conduit between the committee and their teams

  • Coordinate department-level packing and labeling

  • Identify critical equipment, files, or processes that require special handling during the move

  • Validate the new floor plan and seating assignments for their area

7. Safety and Compliance Officer

For larger organizations or those in regulated industries, a dedicated safety and compliance role on the committee is essential.

Key Responsibilities:

  • Ensure the new space meets all applicable building codes,

    OSHA regulations

    , and ADA requirements

  • Verify that the moving company is properly licensed through the

    FMCSA

  • Review and enforce the

    office moving safety checklist

  • Coordinate fire marshal inspections and occupancy permits

  • Manage hazardous materials handling (chemicals, batteries, medical supplies) during the move

  • Ensure data destruction and disposal of sensitive documents meets compliance requirements

Committee Structure and Governance

Meeting Cadence

Phase

Timeline

Meeting Frequency

Planning Phase

6-12 months before move

Biweekly, 60 minutes

Active Preparation

3-6 months before move

Weekly, 60 minutes

Pre-Move Crunch

1-3 months before move

Weekly, 90 minutes; ad hoc as needed

Move Week

The week of the move

Daily stand-ups, 15-30 minutes

Post-Move

1-4 weeks after move

Weekly, 30 minutes (issue resolution)

Decision-Making Protocol

Establish a clear decision-making protocol from day one:

  1. Domain decisions: Each committee member has authority within their domain (e.g., IT lead decides on network architecture)
  2. Cross-domain decisions: Require committee discussion and majority agreement
  3. Budget decisions under threshold: Project manager can approve (set a dollar threshold, such as $5,000)
  4. Budget decisions over threshold: Require executive sponsor approval
  5. Escalation path: Any committee member can escalate to the executive sponsor if they believe a decision puts the project at risk

Communication Channels

  • Committee channel: A dedicated Slack channel, Teams group, or email distribution list for real-time coordination
  • Document repository: A shared drive or project management tool (Asana, Monday.com, or even a shared Google Drive) with all move-related documents
  • Employee-facing channel: A separate communication channel where the committee shares updates with the broader organization
  • Vendor portal: A way for the moving company, general contractor, and other vendors to share updates and documents

Common Mistakes Move Committees Make

1. Starting Too Late

The committee should be formed the moment a relocation becomes a serious possibility, not after the lease is signed. Ideally, the committee is involved in the site selection process so they can evaluate spaces against departmental requirements. See our

office move timeline

for when to form the committee.

2. Excluding IT

Technology is the single most complex and failure-prone element of any office move. IT must be involved from day one and must have veto power over any decision that affects infrastructure, such as floor plan changes that move the server room or construction timelines that do not allow enough time for cabling.

3. Ignoring the Employee Experience

A move committee that focuses entirely on logistics and ignores the human impact will deliver a technically successful move with a demoralized workforce. The HR representative must have equal standing with the facilities and IT leads.

4. No Budget Contingency

Every office move encounters unexpected costs. The finance representative should build a 10-15% contingency into the budget from the start. Our

office relocation costs guide

explains where surprises typically come from.

5. Poor Vendor Coordination

The move committee is typically managing five or more vendors simultaneously: moving company, general contractor, furniture dealer, IT vendor, cabling contractor, and more. Without a clear coordination structure, these vendors will make conflicting assumptions and create scheduling conflicts.

The Move Committee's Relationship with Your Moving Company

Your commercial moving company is the most important external partner your committee will work with. Here is how to structure that relationship for success:

  • Single point of contact: The project manager should be the primary liaison with the moving company. Do not allow every committee member to give separate instructions to the movers.
  • Pre-move walkthrough: The entire committee should participate in at least one walkthrough of both the old and new spaces with the moving company.
  • Scope of work document: Develop a detailed

    scope of work

    that the moving company and the committee both sign off on.

  • Regular check-ins: Include the moving company's project manager in your committee meetings during the final month before the move.

Business Moving Group assigns a dedicated project manager to every

office move

who serves as the committee's external counterpart, managing all logistics, vendor coordination on the moving side, and day-of execution. For larger relocations, our

corporate moving

team provides additional resources.

Sample Move Committee Charter

We recommend creating a one-page charter that the committee and executive sponsor sign at the outset. It should include:

  1. Mission statement: "To manage the relocation of [Company Name] from [old address] to [new address] by [target date], on budget, with minimal disruption to business operations."
  2. Committee members and roles: Names, titles, and specific responsibilities
  3. Meeting schedule: Regular cadence and expectations for attendance
  4. Budget authority: Spending limits by role
  5. Decision-making protocol: How decisions are made and escalated
  6. Success criteria: How the committee will measure a successful move (e.g., less than 4 hours of business downtime, within 5% of budget, employee satisfaction score above 80%)

After the Move: The Committee's Post-Move Responsibilities

The committee's work does not end on move day. Plan for a 30-day post-move period that includes:

  • Punch list management: Track and resolve issues in the new space (furniture problems, IT issues, temperature complaints)
  • Employee feedback collection: Survey employees at one week and 30 days post-move
  • Vendor final payments: Complete all vendor close-outs and final invoices
  • Old space decommissioning: Manage the

    decommissioning of the old space

    , including lease obligations, security deposit recovery, and final cleaning

  • Lessons learned: Document what worked and what did not for the organization's future reference
  • Budget reconciliation: Final accounting of all move-related expenses

Resources for Your Move Committee

Business Moving Group has created a library of resources designed to support every member of your move committee:

The

Small Business Administration

also provides resources for businesses planning relocations, and

OSHA

offers workplace safety guidelines that your committee should reference when planning the new space.

Get Started with Business Moving Group

Your move committee deserves a moving partner that matches their level of professionalism and preparation. Business Moving Group works alongside move committees throughout Orange County and Los Angeles, providing the logistics expertise, project management support, and execution capability that complex relocations demand.

Whether you are moving a 20-person startup or a 500-person corporate headquarters, we tailor our approach to your committee's needs.

Schedule a Free Consultation

to discuss your upcoming relocation and learn how we can support your team every step of the way.

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