A business can register two voters if it can to show some proof (some form of a lease agreement is an example) that it operates in Perth.

A business can register two voters if it can to show some proof (some form of a lease agreement is an example) that it operates in Perth.
A business can register two voters if it can to show some proof (some form of a lease agreement is an example) that it operates in Perth.
In theory, a small office with 10 companies operating from that address could register 20 voters, while a large corporate, just two votes.
Of course, there is an organisational issue here.
A big company that has multiple subsidiaries based at its office might be able to register votes for them, but they have to organise different representatives to vote on their behalf.
There is also a multiplier for property owners. An individual owner gets a vote in his or her own right. Joint owners each get a vote.
If a company owns a property it may nominate two people to be registered.
If multiple companies own part of a property they can each nominate two people to vote on their behalf.