Real Estate Investor Magazine South Africa April/ May 2020 | Page 32

SELLING Digitalisation of real estate agents Mixing new tech with old techniques D igitally the world seems new to the elderly, the slightly backward and not as digital as the digital age needs them to be. Digitalisation in the real estate sector is brand new, and the sector is in the process of adapting to the changing ways of doing things. Moreover, all the signs and traces of success are visible in the sector. Real estate agents are a primary example of the adaptation of the sector to going digital, the implementation of well running online sites and property apps is also a sign that the sector is on the right track. Today the overarching conversation among big players in the sector is the usefulness and impact of traditional real estate agents when compared to online real estate agents. As such Leadhome’s John Murray explains why, in the property industry, online versus traditional estate agencies is a false choice. Instead of asking the question of “Are online estate agencies the way forward?” John Murray, Chief Technology Officer at Leadhome, asks where should technology and estate agencies meet? “To answer this question, we need to look at what problems technology can solve in real estate.” To solve the debate over online versus traditional estate agencies, Leadhome looked to learn what customers, buyers and sellers, really want. The outcome of their internal research gave some insight into customers’ needs and pain points. What do customers need? A good result - The buyer wants the right property, at a reasonable price, and the seller wants a good price and a quick sale. Expertise - Customers are trusting an agent with their biggest financial asset, so they need someone who knows what they are doing. Convenience - Customers don’t want the hassle. They want good, consistent service, and someone to guide them. What are customers’ pain points? Bad service - Across the board, bad service is the biggest complaint. There is a huge variation in the quality of service, even among agents within the same franchise. Tedious fragmented process - The buying and selling of property is a tedious process, not aided by what traditional estate agencies are offering. No transparency - Customers have no idea what is going on during a sale. The process can take up to six months, and there is usually no visibility about what goes on during that time. High commission rates and hidden costs. According to Murray, “Technology eats these problems for breakfast.” Many other industries have solved these problems using technology, so why has real estate lagged in this area? When compared to many other sectors in the corporate space and across the board, the real estate space is a lot harder to disrupt than other industries. “Other industry disruptors like Airbnb and Netflix are operating in a space where you have high frequency, low-value transactions. There is no real commitment required from the customer to try a product. If they don’t like it, there is no major loss on their part,” says Murray. “Property sales, however, operate in a space of high-value, low- frequency transactions, making it that much harder to disrupt. What really counts in this space is expertise; informed, contextual advice and human reassurance. And technology sucks at these,” He adds. What is the solution? For the majority of the real estate market, an online-only model is not sufficient and isn’t likely to add value. Local agents still have a key role to play in most transactions. So, if the agency is not online, what does it look like? “Think of it on a continuum with traditional agencies on one side and online-only on the other. On the traditional side, there is very little technology, and high human interaction, on the other side, there is maximum use of technology and very little human interaction. Most of the major disruptors in the real estate industry fall in the middle of the continuum. We call these hybrid estate agencies. Many of these start as online-only and then either curve towards a more hybrid model, or go out of business,” says Murray. Why hybrid is the answer The traditional agent builds relationships, markets themselves, canvasses, gets to know their market, does marketing evaluations and pricing guidance, photographs properties, gives legal advice, lists properties, vets potential buyers, negotiates offers, conducts interviews, prepares contracts and more. “No one can be an expert in all of that. Estate agents jump from one task to another, and this kills efficiency,” says Murray. A hybrid agency looks at which of these jobs is best done by an agent – such as building relationships and trust, knowing the market, negotiating, and leaves the rest to specialists and technology. “This model is a smart combination of humans and technology, local property experts and specialists enabled by technology, online customer self-service, automation and AI, this is why online versus traditional estate agencies is a false choice – the future of real estate is tech-enabled but delivered by humans,” says Murray. Does it work? “The proof is in the pudding,” says Murray. The average Leadhome agent sells four times as many properties as the average agent in South Africa. In the current buyer’s market, one in five properties sell at or above asking price compared to the national average of one in 50, and properties sell 31% faster. “We have had just over 300% growth in listings of clients since 2017 and more than 400% growth in sales,” reveals Murray. His best advice? Invest in technology – there is no way around it. The most impactful piece of technology is CRM (customer relationship management). “Data is everything – you can’t optimise what you can’t measure. To be able to extract your data, manage it and learn from it will be critical to the industry in the future,” concludes Murray. SOURCE Leadhome 30 APRIL/MAY 2020 SA Real Estate Investor Magazine SA Real Estate Investor Magazine APRIL/MAY 2020 31