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The Real Estate Revolution
The franchising of
residential real estate agencies – one of the single largest parts of the
franchise sector in terms of overall unit numbers – is undergoing a revolution.
This revolution went
largely unnoticed during the booming property market which fuelled explosive
price growth and pushed housing affordability to record lows. Until recently, the
runaway success of the economy, easy finance and an oversupply of consumer
confidence created an environment where virtually any property was in demand,
and sellers would be fielding offers before the “For Sale” sign was erected.
The market boom resulted in
ever-shortening intervals between listing a home for sale, and the signing of a
deal. Selling real estate in such a market may have been something like
shooting fish in a barrel – it was almost impossible to miss. The rapid
turnaround from listing to sale, as well as the large sums to be made from
commissions attracted an influx of Generation Y salespeople whose early careers
have been defined by selling properties many of their friends couldn’t possibly
afford to buy, and by the weekend advertisements which feature bigger photos of
themselves than the actual house they are selling.
But all that is changing...
Real estate prices are
stagnating, or in some cases going backwards. The tightening of credit markets
has strangled the flow of easy-money loans. Combined with creeping doubts about
job-security and a general decline in consumer confidence, buyers are no longer
falling over themselves to buy real estate, shares, cars, big-screen tv’s or
pretty much anything that isn’t absolutely necessary.
Additionally, the current
economic climate is forcing more properties onto the market as buyers and
investors who overextended themselves now realize the difficulty of their
position.
The result is that agents
no longer have to compete so heartily for listings, but instead, compete for
buyers. Listings will continue to take longer to sell. Buyers will be fewer and
further between, sales will be more conditional, vendors may be more reluctant
to spend big dollars marketing their properties, and the costs of running an
agency will start to bite.
Rent rolls will assume a
new importance in meeting the running costs of an agency, and the ranks of
salespeople may gradually reduce as sales slow.
This is not meant to sound
unduly pessimistic. As a former real estate franchisor and network marketing
manager myself, the property cycle is moving into a new phase, with many of the
same conditions emerging that existed in the early 90’s during the recession
“we had to have”, and unemployment was nearly double its current amount.
On top of this – and this
is where the real revolution is occurring – is that the traditional commission
structure under which agents have operated since time began is now under siege.
In a rising market, an agent’s commission may be acceptable to the seller if
the agent can sell the property for a higher-than-expected figure. But in a
stagnating market, buyers forced to sell at prices below their expectations
will be very reluctant to hand over sizeable commission cheques.
However even in the rising
market, agents were coming under pressure to justify why such little effort (in
securing the sale when buyers were apparently everywhere), should result in
such high rewards. Under the traditional agency model, commission rates have
remained unchanged for decades, while property prices have grown exponentially.
When houses were under
$50,000 (yes, it was once possible to buy a house for the same price as a new
4WD), a commission of 5% on the first $18,000 and 2.5% on the balance didn’t much
and for a $50,000 property, would come to just $1,700. Out of this the agent
would have to pay for the For Sale sign, maybe also pay for the advertising in
the weekend papers, driven as many buyers as possible to the property, and
handled all the telephone inquiries.
Today agents are selling
properties for $500,000 on the same commission structure, resulting in a
commission of $12,950, on top of which they also charge the vendor for the
signage and advertising, and through the power of the internet, are no longer
plagued with phone calls for details about the property which are available
online for the world to see.
The reward for effort is
substantial, but vendors who don’t get at least an additional $13,000 in their
price struggle with this value proposition. Especially now that money is tight.
This changing economic
environment has given rise to a quiet revolution in new real estate agency
models that challenge the status quo. These models do unheard-of things like
charge vendors flat-fee commissions or discounted percentages where total
commission costs are just a fraction of those under traditional models.
Agencies of this nature are springing-up around Australia, and some have even
indicated their intentions to franchise. They are unlikely to win many converts
from established agencies who view the newcomers as upstarts and their business
models as a threat to the viability of the real estate industry.
But nonetheless such agency
models are winning traction in tough times and perhaps signal the beginning of
the end of traditional real estate agency models. This is a revolution other
established industries within the franchise sector should observe keenly.
Mature business models, however profitable, are always at risk of an unexpected
innovation that takes the market in an entirely new and unpredictable
direction.
In the current economic
climate, other industries are likely to experience similar radical changes.
Good franchisors will be monitoring both opportunities and threats to arise
from such changes and look to capitalize on them quickly to ensure the
long-term sustainability of their businesses. Those which don’t will cling to
the outdated practices of the past as their competitors sweep past them.
Jason
Gehrke is a director of the Franchise Advisory Centre and
has been involved in franchising for 18 years at franchisee, franchisor and
advisor level. He provides consulting services to both franchisors and
franchisees, and conducts franchise
education programs throughout Australia. He has been awarded for
his franchise achievements, and publishes Franchise News
& Events, Australia’s
only fortnightly electronic news bulletin on franchising issues. In his spare
time, Jason is a passionate collector of military antiques.
Copyright
Jason Gehrke 2008
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