The proptech industry has been building momentum for a number of years, with many homegrown Aussie solutions catching the eye of investors.
But, while the COVID-19 pandemic has changed the way we work, learn and socialise, could it also have a lasting effect on the way we buy, sell and manage property?
On the one hand, in this environment, anything that facilitates business-from-a-distance is a winner. On the other, the challenging economic times are widely expected to have a depressing effect on the property markets.
This week, two protech startups announced significant funding rounds, with :Different pocketing $7.1 million, and Sorted securing $5.6 million for its tech automating transactions between property managers and tenants.
So, is the writing on the wall for the real estate space? And does COVID-19 mean a shift to tech-savvy practices is on the cards?
Solutions needed
Speaking to SmartCompany, Sorted founder Andrew Duncan says when the crisis hit, he didnโt really know what to expect. So his team initially took a step back from clients and leads.
โEveryone was trying to work themselves out. You had to respect that.โ
But soon, he found a lot of the ongoing discussions that had been in progress started up again.
โPeople realised they needed more robust solutions from here on,โ he says.
At the same time, Duncan says the startup is seeing an uptick in inbound enquiries.
โThat doesnโt mean to say that everyone is able and ready to move โ some are, some arenโt,โ he notes.
โBut people are looking to come out of this with improved businesses, improved business models, and not to be waiting around too much anymore.โ
Speaking to SmartCompany after securing her own chunk of funding, :Different co-founder Mina Radhakrishnan says raising during a pandemic is โnot idealโ.
However, she says :Different has been in a good position to weather the COVID-19 storm, thus far.
The startup’s platform facilitates and automates rent payments, maintenance requests and house inspections. And while the property industry is a people-centric one, Radhakrishnan says her business is not focused on taking that human element away. Rather, it uses technology to try to improve it.
โOne of the things that has been very baked into the way that weโve thought about the company from early days is, how we can use technology to be able to humanise these interactions,โ she says.
Now, we find ourselves in a situation where thereโs no choice, she notes. In the COVID-19 environment, these interactions canโt be face-to-face.
And, as a technology company, :Different has been well-placed to support clients, offering things like 3D video viewings.
โHaving that viewpoint from very early on has allowed us to do that,โ the founder says.
Elsewhere, Clayton Howes, founder and chief of MoneyMe, says demand for the businessโ ListReady product has skyrocketed. ListReady offers financing to cover the costs of selling a home, including listing, advertising and staging, until after a settlement is finalised.
Demand for the service has doubled since February, Howes says. March was a record month for the business, and heโs currently seeing demand increase week-by-week.
โItโs just phenomenal whatโs happening,โ he says.
ListReady offers an entirely digital proposition that also doesnโt demand any upfront payment from the vendor. Howes says heโs always been confident, anticipating this would become the default way of listing a property.
โWe didnโt expect it to be this quick,โ he says.
โI think COVID-19 just accelerated that proposition.โ
Focus on efficiency
Paul Naphtali is a partner at VC firm Rampersand, which led the investment into Sorted, and he now also sits on the board of the startup.
โProperty holds a very venerated place in the Australian commercial psyche,โ he notes.
โFrom a technology perspective there are so many areas to optimise.โ
As an investor, Naphtali’s typically looking for opportunities to increase efficiency in a way that improves experience, he says. In this space in particular, there are many areas of business that remain woefully under-optimised andย COVID-19 is driving โan absolute focus on efficiencyโ here and in other industries.
Itโs not that real estate agents and property managers werenโt aware of, or open to, new solutions previously. Itโs very possible, he suggests, that with fewer people moving house, they just have some time to look into them now.
โWhatโs changed is the accelerated understanding, and pursuit of a solution,โ Naphtali suggests.
โWeโve got complex markets where margins are squeezed and people are not necessarily having a great time. Thatโs a perfect storm for a technology solution thatโs simple and effective.โ
And once the market embraces those solutions, he believes they will be there to stay.
โOnce the genie is out of the bottle, and people realise there is an opportunity to run a business more efficiently and deliver a better experience, then itโs hard to see that swinging back.โ
‘Ready to move’
This is an industry that was craving change, and a technological upgrade; all the founders we spoke to suggested everyone in the space was aware they were behind on the times.
โTheyโve heard a lot from different industry leaders, and theyโve seen whatโs happened in other markets. Theyโre certainly ready to move,โ Duncan says.
So the practices theyโre implementing now are likely to stick around once the crisis has passed.
โThey will push on in that direction at a faster rate than they were previously.โ
For Howes, what was needed was an โattitude shiftโ, even if it was a forced one.
Once people in the property industry shift away from the shackles of paper, forgo face-to-face meetings in the office, and realise how much ease and efficiency comes with tech, โtheyโre not going backโ, Howes says.
โThat model is gone.โ
At the same time, this phenomenon isnโt unique to the proptech space. Or even the tech space. While COVID-19 has seen increase adoption of remote working and collaboration tech, as well as advances in edtech and telehealth, Radhakrishnan suggests this is a โbroader societal thingโ.
People are reassessing things that have always been done a particular way โ such as going into an office to sign a lease, for example.
โWhen we are in a place when you can’t do things in the same way youโve always done them before, you have to adapt, you have to be creative,โ she says.
There are many things in business and in life that could be improved, โto make it simple and create a better experience for all partiesโ, she adds.
And this is especially pertinent in a time of uncertainty. At the beginning of the year, no one would have predicted we would be where we are now, Radhakrishnan notes.
โYou canโt just do things the way weโve always done it, because you donโt know whatโs going to happen next.โ
NOW READ: How a commercial property crisis could wreck the economyโs recovery
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