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As proptech startups rake in investor cash, could COVID-19 mean a permanent change to the real estate industry?

As proptech startups :Different and Sorted secure investor funds, could the COVID-19 pandemic have a lasting effect on the way we buy, sell and manage property?
Mina Radhakrishnan
:Different co-founder Mina Radhakrishnan. Source: supplied.

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 didnโ€™t really know what to expect. So his team initially took a step back from clients and leads.

โ€œEveryone 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.

โ€œPeople 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.

โ€œThat doesnโ€™t mean to say that everyone is able and ready to move โ€” some are, some arenโ€™t,โ€ he notes.

โ€œBut 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 โ€œnot 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.

โ€œOne of the things that has been very baked into the way that weโ€™ve 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 thereโ€™s no choice, she notes. In the COVID-19 environment, these interactions canโ€™t be face-to-face.

And, as a technology company, :Different has been well-placed to support clients, offering things like 3D video viewings.

โ€œHaving 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 heโ€™s currently seeing demand increase week-by-week.

โ€œItโ€™s just phenomenal whatโ€™s happening,โ€ he says.

ListReady offers an entirely digital proposition that also doesnโ€™t demand any upfront payment from the vendor. Howes says heโ€™s always been confident, anticipating this would become the default way of listing a property.

โ€œWe didnโ€™t expect it to be this quick,โ€ he says.

โ€œI think COVID-19 just accelerated that proposition.โ€

proptech
MoneyMe founder and chief Clayton Howes. Source: supplied.

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.

โ€œProperty holds a very venerated place in the Australian commercial psyche,โ€ he notes.

โ€œFrom 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 โ€œan absolute focus on efficiencyโ€ here and in other industries.

proptech
Rampersand partner Paul Naphtali.

Itโ€™s not that real estate agents and property managers werenโ€™t aware of, or open to, new solutions previously. Itโ€™s very possible, he suggests, that with fewer people moving house, they just have some time to look into them now.

โ€œWhatโ€™s changed is the accelerated understanding, and pursuit of a solution,โ€ Naphtali suggests.

โ€œWeโ€™ve got complex markets where margins are squeezed and people are not necessarily having a great time. Thatโ€™s a perfect storm for a technology solution thatโ€™s simple and effective.โ€

And once the market embraces those solutions, he believes they will be there to stay.

โ€œOnce 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 itโ€™s 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.

โ€œTheyโ€™ve heard a lot from different industry leaders, and theyโ€™ve seen whatโ€™s happened in other markets. Theyโ€™re certainly ready to move,โ€ Duncan says.

proptech
Sorted founder Andrew Duncan. Source: supplied.

So the practices theyโ€™re implementing now are likely to stick around once the crisis has passed.

โ€œThey will push on in that direction at a faster rate than they were previously.โ€

For Howes, what was needed was an โ€œattitude 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, โ€œtheyโ€™re not going backโ€, Howes says.

โ€œThat model is gone.โ€

At the same time, this phenomenon isnโ€™t 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 โ€œbroader 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.

โ€œWhen we are in a place when you can’t do things in the same way youโ€™ve 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, โ€œto 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.

โ€œYou canโ€™t just do things the way weโ€™ve always done it, because you donโ€™t know whatโ€™s going to happen next.โ€

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