Tag Archives: Real Estate Franchises

One Agency more commission in your wallet

Your tax return doesn’t lie

Real estate is a numbers game. But it’s possible you’ve fallen into the trap of looking at the wrong numbers. I know I once did.

Years ago, when I was a principal, I thought the key to success was sales, sales and more sales. Then one day, though, it hit me like a brick in the back of the head: it’s not what you make, it’s what you keep that counts.

Let me run two scenarios by you, and you tell me which sounds better:

  • Scenario 1: You make $100 in sales, but you pay out $85 in costs, (rent and other expenses), leaving you with $15.
  • Scenario 2: You make $90 in sales, but your costs are $60, leaving you with $30
One Agency more commission in your wallet

Your tax return doesn’t lie

Real estate is a numbers game. But it’s possible you’ve fallen into the trap of looking at the wrong numbers. I know I once did.

Years ago, when I was a principal, I thought the key to success was sales, sales and more sales. Then one day, though, it hit me like a brick in the back of the head: it’s not what you make, it’s what you keep that counts.

Let me run two scenarios by you, and you tell me which sounds better:

  • Scenario 1: You make $100 in sales, but you pay out $85 in costs, (rent and other expenses), leaving you with $15.
  • Scenario 2: You make $90 in sales, but your costs are $60, leaving you with $30
Business Composition Of The Coins, Calculator And Charts

Franchise free real estate group adds more members

One of the industry’s biggest groups continues to expand, with new members highly motivated to join a group that doesn’t charge franchise fees or insist on restrictive rules.

One Agency now has over 600 agents in Australasia, after recruiting four more in the past month – Elli Birnie (Brighton-Le-Sands, NSW), Jeff Chang (Parramatta, NSW), Hazel McGinty (Gosnells, WA) and Samantha Richards, (Toronto, NSW).

Furthermore, several of One Agency’s existing licensees in New Zealand have expanded their businesses by taking on new territories including Renate and Daniel Ochse in the Far North have expanded into Napier, while Ian Croft in Pukekohe has expanded into Papatoetoe.

Jeff Chang, who won RateMyAgent’s agent of the year for Parramatta in 2020, has moved from agent to principal after seven years in the industry.

Andrew Johns Photoadj

How switching real estate brands gave me the value I was looking for

Back in 1997 when I first became principal, it made sense to join a long-established franchise group. They provided me with the tools I needed for my business to grow and succeed. And it did, as my agency quickly became one of the leading franchise offices for this national brand. 

But that was then – and the internet has completely reshaped the property landscape in the subsequent years.

Everything’s online. And not just the homes we sell and rent, but also all the technology, systems, forms and documents you need to run your business successfully.

Google Img PaulD

The biggest lesson I’ve learned from this crisis

For a moment, I want you to imagine it’s 2019 – back when none of us had heard the term ‘coronavirus’.

It was a golden time, right? Well, no, it wasn’t, it was a tough year for many. My group, One Agency, has more than 150 licensees across Australasia, and when I visited our principals and agents, I saw just how many of them were operating in tough real estate markets.

Some, though, were thriving. Why? Because they’d built businesses designed not for summer but winter.

Fast forward 12 months and those principals and agents are still doing well, despite COVID.

That leads on to the biggest lesson I’ve learned from this crisis: you can never predict what will happen to your local market or the wider economy. So you need to build a business that can do well in any environment. How? By doing these three things:

  • Protect your revenue
  • Minimise your costs
  • Master your mindset

How to protect your revenue

Sales revenue is unpredictable, because you have no control over whether your local market goes up, down or sideways.

Property management revenue, though, is largely predictable, because rents are much less volatile than sales prices and volumes. That’s why every agency with a rent roll is safer.

Big or small, even one-person agencies can build rent rolls – you just outsource the different property management functions to freelance staff. One Agency has businesses of every size, including several solo operators, who do sales while managing more than 50 properties.

How to reduce your costs

You have limited control over your revenue, but you have complete control over your costs.

Remember: it’s not what you make, it’s what you keep that counts. That’s why you need to minimise your fixed costs and take a close look at your variable costs. Some ideas include:

  • Move from expensive main street premises to a cheaper, less visible office, or virtual office – these days, a strong digital presence is much more important than a strong physical presence
  • Send some tasks offshore – outsourcing will not only save you money, it will also make it easier for you to scale up and down when your revenue rises and falls
  • Refinance your debts – interest rates are at record lows, so you could potentially save thousands of dollars per year by investigating current lower-rate loans
  • Hold your group accountable – if you work with a branded group, research the market to see if you can find a group that will give you the same service for lower fees, as there is no such thing as a best brand, only a best operator

How to master your mindset

During my decades in real estate, I’ve learned that the market always turns – for better and worse.

You need to build a mindset that can handle these ups and downs. You can’t allow your mood to go up and down in tandem with the market, because that’s not sustainable.

When the market is booming, you need to remain level-headed; when the market is tanking, you need to remain optimistic.

Have a plan, work the plan and reset as necessary. A strategy with a goal keeps you focused.

So work hard on yourself. Hang out with positive people. Read personal development books. Take care of your physical and mental health. If you’re feeling down, don’t be afraid to ask for help.

One Agency Highrise Building

What’s the value of a real estate franchise?

While an independent agency may be able to build up a loyal and repeat client base after years or even decades servicing the same location, a real estate franchise offers agents and principals a way to bypass this, to an extent, with a nationally recognised brand.

When home sellers look for someone to entrust selling or managing their most significant asset, they may feel more secure in dealing with an agency that has an established name and identity. But it’s also clear that the traditional franchise model in Australia comes with frustrations for successful principals – namely, having to hand over a significant percentage of your commissions, alongside high ongoing franchise fees.

With the real estate landscape changing in response to the internet, it’s worth reflecting on what value is derived from being part of a franchise and how much a national franchise brand contributes to your success.

An established brand and identity

There’s an inherent professionalism that comes with being part of an established franchise or network. This is conveyed in the brand messaging, corporate livery, the retail experience with standardised office fit-outs and the familiar templates bringing consistency to every piece of marketing, from stationery to signage, to the myriad of advertising materials.

Real Estate Franchises

Leading Real Estate Brand Forecasts Failure of High Overhead Franchises

Paul Davies, CEO and Founder of One Agency Real Estate Group, has forecast the failure of high overhead businesses and particularly franchises as many areas head into uncertain market conditions and economic times.

Speaking from the 300 strong Australian and New Zealand-wide group’s headquarters in Sydney today, Mr. Davies predicted that high overhead businesses will struggle in a slowing property market, where the rate of price growth for residential properties has diminished in recent months, less turnover of properties, and pressure on maintaining agents fee levels as competition to survive increases.

“Franchise offices in particular have added overheads, and may have difficulty maintaining the narrow profit margins, creating added stress to meet their high overheads,” he says.

“I believe that many offices will close. The first will be ones with the slimmest profit margins, gradually followed by many others. I would go as far as to suggest, some franchises groups, that struggle to provide a fair exchange for fees, where their franchisees cannot justify the costs, will become irrelevant and cease to exist.”

Read more as reported by REB online today.