Real estate development may seem to be little more than laying down brick and mortar to develop a massive concrete structure. It may seem to be a business that anyone can and probably should enter, especially considering the massive unmet housing demand in India. Nothing could be further from the truth — real estate development is tough business. And though the entry barriers have reduced over time, the complexities of the real estate business have increased manifold.
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As of now, developers across the country are grappling with a massive unsold inventory of more than 7 lakh units in the top seven cities alone.
Hallmarks of success
1.Understanding that it’s still always about location
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Location is the most critical success component for any real estate development. Even the humblest of small-sized projects with the barest minimum of facilities and amenities will find takers if they are in locations with sufficient social infrastructure and good multi-nodal transport connectivity. The fanciest modern apartment high-rise will fall flat if the location doesn’t work. A real estate developer has to factor in this truth in the initial stage of land acquisition itself. He also needs to have a firm grasp of planned and proposed infrastructure upgrades in the area, and whether they sync with the project’s development timelines.
2.Accurate market assessment
In addition to assessing the location in terms of connectivity and social infrastructure, a developer also needs to study the exact demand profile, the competition’s projects and the development pattern in and around the location. What works in one city/ region may not work in another.
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3. Avoiding plagiarism
One of the worst mistakes a developer can commit is to merely replicate other projects that the catchment offers. One particular project’s success does not necessarily mean success for similar projects which offer nothing new. In fact, even self-emulation may not work — when a developer replicates a project greeted enthusiastically by one city in another, it can sometimes fail miserably.
4.Ensuring brand consistency and resonance
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Any real estate development must resonate with its potential buyers as per the company’s brand created over a period of time. If there is gross mismatch, a development can fail. For example, a developer specialising in affordable housing projects will find it difficult to attract buyers to a high-end/ luxury project, and vice versa. There is a niche that the brand fits into, and it must not deviate from it. This is why many developers who have in the past built a brand for mid-income or high-end housing have formed separate companies for developing affordable housing. By adopting this approach, some luxury developers have created successful affordable housing offshoots under the parent brand.
5.Creating the right buzz
Making the general public, and therefore potential buyers, aware of a new proposed development is a key success ingredient when it comes to sales. A detailed marketing plan has to be drafted to create the right kind of noise at just the right decibel levels, and to the right audiences. Developers who still rely solely on traditional offline marketing and lack expertise in, and understanding of, digital marketing media cannot succeed any more.
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6.Strategically leveraging local expertise
When a developer ventures beyond his accustomed borders, it is always advisable for him to tie-up with local majors for any real estate development in their territory. This not only brings local know-how to the table but also helps reach out to potential buyers, as the local players already have a good hold on the market. Many developers who had previously ventured out of their territories on their own without forging the right partnerships, and without creating enough market buzz, have faced serious disappointment.
7. Emphasising transparency
Transparent business operation is not only the best strategy in the post-RERA era — it’s the only strategy which will work, and not taking it seriously can potentially land a developer in hot waters. RERA is still a relatively new phenomenon, and is not even a reckonable force in some parts of the country. However, homebuyers are quite aware of the fact that it exists, and why it exists. Honest and transparent developers can and will succeed, but those who try to ‘play the market’ won’t.
Hallmarks of failure
The factors that result in failed real estate projects can be many, but we can isolate the seven most critical errors:
1. Ignoring the all-important location factor
Venturing into areas which are bereft of necessary support infrastructure with no immediate possibility of it getting deployed.
2.Following the herd
Starting projects in micro-locations which already have too much supply.
3. Launching without adequate capitalisation to complete projects
A serious drawback if one also lacks an established track record and therefore wields no clout with banks and other financial institutions
4.Excessive focus on land aggregation
Just because land was cheap at some point — primarily to drive up the company’s valuation, with no focus on actual project execution.
5. Diversifying into non-core businesses
And diverting funds meant for real estate projects to these ventures. Diversification is a good thing if it starts from a strong base and is backed by the right intent — many of India’s largest players are well-diversified. However, if diversification merely equals diversion and nothing else, it will backfire
6. Failing to undertake micro-location research
Investing no effort in trying to understand the product typology which is in highest demand, and merely developing the same product mix that had previously succeeded.
7. Failing to innovate
Trying to replicate a housing model that worked well previously, without checking how the competition is innovating and what customers expect now.
The writer is Chairman, ANAROCK Group.