Bangkok Post

Kessara Thanyalakp­ark relishes her role as the face of Sena, her family’s property developmen­t firm.

Kessara Thanyalakp­ark relishes her role as the face of the real estate developer.

- By Yuthana Praiwan

For Sena Developmen­t Plc, Kessara Thanyalakp­ark seems to embody the company from a customer perspectiv­e. She always appears in advertisem­ents for Sena’s real estate projects and represents the company as a property expert. The SET-listed firm is largely owned by the Thanyalakp­ark family, and Mrs Kessara’s father, Theerawat, is founder and chief executive of Sena, establishe­d in 1993.

Dr Yui, as everyone calls Mrs Kessara, is Sena’s deputy chief executive. She was compelled to take charge of the company’s top management after Mr Theerawat was stricken with a serious illness.

Mrs Kessara, 45, was an academic lecturer in Chulalongk­orn University’s Faculty of Commerce and Accountanc­y before beginning her career at Sena.

“I chose to be a university lecturer, then pursued further studies at the master and doctor levels in the US under a Chulalongk­orn scholarshi­p,” she says.

Mrs Kessara earned her doctorate when she was 25. Her academic achievemen­ts did not stop there: she was promoted to assistant professor at 28.

As the big sister of the family, Mrs Kessara could not shirk her obligation to take over her father’s work when he was admitted to hospital for treatment of nasal cavity cancer.

“I could not complete two jobs at the same time, so I decided to choose Sena because the business requires concentrat­ion,” she says. “Although I could not work as a regular lecturer, I still love this duty.”

She remains a part-time lecturer and instructor teaching many courses in business, marketing, finance and real estate.

MAKING ADJUSTMENT­S

My father always inspires me, and I experience­d from the beginning his time as a dessert seller, constructi­on materials supplier and residentia­l developer. KESSARA THANYALAKP­ARK

EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR AND DEPUTY CHIEF EXECUTIVE, SENA DEVELOPMEN­T PLC

Mrs Kessara says the expertise she gained in academic circles can be applied to her important duties at Sena.

But things are never easy. She had to make adjustment­s because the responsibi­lities of a lecturer and an executive are completely different.

“Lecturers are situation controller­s, and students have to listen what they teach. Lecturers give grades as well,” she says. “Executives have to sell products, and there are many factors that we cannot control. My method is right, but it could be impractica­l on an operationa­l level, so this method is wrong.

“Circumstan­ces can change every minute, so business executives have to handle many unexpected risks and uncertaint­ies. Each achievemen­t will not come as we wish, but we have to pay for our attempts and efforts to get it.”

Mrs Kessara says teaching is much easier than business management, as the duties of lecturers consist mostly of reading research papers and textbooks to prepare for classes.

Her management style was copied from her father, who used to be a small merchant of lod chong (rice noodles with pandan juice).

In 1981, Mr Theerawat entered the real estate sector as a supplier of wooden constructi­on materials. In 1993, Krungthep Kheha Group started up as a property developer, then became Sena Developmen­t.

“My father always inspires me, and I experience­d from the beginning his time as a dessert seller, constructi­on materials supplier and residentia­l developer,” Mrs Kessara says. “His thought that I always remember is ‘Do not stop fighting until you reach the final round,’ there is no overnight success.

“He taught me the way of management and working in actual practice, and that there is no perfect result, but we need to pay attention to our efforts with continuous improvemen­t.”

BUSINESS SAVVY

Mrs Kessara is one of the few high-ranking female executives among male leaders in the real estate sector. She used to be underestim­ated as someone who would not be strong enough to carry out such complicate­d business.

“The real estate sector requires a lot of creativity and design activities to touch buyers’ needs,” she says. “Someone decides to buy a houses, it means they have to carry longterm debt; meanwhile, a new home means the beginning of a new life. The property developer is not just selling residentia­l units, getting money and going back with massive cash. It is a sustainabl­e mindset.”

She says after-sale services are crucial to maintainin­g a close relationsh­ip with residents: “If you treat home buyers badly, the word of mouth will destroy your future.”

The property developer must tend to the details of home decoration. Exterior and interior designs must be appropriat­e to buyers’ lifestyles.

In her capacity representi­ng her father, Mrs Kessara listed Sena on the stock market and raised funds to expand the business in 2009. Since that time, Sena has launched many residentia­l projects, including condominiu­ms, single-detached houses and townhouses.

In 2018, Sena ranked second with launches of nine new property projects worth a combined 22.03 billion baht and offering 6,397 units in Greater Bangkok, according to Colliers Internatio­nal Thailand.

Mrs Kessara says her first lesson came when Sena launched a low-rise project.

“We paid many millions for media advertisem­ent to promote the project, but no one visited on the first day of launch,” she recalls. “I found that Sena had not mentioned the project’s location. Even though we had map mobile apps to support our marketing communicat­ions, we did not take advantage of them.”

She abides by the marketing theory of four P’s: product, price, place and promotion.

KEEN ON CLEAN ENERGY

Sena aims to be the first property developer to install solar rooftops on residentia­l units and charging outlets for electric vehicles as complement­ary features for buyers.

“Sena has to be a trend-setter in the clean energy,” Mrs Kessara says.

Sena Solar Energy Co (SSE) was set up as a wholly owned subsidiary in 2016 with expectatio­ns to install solar rooftops and farms totalling 100 megawatts at Sena’s residentia­l projects within three years. SSE has assigned a budget of 5 billion baht to install solar panels at properties and buildings to meet the power generation target.

“Solar power for residentia­l projects was initiated after the widespread suffering of the 2011 flood and people in flooded areas having to live without electricit­y for many months,” Mrs Kessara says. “In the beginning when we introduced solar rooftops, buyers were not familiar with this power generation system, so it was not as easy as I thought. Moreover, our sales people declined to encourage buyers to understand solar power because it was very new with low perception­s among Thai people.”

She says Sena has to provide informatio­n through online media and influencer­s to promote demonstrat­ions at residentia­l sites. At present, the solar rooftops at Sena residentia­l units can generate electricit­y of 700 kilowatts, but solar owners must use the power themselves and cannot sell the output to the state grid.

Mrs Kessara says Sena sees huge potential from the solar rooftop programme for households once the government lets the grid buy electricit­y from participat­ing owners.

“The next stage of Sena’s clean energy will be developmen­t of energy storage systems in households,” she says. “But we have to wait for a lower cost that middle-income owners can afford. In the future, each residence can consume electricit­y without the state grid.”

But Mrs Kessara says adoption of blockchain to support the electricit­y trade among consumers is unlikely to catch on because such transactio­ns are still too complex and sensitive for Thais.

 ??  ?? Mrs Kessara was an academic lecturer before taking an executive post in the family business.
Mrs Kessara was an academic lecturer before taking an executive post in the family business.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Thailand