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TECH- DRIVEN PROPERTY LISTING PLATFORM NOBROKER SOUNDS THE DEATH KNELL FOR PROPERTY BROKERS

- By Venkatesha Babu

Tech-driven property listing platform NoBroker sounds the death knell for property brokers

If you use Google Maps to locate Bengaluru-based NoBroker Technologi­es, you are unlikely to find its office. It is not Google’s fault. NoBroker deliberate­ly misleads those trying to reach its headquarte­rs. That is because in September 2015, its office was attacked by angry brokers who were losing their commission­s paid by landlords and tenants. In the melee, an employee was injured and the office was ransacked.

Akhil Gupta, co-founder and Chief Executive, remembers the dark day. “What happened was atrocious, but it vindicated the work we are doing. Brokers felt threatened enough to attack us, showing that our work was having an impact and we had arrived.” NoBroker has moved to a different location since that incident.

The company was set up by three friends from IIT-Bombay – Akhil Gupta, Amit Kumar Agarwal and Saurabh Garg. The concept was there as all three had a uniformly bad experience when they were trying to rent homes and found that the brokers were not punctual, asked for high fees and even misled them regarding property details. Due to spurious online listings and informatio­n asymmetry, brokers remain the single biggest beneficiar­y in all deals struck between tenants/buyers and property owners.

The trio decided to come up with a technology platform that would make “the entire exercise of renting/buying/selling properties a happy, convenient and cost-effective experience,” says Agarwal.

Market Size, Revenue Model

NoBroker cites an assessment by the National Housing Board and a study by the Indian government to claim residentia­l rental brokerage in the top 20 cities is estimated to be `36,300 crore. “Even if we get a small portion of that business, it will be a win-win for everybody,” says Garg.

One such beneficiar­y is Chirag Patel. When he moved from Ahmedabad to Chennai, Patel was looking for a three-bedroom house for his family of six. A few brokers came up with a few properties but said they would charge 1-2 months of rent. Patel went online and registered with NoBroker. “I got the details of nine properties, which matched my metrics, and I was able to finalise on the third. I paid zilch for that.”

For property owners too, NoBroker does a good job. For instance, Chennai-based Purshotham­an owns a flat in Goregaon West, Mumbai. Every time a tenant leaves, he has to go there as the regulation­s in Maharashtr­a require every rental agreement to be registered. It means both tenant and owner have to be present and their biometric data will be verified.

But with the rental agreement and Aadhar identifica­tions in place, NoBroker will now go to the owner’s house and the tenant’s place to obtain their biometric signatures via a simple authentica­tion device. Post that, it will home-deliver a registered rental agreement within three working days.

Revenue comes from these value-added services and also from service packages. If one is not happy with the first nine free properties featured on the platform, he/she can pay `999 for viewing 25 more properties or go for a package worth `1,999 to appoint a relationsh­ip manager. This manager will not only find a suitable house based on one’s requiremen­ts but will also negotiate the details of the deal on the tenant’s behalf. For a sum of `5,999, the company guarantees to find a house within 45 days; otherwise, the money will be refunded.

“Nearly 95 per cent of our customers need not buy any package. We help them save about `25 crore in brokerage every month due to our extensive presence in Mumbai, Bengaluru, Chennai, Pune and Gurugram,” says Agarwal.

Asked how it is different from other property listing portals such as MagicBrick­s, 99acres, Housing.com, PropTiger and CommonFloo­r (now owned by Quikr), Garg says the company’s value propositio­n is different. “All our listings are verified; we do not have brokers on our platform, and there are no fake listings. We make the entire exercise hassle-free and that sets us apart.”

NoBroker currently employs around 270 people and has raised $20 million to date from the likes of SAIF partners, Fulcrum Ventures, BEENOS, Qualgro and Asuka Asset Management. Several angel investors, including Vijay Shekhar Sharma of Paytm and Anand Chandrasek­aran, a Facebook director, have contribute­d as well. The company says it has 2.3 million registered users and its app has reached a million downloads on Google Play Store.

AI, ML and Future Plans

The company identifies, sorts and showcases suitable properties, and also offers premium listings for a fee. But the key challenge it faced in the initial days was how to weed out brokers from the platform. By leveraging Google’s artificial intelligen­ce ( AI) and machine learning ( ML) platforms, the start-up claims to have developed a secret sauce, which is used at the back end to identify potential brokers. “We cannot reveal how it is done, but typically, a broker will browse all the categories, which is not the case with regular users with specific requiremen­ts,” explains Agarwal.

Commenting on its growth prospects, Mayank Khanduja, Principal at SAIF Partners, says, “Intermedia­ries in real estate have worked on informatio­n asymmetry and charged hefty fees for exchanging informatio­n. NoBroker has disrupted this approach with the help of technology.”

Another investor Teruhide Sato, founder of BEENOS (an Internet and e-commerce business incubator group) and venture capital firm BEENEXT, got attracted because of its scalable and capital-efficient model. “The current growth in revenue indicates customers are happy to pay for a service, which adds value,” he says. Sato thinks the concept should also work in other countries of South East Asia.

Gupta claims the company will be profitable in the next 12-18 months. It will also expand to more cities before going overseas. “The growth opportunit­y is very large, and we know which market to enter. Whenever traditiona­l players start ganging up on us, that market is ripe. We will get into residentia­l resale and commercial rental as well. We believe we have barely started.” ~

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