Weekend Herald

LEONIE FREEMAN

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Leonie Freeman has had just about every role in the property industry, apart from selling real estate. Now the chief executive of the Property Council, she has a lifelong passion for property and a desire to do her bit to sort out the housing crisis.

Was working in property always the plan?

No, I kind of fell into it. My parents were teachers and I was going to teach too. Then a careers adviser at school who was interested in getting females into jobs where there weren’t many suggested doing a property degree at Lincoln University.

I became a registered property valuer in the late 80s and was the first female in private practice in Christchur­ch. I was lucky to be taken on by the legendary Peter Cook [real estate agent, valuer and former president of the Real Estate Institute] who became my mentor.

Did you get a hard time for being a woman in a maledomina­ted industry?

Sometimes. I remember one valuer who was probably close to retirement, sitting in his office puffing on a pipe and saying to me, “Oh Leonie, I can’t understand why Peter took on a female valuer.”

And there were times I’d turn up to do valuations and get asked, “Are you the administra­tion person?”

I brushed it off and carried on. It’s good to see how much things have changed though.

Why did you move on from being a valuer?

I wanted to travel so I went off for a couple of years to do my OE and when I came back I decided to have a go at working for myself. It was risky but I set up a property consultanc­y business and it went really well.

One of my clients was the Real Estate Institute of New Zealand, which got me to undertake research for them. It was 1995 and I could see that

‘I suggested a website where properties for sale from all over the country could be listed, and everyone thought I was crazy.’

the internet was going to have a big impact on business. I suggested a website where properties for sale from all over the country could be listed, and everyone thought I was crazy.

Real estate agents would say, to me, “Leonie, nobody will ever buy a property that way.”

I talked about the concept for five months, and I nearly gave up because nobody was listening, until I talked to Peter Cook about it. He got it and said he would stand alongside me. Because he was so well respected in the real estate industry people started to pay attention, and that led to the launch in 1996 of RealENZ. co.nz, which is now realestate. co.nz.

Are you proud of what you accomplish­ed?

I am. It could have so easily not have happened if I’d given up. I think as well as having a vision you have to have the courage to keep going when people around you say no.

I ran RealENZ for three years, then decided I wanted my own business where I could instil my values and vision, and that I could transform and sell in a few years’ time. So I bought a small, rundown, largely residentia­l property management company and got a similar reaction to when I came up with the RealENZ idea.

It was scary, all of my money was invested in the business, but I was able to build a fantastic company with an amazing team. I sold it after seven years and needed some time off after that.

But you’ve kept taking on new roles?

I have taught part-time at Auckland University on their property paper, been a strategic adviser in the set-up of Auckland’s super city and worked on turning around the developmen­t programme at Housing New Zealand. I wanted to bring private sector entreprene­urial skills into the public sector.

I’ve become really passionate about housing and in 2016 I spent a lot of time looking at the housing crisis in Auckland and ways of solving it. As a result, I launched an initiative that uses a collective impact approach to address social housing needs and end homelessne­ss. It’s a framework that brings together multiple groups that are normally segmented to focus on a common goal. There have been some major success stories around the world and in New Zealand — the People’s Project in Hamilton is a great example.

How’s it going?

We had some great support from the private sector but couldn’t get government and council on board at the time. So I decided to try another approach. When the Property Council job came up I thought that would be a different avenue. We’ve got to shift people’s perception­s around thinking that any one group by themselves can fix the housing problem. You have to stand up and keep talking about it, and that’s what I am going to do.

My parents, who had three kids, scrimped and saved to buy a house in the 1960s. I look at comparable families today, teachers with kids, and they don’t have a hope of buying a house in Auckland. There’s something fundamenta­lly wrong about that.

Do you ever get time for hobbies?

I love to box. After the first class I thought I was going to die. But I stuck with it. I’m not the sort of person who wants to hit anyone but I did end up doing a couple of fights. I haven’t done anything harder in my life, it was a challengin­g mental journey as well as a physical one. I lost the first match and drew the second. I don’t feel the need to do any more fights but I box to keep fit and to help cope with all the craziness going on.

I also like to write. I have written and self-published two books — one on building a business and the other on two of the men in my family who served in World War 1. I’m currently working on a third, about my family’s history.

 ??  ?? Words Donna Fleming. Photo Fiona Goodall
Words Donna Fleming. Photo Fiona Goodall

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