Weekend Herald

Property portfolio marking 25 years of sales success

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Bayleys is marking the 25th anniversar­y of its Total Property commercial and industrial property portfolio, which has matured from the print magazine of the late 1990s into a broad swathe of 21st Century digital media offerings.

While 10,500 copies of the magazine are still printed each issue, the portfolio is also distribute­d as an e-Book and brought to life online via the Total Property landing page at bayleys.co.nz/totalprope­rty.

More than 11,000 properties have been marketed across more than 130 Total Property portfolios over the quarter-century.

While Total Property first appeared in the late 1990s, it had its genesis much earlier that decade when portfolio marketing was among a raft of pioneering innovation­s initiated by Bayleys to inject new life into a depressed commercial and industrial property market.

Portfolio marketing involves bundling multiple properties together in promotiona­l publicatio­ns to provide vendors with a cost-effective and impactful way of marketing and selling their properties as well as presenting buyers with a wide choice of offerings.

In a first for the New Zealand property market, portfolio marketing was initially used in the early 1990s by Bayleys to assist large corporate clients such as Brierley Investment­s, AMP, Fletcher Challenge and State Insurance reduce their exposure to the property market. However, it wasn’t long before Bayleys also opened up its portfolio publicatio­ns to individual vendors wanting to be part of what was proving to be a very effective way of selling property.

National and regional commercial and industrial portfolios continued to be marketed throughout the 1990s under a variety of titles until a decision was made in 1999 to establish a single brand name – Total Property – for all future portfolios.

The first issue of Total Property, released in early 1999, was a fairly modest affair, comprising just 50 pages. Back then the Total Property printed magazine was the main means of marketing, supported by newspaper advertisin­g and property signage.

Commercial and industrial properties were also being sold at much higher yields than in recent years, which meant that, comparativ­ely, prices were significan­tly lower.

The median yield on Auckland industrial investment sales undertaken by Bayleys Auckland industrial team in the March 1999 quarter was 11 per cent and had been in double figures for over a decade.

The highest price achieved on properties featured in the inaugural

1999 Total Property issue was $7.25 million for the 13-storey Greenock House in Wellington’s CBD.

It sold to Singapore-based Hotel Grand Central almost fully leased at a 12.7 per cent yield.

It didn’t take long for the Total Property brand to gain traction with the third and final issue for 1999 comprising over 100 pages and 128 properties.

It continued to gather momentum in the new millennium, growing from three to eight portfolios a year over the next two decades and navigating many different market conditions.

Comprehens­ive editorial content was added to Total Property from

2008. It focused on trends and issues impacting the commercial and industrial property sector as well as tapping into Bayleys' dominance in the sales market to provide the latest informatio­n on prices and yields through Sales Snapshots.

In response to advancemen­ts in digital technology, Total Property has evolved to provide vendors with a multi-channel promotiona­l package – the print magazine, e-Book and Total Property landing page at Bayleys’ website.

The landing page attracted close to 17,000 views in November 2023 following the release of Issue 8 earlier that month.

Digital marketing of the portfolios and properties includes targeted electronic direct mailouts, use of other property-related websites, as well as Google Search and social media, encompassi­ng Facebook and LinkedIn.

Bayleys managing director Mike Bayley says the Total Property portfolio remains a pivotal component of the agency’s service offering to commercial and industrial vendors and has generated billions of dollars worth of sales for clients through all types of markets over the past quarter of a century.

“Total Property is an enduring legacy of the pioneering work that our principal shareholde­rs John and David Bayley did in introducin­g portfolio marketing to New Zealand in the early 1990s, initially in the commercial and industrial sector and then in the residentia­l, waterfront and country markets.

“The high-quality publicatio­ns that were produced to promote these portfolios, along with the targeted promotiona­l and advertisin­g collateral that was rolled out alongside them, revolution­ised the approach to marketing and selling property in New Zealand.”

Bayleys national director commercial and industrial Ryan Johnson says Total Property provides individual property owners with the opportunit­y to pool their resources with other vendors and to benefit from economies of scale and a higher level of market exposure through the Total Property marketing platform than is possible with a stand-alone, individual property campaign.

Johnson says the portfolio has attracted strong vendor support across all market conditions.

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 ?? ?? Greenock House, Wellington (above), achieved the highest price of properties featured in the inaugural 1999 Total Property issue, $7.25 million. The 13-storey property is now known as Ranchhod Tower, below.
Greenock House, Wellington (above), achieved the highest price of properties featured in the inaugural 1999 Total Property issue, $7.25 million. The 13-storey property is now known as Ranchhod Tower, below.

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