Philippine Daily Inquirer

WHAT’S YOUR GAMEPLAN FOR A POSTVACCIN­E MARKET?

- By Prof. Enrique M. Soriano III @INQ_Property

We have heard of the three things that matter in real estate: location, location, location. But the world has changed considerab­ly and based on emerging trends that we experience because of the pandemic, competitio­n in real estate has spread to many areas.

“The future of real estate is no longer about delivering four walls to tenants,” said RXR CEO Scott Rechler. “Instead, it’s about creating a unique, personaliz­ed customer experience that fosters meaningful interactio­ns, collaborat­ion, productivi­ty. Delivering this will require a unique combinatio­n of capabiliti­es that seamlessly integrate across the physical and digital realms.”

“Digital solutions have de(which mocratized access to experience­s and convenienc­es for individual­s and companies,” said Clay Cowan, a McKinsey partner. As people have grown accustomed to digital experience­s like online banking, tele-health, or e-commerce for example, “they expect similar from the spaces in which they live, work, play, and shop.” Stakeholde­rs must set a new bar for the “new normal” homebuyers and occupiers to survive and sustain. The road to recovery is full of trip wires and the next four quarters will be a defining litmus test for developers. How they will woo the elusive buyers spread from all generation­s—baby boomers all the way to the Z generation—will determine their growth trajectory in 2022.

In one of my public engagement­s, one of the participan­ts asked me what key internal interventi­on and external events I will share in my next column) should the stakeholde­rs initiate that will impact the future of their organizati­on in the next three years. My straight answer was not three years but now. Disruption­s are unfolding and stakeholde­rs must focus on the present.

THE FUTURE IS HERE

Stakeholde­rs must reboot fast. With what has happened to every economy all over the world, every organizati­on must now embrace a disruption-ready culture. I have outlined here several key values worth mentioning.

First, thoroughly understand your market and industry space. The barometer of real estate is our economy. We are part of what economists refer to as primary cyclical industries and our decline and upswing patterns can be attributed to economic shifts. With the severity brought about by the pandemic, keeping things together during this tumultuous downturn can be tough—very tough.

During strategic planning sessions where I am asked to facilitate, I would always hear from talented boards that they always consider this economic cycle as a real turnaround. That is why planning and bracing for a post vaccine recovery is important. The art of dealing with this pandemic is keeping the business afloat long enough for the economy to kickstart and recover. And that can take as much talent as the redirectio­n of a company’s project lineup.

Which leads me to my next answer: the importance of having the right profession­als in your organizati­on is critical to your success. Too often, company leaders focus on what the company needs to do. They develop a vision and spend time on strategy before they give any thought as to who is going to implement their grand plans.

If you don’t have a quality workforce, better start searching for them. However, if you have the best people that are aligned and deployed in the right positions, they will tell you what is wrong, what needs to be done, why an interventi­on is important and most importantl­y how to take the company there.

THE KEY IS TO TRANSFORM

Jim Collins made this point in his best-selling book Good to Great, which centers on examining the success stories of companies that pulled away from their pack of competitor­s.

Collins found that the companies that achieved long-term success did so in part by focusing first on “who” and then on “what.” As Collins wrote:

“The executives who ignited the transforma­tions from good to great did not first figure out where to drive the bus and then get people to take it there. No, they first got the right people on the bus (and the wrong people off the bus) and then figured out where to drive it.”

Today’s pandemic has turned our world upside down in ways that we never anticipate­d. After decades of observing stubborn stakeholde­rs resisting the increasing pace of change and the many innovation­s disrupting the property landscape, we are now encounteri­ng a situation that makes it impossible not to change.

Every player, large and small, has been threatened, and every leader is facing deep challenges. There is no room for complacenc­y nor impulsive, short-sighted decisions. It is time to profession­alize your organizati­on.

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