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  • Will You Add? - Auctions - Gold Coast Australia

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    0.5

    Raine & Horne 2 0.25

    Elders 2 0.5

    Wentworth 5 1

    Independants 8 3.25

    TOTALS 181 56.25

    Average Page Cost $4,500 - Estimated Advertising Spend $253,125 - Average spend per auction/week $1,398.48 - Average weeks for auction ads 4 - Estimated Auction cost/property $5,593.92

    Advertising costs vary depending on the purchasing power of the agency group advertising, but I have used a estimated $4500 per page. (Casual rates are in excess of $6000 per page) this equates to $253,000 being spent on advertisements each week on the Gold Coast for auctions. (Weekend 31st March is a average week with number of advertisements represented in the Gold Coast Bulletin.) Based on a success rate of only 33.1% for auctions, it means that over $169,000 is spent by property owners each week on the Gold Coast to advertise an auction that will fail. $169,000 every week! Based on 48 weeks for the year – that is over $8.1 Million dollars in property advertising for FAILED auctions. How can anyone say that this process is in the best interests of property owners?

    Local Information from Property Owners

    If you need information from property owners who can support the process of failed auctions on the Gold Coast please advise and I will supply specific information of people for you to contact, or I can simply create a process for them to lodge their complaint direct. This process will identify specific agents and agencies, and to be fair I would rather address the issue from a legislative process then create much attention to specific companies and individuals. This issue though needs serious attention, and I will go agent by agent if that is what it takes to provide a fairer system for property owners.

    Section 594 of the PAMD Act – Public Warning Statements

    Under the act the Minister or chief executive may make or issue a public statement identifying and giving warnings or information. It is in the public interest on the Gold Coast to be made aware of the failings of auctions on the Gold Coast. Too many people are being convinced to auction their property at significant cost, significant disillusionment and with a 67% statistical cha

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    I believe that certain real estate practices being conducted on the Gold Coast may be in breach of the Property Agents and Motor Dealers Act (PAMD) and the Trade Practices Act.

    These practices relate to promotion and conducting Auctions.

    The relevant legislation I will be referring to are;

    PAMD Act

    • Section 154 of the PAMD act specifies the Code of Conduct applicable to a real estate agency or agent.
    • Section 231 of the PAMD act specifies the code of conduct applicable to Auctioneers.
    • Section 593 of the PAMD act relates to false or misleading representations or statements.
    • PAMD – Real Estate Agency Practice Code of Conduct – Schedule 7 – Honesty fairness and professionalism
    • PAMD – Real Estate Agency Practice Code of Conduct – Schedule 9 – Agent to act in client’s best interest
    • PAMD – Real Estate Agency Practice Code of Conduct – Schedule 14 – Fraudulent or misleading conduct
    • PAMD – Real Estate Agency Practice Code of Conduct – Schedule 15 – High pressure tactics, harassment or unconscionable conduct
    • PAMD – Real Estate Agency Practice Code of Conduct – Schedule 18 – Soliciting through false or misleading advertisements or communications
    • PAMD – Real Estate Agency Practice Code of Conduct – Schedule 21 – Advice about market price or rent
    • PAMD – Real Estate Agency Practice Code of Conduct – Schedule 29 – Duty to obtain maximum sale price
    • PAMD – Auctioneering Practice Code of Conduct – Schedule 7 – Honesty fairness and professionalism
    • PAMD – Auctioneering Practice Code of Conduct – Schedule 9 – Auctioneer to act in client’s best interest
    • PAMD – Auctioneering Practice Code of Conduct – Schedule 14 – Fraudulent or misleading conduct
    • PAMD – Auctioneering Practice Code of Conduct – Schedule 15 – High pressure tactics, harassment or unconscionable conduct
    • PAMD – Auctioneering Practice Code of Conduct – Schedule 18 – Soliciting through false or misleading advertisements or communications
    • PAMD – Auctioneering Practice Code of Conduct – Schedule 22 – Advice about market price
    • PAMD – Auctioneering Practice Code of Conduct – Schedule 31 – Duty to obtain maximum sale price

    Trade Practices Act

    • Part V – Consumer Protection of the Trade Practices Act
    • Section 52 Misleading or Deceptive Conduct
    • Section 53 False or Misleading representations

    Auction - Definition

    An auction is a form of sale where potential purchasers make competing offers or "bids", with the person offering the highest bid being declared as the purchaser.

    Market Information – Gold Coast

    Australian property monitors - Home Price Guide – (Owned by Fairfax which also owns property website Domain) publish auction clearance rates for every major city within Australia. The statistics that relate to adjusted auction clearance rates include properties sold prior to Auction by private treaty negotiation ( Including private treaty sales prior to an auction increases the actual auction success statistic and is misleading the market further about Auction success). Representatives of Australian property monitors attend auctions and contact marketing real estate agents to compile these statistics. They rely in part on real estate agents providing factual auction result information.

    The published statistics for the Gold Coast are:
    Jan 07 32.6% 49/150
    Dec 06 25.0% 14/56
    Nov 06 36.0% 45/125
    Oct 06 33.1% 53/160
    Sep 06 33.3% 38/114
    Aug 06 37.5% 51/136
    Jul 06 35.8% 47/131
    Jun 06 32.0% 41/128
    May 06 34.7% 42/121
    Apr 06 36.3% 61/168
    Mar 06 28.7% 42/146
    Feb 06 28.1% 45/160

    For a full year on the Gold Coast as quoted by Australian Property Monitors – Home Price Guide there were 1595 auctions and of those auctions 528 sold at auction or prior to auction. This gives an adjusted clearance rate for the full year of 33.1% (528/1595). The real impact of these statistics is to quote the auction failure rate at 66.9%. Just over 2 out of 3 auctions fail on the Gold Coast. (This clearance rate would also include mortgagee in possession auctions which typically sell below market price due to a lowered reserve price expectation)

    The legislation

    The legislation specifically points to the responsibilities of agents and auctioneers. These responsibilities make it a breach of the act to make false or misleading communications or statements and for the agent or auctioneer to not work in the best interests of the property owner. If an agency or agent promote that auctions are the best way to sell a property they would be in breach of the act based on the auction clearance rates on the Gold Coast unless they can clearly demonstrate why that particular property would be an exception. If an agent or auctioneer are aware of these clearance rates and cannot clearly demonstrate how a particular property would be an exception, then they are not working in the best interests of the property owner. Clearly 2 out of 3 auctions would require scrutiny.

    Advice about Market Price

    If the agent or auctioneer provide advice about market price, either orally or written they must be able to substantiate it. The suggestion that an auction would be the best way to determine the market price may be misleading particularly if the highest bid at auction, whether the property sells or is passed in, is significantly lower than the advice provided. Having a final vendor bid, that meets advice to market price will not substantiate that the process of an auction was in the property owners best interest or was the best way to achieve a maximum selling price.

    Price Expectations

    Under the act, an agent has a responsibility to advise a property owner if they believe their price expectations are too high or too low. In the case of too high expectations, agencies do not provide that honest advice, but rather suggest an auction as a process to condition that property owner to accept a lower price then their expectation. This is a dishonest & unconscionable approach that costs a property owner thousands of dollars in advertising monies to simply come to an awareness of a fair market price.

    Duty to Obtain Maximum Selling Price

    The agent or auctioneer has a duty to obtain the maximum selling price. I don’t believe this is achievable on the Gold Coast for an auction when 2 out of 3 auctions fail. Additionally you have reservations from buyers who are well aware they do not have the same consumer protection or buying conditions at an auction. This reservation from buyers, to participate, particularly at a fair market price, results in a lack of competition at the auction from potential buyers. This situation compounds the inability for an agent or auctioneer to obtain maximum selling price.

    Disadvantaged Consumer Protection

    Auctions do not provide the same level of consumer protection. No cooling off period exists and there is no provision for conducting a satisfactory valuation or building inspection after purchasing at an auction, which is provided within the legislation for private treaty property sales. Buyers are well aware of this and avoid buying at auctions unless they believe the property is cheap – or the property is in a particularly high demand position.

    High Pressure Tactics and Coercion

    I have personally witnessed at many a Gold Coast auction, agents trying to influence a property owner to place their property “on the market” and to accept far lower bids for their property then the actual reserve price provided. This is pressure placed on a property owner to accept less, particularly because the property owner is only too aware they also spent considerable money on an advertising campaign that will potentially be wasted. The agent may in fact be recommending selling at a fair market price but if the price were significantly less than the original market price advice any property owner would feel reluctant to sell.

    Evaluation of Results

    I believe the office of fair trading has a duty of care to evaluate actual sale prices achieved at auction and compare them to the market price the property owner was provided by their real estate agent. Particularly if they were provided this price orally without any substantiating support documentation as is stipulated as a requirement on a 22a Form or with an attached CMA.

    Auction Practice in Other Markets

    Auctions appear far more successful in other markets in Australia. Melbourne averages 60% or above. Of the 7 major areas reported by Australian Property Monitors, the Gold Coast consistently reports the lowest clearance rates. Brisbane performs poorly as well with an adjusted clearance rate of 43.3% (621/1432) for the 6 months preceding and including January 2007.

    Saturday 31st March 2007 – Gold Coast Bulletin

    On this date, the following numbers of auctions were advertised in the Gold Coast Bulletin.

    Agency No of Auctions No of Advertising Pages

    Ray White 89 35

    Professionals 24 6

    LJ Hooker 26 4.25

    Harcourts 13 3

    Coldwell Banker 5 2

    First National 5 0.5

    PRD Nationwide 2 0.5

    Raine & Horne 2 0.25

    Elders 2 0.5

    Wentworth 5 1

    Independants 8 3.25

    TOTALS 181 56.25

    Average Page Cost $4,500 - Estimated Advertising Spend $253,125 - Average spend per auction/week $1,398.48 - Average weeks for auction ads 4 - Estimated Auction cost/property $5,593.92

    Advertising costs vary depending on the purchasing power of the agency group advertising, but I have used a estimated $4500 per page. (Casual rates are in excess of $6000 per page) this equates to $253,000 being spent on advertisements each week on the Gold Coast for auctions. (Weekend 31st March is a average week with number of advertisements represented in the Gold Coast Bulletin.) Based on a success rate of only 33.1% for auctions, it means that over $169,000 is spent by property owners each week on the Gold Coast to advertise an auction that will fail. $169,000 every week! Based on 48 weeks for the year – that is over $8.1 Million dollars in property advertising for FAILED auctions. How can anyone say that this process is in the best interests of property owners?

    Local Information from Property Owners

    If you need information from property owners who can support the process of failed auctions on the Gold Coast please advise and I will supply specific information of people for you to contact, or I can simply create a process for them to lodge their complaint direct. This process will identify specific agents and agencies, and to be fair I would rather address the issue from a legislative process then create much attention to specific companies and individuals. This issue though needs serious attention, and I will go agent by agent if that is what it takes to provide a fairer system for property owners.

    Section 594 of the PAMD Act – Public Warning Statements

    Under the act the Minister or chief executive may make or issue a public statement identifying and giving warnings or information. It is in the public interest on the Gold Coast to be made aware of the failings of auctions on the Gold Coast. Too many people are being convinced to auction their property at significant cost, significant disillusionment and with a 67% statistical chan

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    alse or Misleading representations

    Auction - Definition

    An auction is a form of sale where potential purchasers make competing offers or "bids", with the person offering the highest bid being declared as the purchaser.

    Market Information – Gold Coast

    Australian property monitors - Home Price Guide – (Owned by Fairfax which also owns property website Domain) publish auction clearance rates for every major city within Australia. The statistics that relate to adjusted auction clearance rates include properties sold prior to Auction by private treaty negotiation ( Including private treaty sales prior to an auction increases the actual auction success statistic and is misleading the market further about Auction success). Representatives of Australian property monitors attend auctions and contact marketing real estate agents to compile these statistics. They rely in part on real estate agents providing factual auction result information.

    The published statistics for the Gold Coast are:
    Jan 07 32.6% 49/150
    Dec 06 25.0% 14/56
    Nov 06 36.0% 45/125
    Oct 06 33.1% 53/160
    Sep 06 33.3% 38/114
    Aug 06 37.5% 51/136
    Jul 06 35.8% 47/131
    Jun 06 32.0% 41/128
    May 06 34.7% 42/121
    Apr 06 36.3% 61/168
    Mar 06 28.7% 42/146
    Feb 06 28.1% 45/160

    For a full year on the Gold Coast as quoted by Australian Property Monitors – Home Price Guide there were 1595 auctions and of those auctions 528 sold at auction or prior to auction. This gives an adjusted clearance rate for the full year of 33.1% (528/1595). The real impact of these statistics is to quote the auction failure rate at 66.9%. Just over 2 out of 3 auctions fail on the Gold Coast. (This clearance rate would also include mortgagee in possession auctions which typically sell below market price due to a lowered reserve price expectation)

    The legislation

    The legislation specifically points to the responsibilities of agents and auctioneers. These responsibilities make it a breach of the act to make false or misleading communications or statements and for the agent or auctioneer to not work in the best interests of the property owner. If an agency or agent promote that auctions are the best way to sell a property they would be in breach of the act based on the auction clearance rates on the Gold Coast unless they can clearly demonstrate why that particular property would be an exception. If an agent or auctioneer are aware of these clearance rates and cannot clearly demonstrate how a particular property would be an exception, then they are not working in the best interests of the property owner. Clearly 2 out of 3 auctions would require scrutiny.

    Advice about Market Price

    If the agent or auctioneer provide advice about market price, either orally or written they must be able to substantiate it. The suggestion that an auction would be the best way to determine the market price may be misleading particularly if the highest bid at auction, whether the property sells or is passed in, is significantly lower than the advice provided. Having a final vendor bid, that meets advice to market price will not substantiate that the process of an auction was in the property owners best interest or was the best way to achieve a maximum selling price.

    Price Expectations

    Under the act, an agent has a responsibility to advise a property owner if they believe their price expectations are too high or too low. In the case of too high expectations, agencies do not provide that honest advice, but rather suggest an auction as a process to condition that property owner to accept a lower price then their expectation. This is a dishonest & unconscionable approach that costs a property owner thousands of dollars in advertising monies to simply come to an awareness of a fair market price.

    Duty to Obtain Maximum Selling Price

    The agent or auctioneer has a duty to obtain the maximum selling price. I don’t believe this is achievable on the Gold Coast for an auction when 2 out of 3 auctions fail. Additionally you have reservations from buyers who are well aware they do not have the same consumer protection or buying conditions at an auction. This reservation from buyers, to participate, particularly at a fair market price, results in a lack of competition at the auction from potential buyers. This situation compounds the inability for an agent or auctioneer to obtain maximum selling price.

    Disadvantaged Consumer Protection

    Auctions do not provide the same level of consumer protection. No cooling off period exists and there is no provision for conducting a satisfactory valuation or building inspection after purchasing at an auction, which is provided within the legislation for private treaty property sales. Buyers are well aware of this and avoid buying at auctions unless they believe the property is cheap – or the property is in a particularly high demand position.

    High Pressure Tactics and Coercion

    I have personally witnessed at many a Gold Coast auction, agents trying to influence a property owner to place their property “on the market” and to accept far lower bids for their property then the actual reserve price provided. This is pressure placed on a property owner to accept less, particularly because the property owner is only too aware they also spent considerable money on an advertising campaign that will potentially be wasted. The agent may in fact be recommending selling at a fair market price but if the price were significantly less than the original market price advice any property owner would feel reluctant to sell.

    Evaluation of Results

    I believe the office of fair trading has a duty of care to evaluate actual sale prices achieved at auction and compare them to the market price the property owner was provided by their real estate agent. Particularly if they were provided this price orally without any substantiating support documentation as is stipulated as a requirement on a 22a Form or with an attached CMA.

    Auction Practice in Other Markets

    Auctions appear far more successful in other markets in Australia. Melbourne averages 60% or above. Of the 7 major areas reported by Australian Property Monitors, the Gold Coast consistently reports the lowest clearance rates. Brisbane performs poorly as well with an adjusted clearance rate of 43.3% (621/1432) for the 6 months preceding and including January 2007.

    Saturday 31st March 2007 – Gold Coast Bulletin

    On this date, the following numbers of auctions were advertised in the Gold Coast Bulletin.

    Agency No of Auctions No of Advertising Pages

    Ray White 89 35

    Professionals 24 6

    LJ Hooker 26 4.25

    Harcourts 13 3

    Coldwell Banker 5 2

    First National 5 0.5

    PRD Nationwide 2 0.5

    Raine & Horne 2 0.25

    Elders 2 0.5

    Wentworth 5 1

    Independants 8 3.25

    TOTALS 181 56.25

    Average Page Cost $4,500 - Estimated Advertising Spend $253,125 - Average spend per auction/week $1,398.48 - Average weeks for auction ads 4 - Estimated Auction cost/property $5,593.92

    Advertising costs vary depending on the purchasing power of the agency group advertising, but I have used a estimated $4500 per page. (Casual rates are in excess of $6000 per page) this equates to $253,000 being spent on advertisements each week on the Gold Coast for auctions. (Weekend 31st March is a average week with number of advertisements represented in the Gold Coast Bulletin.) Based on a success rate of only 33.1% for auctions, it means that over $169,000 is spent by property owners each week on the Gold Coast to advertise an auction that will fail. $169,000 every week! Based on 48 weeks for the year – that is over $8.1 Million dollars in property advertising for FAILED auctions. How can anyone say that this process is in the best interests of property owners?

    Local Information from Property Owners

    If you need information from property owners who can support the process of failed auctions on the Gold Coast please advise and I will supply specific information of people for you to contact, or I can simply create a process for them to lodge their complaint direct. This process will identify specific agents and agencies, and to be fair I would rather address the issue from a legislative process then create much attention to specific companies and individuals. This issue though needs serious attention, and I will go agent by agent if that is what it takes to provide a fairer system for property owners.

    Section 594 of the PAMD Act – Public Warning Statements

    Under the act the Minister or chief executive may make or issue a public statement identifying and giving warnings or information. It is in the public interest on the Gold Coast to be made aware of the failings of auctions on the Gold Coast. Too many people are being convinced to auction their property at significant cost, significant disillusionment and with a 67% statistical cha

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    In her third Harry Potter novel, 'The Prisoner of Azkaban', J.K. Rowling introduces a mysterious clan of spiny, cloaked creatures capable of siphoning off happiness and all good thoughts from anyone in their presence. Extended exposure to these scabby grim reapers, called Dementors, resulted in madness or death for even the most joyful individuals. In the world of equipment leasing, the closest things to Dementors are lessors who lose confidence in defaulting lessees. If your firm faces imminent payment default, there are several actions you can take to improve your chances of navigating this unfortunate situation.As in most situations that can spin out of control, effective communication between lessee and lessor is extremely important. At the start of the lease, you are primarily concerned with obtaining flexible, cost effective equipment financing. The lessor's primarily objective is to originate a profitable lease transaction. Once a payment default is in the offing, the primary concerns of both parties change. You now focus on taking actions to guarantee survival, while the lessor seeks protection and recovery of the lease investment. That being said, it is very important that you appreciate the lessor?s concerns when you are planning a recovery and when communicating with the lessor.As a first step, you should notify the lessor when a payment default seems unavoidable. No one wants to be blindsided by an unexplained delinquency as the first indication of a problem. Most lessors will appreciate your forthright candor in alerting them. Be prepared to give an explanation of the cause of the payment problem, a detailed account of your company's financial condition, and your plan to correct the situation. If you are able to generate financial projections, they will prove helpful in convincing the lessor to allow you to execute your recovery plan.Try to stay in compl
    less they can clearly demonstrate why that particular property would be an exception. If an agent or auctioneer are aware of these clearance rates and cannot clearly demonstrate how a particular property would be an exception, then they are not working in the best interests of the property owner. Clearly 2 out of 3 auctions would require scrutiny.

    Advice about Market Price

    If the agent or auctioneer provide advice about market price, either orally or written they must be able to substantiate it. The suggestion that an auction would be the best way to determine the market price may be misleading particularly if the highest bid at auction, whether the property sells or is passed in, is significantly lower than the advice provided. Having a final vendor bid, that meets advice to market price will not substantiate that the process of an auction was in the property owners best interest or was the best way to achieve a maximum selling price.

    Price Expectations

    Under the act, an agent has a responsibility to advise a property owner if they believe their price expectations are too high or too low. In the case of too high expectations, agencies do not provide that honest advice, but rather suggest an auction as a process to condition that property owner to accept a lower price then their expectation. This is a dishonest & unconscionable approach that costs a property owner thousands of dollars in advertising monies to simply come to an awareness of a fair market price.

    Duty to Obtain Maximum Selling Price

    The agent or auctioneer has a duty to obtain the maximum selling price. I don’t believe this is achievable on the Gold Coast for an auction when 2 out of 3 auctions fail. Additionally you have reservations from buyers who are well aware they do not have the same consumer protection or buying conditions at an auction. This reservation from buyers, to participate, particularly at a fair market price, results in a lack of competition at the auction from potential buyers. This situation compounds the inability for an agent or auctioneer to obtain maximum selling price.

    Disadvantaged Consumer Protection

    Auctions do not provide the same level of consumer protection. No cooling off period exists and there is no provision for conducting a satisfactory valuation or building inspection after purchasing at an auction, which is provided within the legislation for private treaty property sales. Buyers are well aware of this and avoid buying at auctions unless they believe the property is cheap – or the property is in a particularly high demand position.

    High Pressure Tactics and Coercion

    I have personally witnessed at many a Gold Coast auction, agents trying to influence a property owner to place their property “on the market” and to accept far lower bids for their property then the actual reserve price provided. This is pressure placed on a property owner to accept less, particularly because the property owner is only too aware they also spent considerable money on an advertising campaign that will potentially be wasted. The agent may in fact be recommending selling at a fair market price but if the price were significantly less than the original market price advice any property owner would feel reluctant to sell.

    Evaluation of Results

    I believe the office of fair trading has a duty of care to evaluate actual sale prices achieved at auction and compare them to the market price the property owner was provided by their real estate agent. Particularly if they were provided this price orally without any substantiating support documentation as is stipulated as a requirement on a 22a Form or with an attached CMA.

    Auction Practice in Other Markets

    Auctions appear far more successful in other markets in Australia. Melbourne averages 60% or above. Of the 7 major areas reported by Australian Property Monitors, the Gold Coast consistently reports the lowest clearance rates. Brisbane performs poorly as well with an adjusted clearance rate of 43.3% (621/1432) for the 6 months preceding and including January 2007.

    Saturday 31st March 2007 – Gold Coast Bulletin

    On this date, the following numbers of auctions were advertised in the Gold Coast Bulletin.

    Agency No of Auctions No of Advertising Pages

    Ray White 89 35

    Professionals 24 6

    LJ Hooker 26 4.25

    Harcourts 13 3

    Coldwell Banker 5 2

    First National 5 0.5

    PRD Nationwide 2 0.5

    Raine & Horne 2 0.25

    Elders 2 0.5

    Wentworth 5 1

    Independants 8 3.25

    TOTALS 181 56.25

    Average Page Cost $4,500 - Estimated Advertising Spend $253,125 - Average spend per auction/week $1,398.48 - Average weeks for auction ads 4 - Estimated Auction cost/property $5,593.92

    Advertising costs vary depending on the purchasing power of the agency group advertising, but I have used a estimated $4500 per page. (Casual rates are in excess of $6000 per page) this equates to $253,000 being spent on advertisements each week on the Gold Coast for auctions. (Weekend 31st March is a average week with number of advertisements represented in the Gold Coast Bulletin.) Based on a success rate of only 33.1% for auctions, it means that over $169,000 is spent by property owners each week on the Gold Coast to advertise an auction that will fail. $169,000 every week! Based on 48 weeks for the year – that is over $8.1 Million dollars in property advertising for FAILED auctions. How can anyone say that this process is in the best interests of property owners?

    Local Information from Property Owners

    If you need information from property owners who can support the process of failed auctions on the Gold Coast please advise and I will supply specific information of people for you to contact, or I can simply create a process for them to lodge their complaint direct. This process will identify specific agents and agencies, and to be fair I would rather address the issue from a legislative process then create much attention to specific companies and individuals. This issue though needs serious attention, and I will go agent by agent if that is what it takes to provide a fairer system for property owners.

    Section 594 of the PAMD Act – Public Warning Statements

    Under the act the Minister or chief executive may make or issue a public statement identifying and giving warnings or information. It is in the public interest on the Gold Coast to be made aware of the failings of auctions on the Gold Coast. Too many people are being convinced to auction their property at significant cost, significant disillusionment and with a 67% statistical cha

    How To Promote Your Business With Other Online Business Owners
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    on, which is provided within the legislation for private treaty property sales. Buyers are well aware of this and avoid buying at auctions unless they believe the property is cheap – or the property is in a particularly high demand position.

    High Pressure Tactics and Coercion

    I have personally witnessed at many a Gold Coast auction, agents trying to influence a property owner to place their property “on the market” and to accept far lower bids for their property then the actual reserve price provided. This is pressure placed on a property owner to accept less, particularly because the property owner is only too aware they also spent considerable money on an advertising campaign that will potentially be wasted. The agent may in fact be recommending selling at a fair market price but if the price were significantly less than the original market price advice any property owner would feel reluctant to sell.

    Evaluation of Results

    I believe the office of fair trading has a duty of care to evaluate actual sale prices achieved at auction and compare them to the market price the property owner was provided by their real estate agent. Particularly if they were provided this price orally without any substantiating support documentation as is stipulated as a requirement on a 22a Form or with an attached CMA.

    Auction Practice in Other Markets

    Auctions appear far more successful in other markets in Australia. Melbourne averages 60% or above. Of the 7 major areas reported by Australian Property Monitors, the Gold Coast consistently reports the lowest clearance rates. Brisbane performs poorly as well with an adjusted clearance rate of 43.3% (621/1432) for the 6 months preceding and including January 2007.

    Saturday 31st March 2007 – Gold Coast Bulletin

    On this date, the following numbers of auctions were advertised in the Gold Coast Bulletin.

    Agency No of Auctions No of Advertising Pages

    Ray White 89 35

    Professionals 24 6

    LJ Hooker 26 4.25

    Harcourts 13 3

    Coldwell Banker 5 2

    First National 5 0.5

    PRD Nationwide 2 0.5

    Raine & Horne 2 0.25

    Elders 2 0.5

    Wentworth 5 1

    Independants 8 3.25

    TOTALS 181 56.25

    Average Page Cost $4,500 - Estimated Advertising Spend $253,125 - Average spend per auction/week $1,398.48 - Average weeks for auction ads 4 - Estimated Auction cost/property $5,593.92

    Advertising costs vary depending on the purchasing power of the agency group advertising, but I have used a estimated $4500 per page. (Casual rates are in excess of $6000 per page) this equates to $253,000 being spent on advertisements each week on the Gold Coast for auctions. (Weekend 31st March is a average week with number of advertisements represented in the Gold Coast Bulletin.) Based on a success rate of only 33.1% for auctions, it means that over $169,000 is spent by property owners each week on the Gold Coast to advertise an auction that will fail. $169,000 every week! Based on 48 weeks for the year – that is over $8.1 Million dollars in property advertising for FAILED auctions. How can anyone say that this process is in the best interests of property owners?

    Local Information from Property Owners

    If you need information from property owners who can support the process of failed auctions on the Gold Coast please advise and I will supply specific information of people for you to contact, or I can simply create a process for them to lodge their complaint direct. This process will identify specific agents and agencies, and to be fair I would rather address the issue from a legislative process then create much attention to specific companies and individuals. This issue though needs serious attention, and I will go agent by agent if that is what it takes to provide a fairer system for property owners.

    Section 594 of the PAMD Act – Public Warning Statements

    Under the act the Minister or chief executive may make or issue a public statement identifying and giving warnings or information. It is in the public interest on the Gold Coast to be made aware of the failings of auctions on the Gold Coast. Too many people are being convinced to auction their property at significant cost, significant disillusionment and with a 67% statistical cha

    Building a Strong Customer Service Team
    There are more and more demands being made of front line team members, and sometimes the pressure can be heard by your customer. As the leader of a customer facing team you must be aware of what is going on with your team members - how to best support them, develop their skills and handle some tough situations. Building a strong customer service team is no easy feat. Here are some suggestions for building and strengthening your team:Hire the right people Decide up front what skills, strengths and personality you want on the team. The team creates its own culture based on your leadership. Be clear in interviews about what expectations you have for the job, what will create success and how it will be measured. As you narrow down candidates it’s a good idea to have them meet a few people on the team. Let the candidates get a feel for the team they may be working with.Be a team member as well as a manager and leader A successful team is only as successful as each individual team member. By viewing each role as an integral part of the team, not as a subordinate, each team member feels valued. This results in greater trust, smoother communication and better individual and team results.Model the behaviour you want to see As a leader you are the role model for the team. They set the tone based on you. When things go wrong they look to you for help. After a tough customer call it’s important that they feel they can tell you about it - for two reasons: you never want to be broad sided by an irate customer or customer issue, and you want your team to have trust in you. You can information gather after a tough call which allows you to identify any trends in product issues or identify any training or interpersonal issues. The sooner these are identified the better.Jointly set objectives It’s amazing what happens when team members are asked t
    0.5

    Raine & Horne 2 0.25

    Elders 2 0.5

    Wentworth 5 1

    Independants 8 3.25

    TOTALS 181 56.25

    Average Page Cost $4,500 - Estimated Advertising Spend $253,125 - Average spend per auction/week $1,398.48 - Average weeks for auction ads 4 - Estimated Auction cost/property $5,593.92

    Advertising costs vary depending on the purchasing power of the agency group advertising, but I have used a estimated $4500 per page. (Casual rates are in excess of $6000 per page) this equates to $253,000 being spent on advertisements each week on the Gold Coast for auctions. (Weekend 31st March is a average week with number of advertisements represented in the Gold Coast Bulletin.) Based on a success rate of only 33.1% for auctions, it means that over $169,000 is spent by property owners each week on the Gold Coast to advertise an auction that will fail. $169,000 every week! Based on 48 weeks for the year – that is over $8.1 Million dollars in property advertising for FAILED auctions. How can anyone say that this process is in the best interests of property owners?

    Local Information from Property Owners

    If you need information from property owners who can support the process of failed auctions on the Gold Coast please advise and I will supply specific information of people for you to contact, or I can simply create a process for them to lodge their complaint direct. This process will identify specific agents and agencies, and to be fair I would rather address the issue from a legislative process then create much attention to specific companies and individuals. This issue though needs serious attention, and I will go agent by agent if that is what it takes to provide a fairer system for property owners.

    Section 594 of the PAMD Act – Public Warning Statements

    Under the act the Minister or chief executive may make or issue a public statement identifying and giving warnings or information. It is in the public interest on the Gold Coast to be made aware of the failings of auctions on the Gold Coast. Too many people are being convinced to auction their property at significant cost, significant disillusionment and with a 67% statistical chance of failure.

    Auctions are supposed to have no price indication

    The web portals realestate.com.au and domain.com.au all require a price to be entered when advertising a property on their site. An agent can select not to display that price, but the website requires a price so that it can sort that property in search results. Agents typically place a far lower price in this section so the property appears in buyer searches at significantly lower values to try and improve enquiry. This is a form of bait advertising by stealth. The picture below is the property addition section of Domain. Realestate.com.au is similar. The red asterix indicates compulsory fields.

    The ACCC has taken undertakings from Ray White in the past regarding bait advertising yet this process is continuing every day because these websites make it mandatory for Price to be entered when advertising a auction.

    REIQ – Position of Influence

    Obviously the Real Estate Institute of Queensland is in a position of influence when it comes to assessing legislative changes for the PAMD act. It should be noted that this industry group represent the wishes of its members – real estate agents and agencies. (I am also a member of the REIQ). The current chairman of the REIQ is Peter McGrath. Peter is also a senior manager for a Gold Coast based agency called HILLSEA which has 7 offices all on the Gold Coast. The position of this company is to not do auctions because they know they are not in the best interests of property owners. You have the chairman for the REIQ taking an ethical position when it comes to conducting real estate, yet it is not reflected in the REIQ position. I find this very illuminating.

    My Recommendation for Advice to Market Price

    Every residential property that is for sale must have a valuation provided by a independent licensed valuer. By providing this property valuation through an independent source both the property owner and the purchaser will have a secure knowledge of the market price (price range). This could eliminate much of the angst associated with real estate agent practices and provide a better level of consumer protection for all parties. Agents no longer have to dance between a buyer and seller with regards to property value as there will be a legislated requirement for full disclosure. This valuation could be equally paid for by seller and successful buyer, and also eliminate mortgage providers need for additional valuations. Agents use the market appraisal system as a way of enticing people to sell through them and creates a system that rewards dishonest behaviour.

    There is a serious requirement for this practice to be stopped specifically on the Gold Coast, or for far better provisions within the legislation to ensure property owners are better informed about decisions they make with real estate agents. State and Federal Governments have a responsibility to provide consumer protection, which is why the Trade Practices act and the PAMD act exist.

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