By Shajai Jacob, JLL India
Shajai Jacob, JLL India |
The
type of property marketing strategies that Indian developers / builders /
promoters employ to sell residential properties in a tough market may often
seem strange to property marketers in other countries.
Marketing Strategies..!
Nevertheless,
these marketing strategies are based on a deep understanding of their target clienteles,
which are as variegated as the Indian real estate market itself.
In
India, the aspirational quotient cannot be under-estimated and can often be
capitalized upon.
Freebies..!
Certain
add-on offerings –
or ‘freebies’ – often appear to have no logical connection to the actual
considerations residential property / plots of land buyers would have. However,
they in fact address well-researched ‘points of attraction’ within the
developers’ targeted customer base.
This
dynamic is especially true in the case of the noveau riche class of buyers, but
can apply equally to customers coming from established wealth. In India as in
most other countries, a plush foreign car is a valid external manifestation of
the level of ‘arrivedness’ that buyers of luxury houses wish to portray in the
first place.
Likewise,
gold is a highly accepted and coveted asset of appreciation that appeals
directly to the Indian senses. Foreign travel still maintains sufficient
glamour to attract attention as a value-added offering packaged into a property
deal.
Property
Buying Sentiments..!
Often,
such offerings meet with a level of success that foreign market analysts are
challenged to explain. This is because they are pertinent to a highly
individualistic national psyche, and are usually played out at times of the
year when the India’s residential property buying sentiments are at their
traditional peak.
Not
all of these incentives hit the mark, because not every type of buyer can be
tempted with ‘freebies’. The Indian middle-class is a highly price-sensitive
one, and the current buzzword in this market segment is ‘correction’.
These
buyers, who are on the market for residential properties costing between Rs. 35
lakh to Rs. 75 lakh, have an eagle eye on the final bottom line & have been
primed for a possible reduction in prices. In fact, such a reduction has been
long awaited in the primary cities.
Given
the high demand for middle income houses in cities such as Mumbai, Pune,
Bangalore Chennai and Delhi-NCR, whether
such a correction will come at all is a big question mark.
In
most cases, developers / builders have the financial wherewithal to stay firm
on their official market prices. They see little sense in marking down their
price tags and possibly signalling what, from the buyers’ perspective, is a
long overdue correction.
Incentives..!
The
alternative marketing strategy is often to announce incentives. However,
because the base pricing of the units in these projects reduces their margins,
these incentives tend to be far from extravagant.
For
instance, a hi - fi sound system or a microwave oven as an inducement to buy a
2 BHK in the suburbs of Mumbai is unlikely to work for a budget - conscious
buyer who is more concerned with how much the EMIs will impact the family
budget.
Freebies
only work in the midddle income housing segment if they actually add value to
the property or lighten the financial burden on the buyer in some way.
Conversely,
the property marketing tactic of offering lifestyle-oriented freebies is often
quite effective when it comes to high-end premium houses.
Thanks
to the considerably higher base price and the proportionately better purchasing
power of the target clientele, developers can afford to raise the ante on the
add-on offerings.
In
cases where there are 2 / or more luxury house projects of more or / less equal
attractiveness in a single location, these freebies can become very decisive
differentiators. High networth buyers evaluating all available options often
respond to the cake with better icing, given that they intend to buy one cake
or / the other anyway.
About
the author..!
Mr
Shajai Jacob is Head – Marketing, at Jones Lang LaSalle India (JLL India)
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