Data
Explosion - Three Tectonic Shifts in Indian Real Estate..!
by Mr. Ramesh
Nair, JLL India
In
today’s technology-driven market environment, data rules – and for India’s real
estate market, the importance of data was underlined in bold strokes by the
implementation of RERA. No longer are we talking about ‘my data vs. your data’
– now, the most pertinent data related to real estate projects will be
available to all.
As
more and more projects are registered under RERA, there will be a lot more data
on real estate projects and markets - earlier classified or confidential with
developers or real estate consultants - available in the public domain.
The
data now being made available provides granular insights on projects as well as
their promoters.
It includes previously vague or completely hidden information
of great pertinence to end-users, investors and market watchers, such as
project construction status, the number of apartments completed, booking
status, proposed date of project completion, project infrastructure status in
terms of water supply, internal roads, available car parking, etc.
With
so much highly pertinent information now available in the public domain,
possession of data per se can no longer be a unique selling proposition for any
real estate player – the ‘data monopoly’ is finally broken.
There
will be fundamental shifts in real estate data and analytics due to RERA
‘forcing’ such data into the public domain.
Apart from RERA websites, data is
appearing online through new technology tools and social media.
We
are looking at three fundamental shifts:
1. New headline numbers and
deeper, more accurate insights:
The
market will yield ‘headline numbers’ which all major market stakeholders will
accept as they will be corroborated by Government data.
These will be ‘big
picture’ numbers like the aggregate city-wise absorption, upcoming supply and
vacancy levels.
Today,
we accept the Government’s inflation readings or census survey numbers for
population as sacrosanct.
Likewise, these ‘big picture’ numbers which emerge
for residential markets will be universally accepted. Data discrepancies among
existing data owners will be addressed through a new reference point -
Government data.
Deeper
and more accurate analytics will become the order of the day. With easy data
availability, firms will now be able to ‘crack the code’ by analyzing granular
data for better business decisions.
The analysis and interpretation of this
data will become the subject matter of debate at various forums, as major
variations in data per see will no longer exist.
This
will bring with it increased importance of field surveys, which highlight
possible future trends – an input most investors will look for more keenly.
Surveyors will be equipped with the right kind of big data to use in on-field
surveys to analyze trends in the real estate sector.
For the
consumer, the availability of such data will obviously mean much
better-informed decision making.
2. Social media analysis will
become a major game changer:
The
ability to predict human behavior through qualitative data analysis
of social media like twitter feeds and ‘likes’ on Facebook and YouTube videos,
and similar trends, will be the next big game changer for the real estate
sector.
Social media data will help in understanding and evaluating data coming
from formal sources, and guide researchers towards a more predictive approach.
For
example:
- The average number of tweets originating from a city related to food and entertainment over a specified period can guide F&B operators to build more in this direction
- A huge
interest in sports in another city can provide valuable cues to sports
retailers and theme-focused real estate developers.
- An office
building with its own cafeteria generating social media debates between
the relative merits and demerits of pizza and sandwich outlets or
traditional South Indian fare can help analyze the food
preferences of local staff and visitors.
To
be effective, intelligent analysis will necessarily require a mix of both
social media and conventional stock, occupancy, vacancy and price data.
While
the retail and FMCG sectors have already become very active in analyzing social
media, real estate players will also benefit from getting aggressively into
this domain.
3. Empowerment through
information technology-led data:
Google
Maps is probably the most widely-used app because it addresses a core need.
Similarly, map and satellite images provide 3D, real-time experience of office
spaces provided to clients.
While ‘walk-throughs’ by developers are now
commonplace in India, higher forms of IT-led experience are already available
in other countries and will soon make inroads into India.
The
‘look-touch-feel’ factor, currently very much talked about in retail
spaces, will soon have a stronger presence in other real estate segments. While
drones to capture 3D views and images will gain popularity, CRM tools for
capturing data, business development tracking tools for brokers and new apps
for capital markets should all become a reality soon.
Use of predictive
analytics and data science, coupled with modern-day BI tools, will be used more
and more to analyze, self-serve and visualize the data.
With
new technologies, consumers will be increasingly empowered to experience the
spatial dimension of real estate like never before.
Between acceptable headline
market numbers, more accurate social media analyses and technology-driven real
estate ‘experiences’, we are indeed on the verge of a tectonic shift in the
market.
About the author
Mr. Ramesh Nair - CEO & Country Head, JLL India
For media contact
Arun Chitnis
Head - Corporate Communications & Media Relations
JLL India
Level 6, Amar Avinash Corporate Plaza
Bund Garden Road,
Pune 411 001.
Tele: 020 40196100 Fax: (020) 40196101
Mob: 91 9657129999
Website: www.joneslanglasalle.co.in
Blog: www.joneslanglasalleblog.com/realestatecompass
Arun Chitnis
Head - Corporate Communications & Media Relations
JLL India
Level 6, Amar Avinash Corporate Plaza
Bund Garden Road,
Pune 411 001.
Tele: 020 40196100 Fax: (020) 40196101
Mob: 91 9657129999
Website: www.joneslanglasalle.co.in
Blog: www.joneslanglasalleblog.com/realestatecompass
No comments:
Post a Comment