The ad, dubbed “All We have Is Home,” is filled with crowd-sourced video and focuses on the idea of home during the coronavirus pandemic.
The ad, dubbed “All We have Is Home,” is filled with crowd-sourced video and focuses on the idea of home during the coronavirus pandemic.
Effective leaders understand that tensions and conflict will arise, and they can effectively channel that energy into positive solutions that foster a healthy team. Here are six steps for building a comprehensive conflict resolution process into your team.
These tips, adapted to your personal selling style and fine-tuned to your client, can add to the buying experience despite not being physically present.
Experts and industry veterans alike believe coaching can help newer agents learn the ropes and industry veterans achieve even higher levels of success.
If you want to stand out and inspire interest in your business, there’s no better way than to have past clients vouch for your work. Here’s why social proof is invaluable in drawing new clientele and bolstering your online presence.
In this column, real estate agents across the nation share stories of the lessons they’ve learned during their time in the industry. This week, find out how the brokers at Charleston’s Maison Real Estate put their collaborative approach to work for buyers and sellers.
Melbourne homeowners will only be able to bring tradies into their properties for “emergency” maintenance under the city’s stage four COVID-19 lockdown, but Premier Daniel Andrews has indicated sale settlements and moving home will be permitted.
And the construction industry — described by Mr Andrews as “in many respects the lifeblood of the Victorian economy” — will be allowed to keep operating at a scaled-back level.
The announcement follows Melbourne’s shift into stage four restrictions, which have placed the city under an 8pm-5am curfew and banned residents from travelling further than 5km from their homes for at least the next six weeks.
RELATED: Melbourne property downturn deepens as stage four lockdown starts
New restrictions as Victoria declared ‘state of disaster’
Can you move house during lockdown?
Documents released by the Victorian Government on Monday also stated Melbourne property operators and real estate services would be required to close on-site from 11.59pm Wednesday.
The Herald Sun is seeking clarity from the government about what this means for the operation of the residential property market.
Before Mr Andrews announced a raft of closures of non-essential businesses on Monday afternoon, Real Estate Institute of Victoria president Leah Calnan told the Herald Sun she had not been informed of any further restrictions being placed on the city’s real estate industry.
“As of yesterday (Sunday), we were still able to conduct online auctions and private inspections by appointment,” she said.
“Agents have continued to acknowledge the very privileged place they work in. We’ll make sure they continue to abide by the highest level of hygiene and processes.”
Mr Andrews flagged further announcements regarding real estate, stating: “I don’t want to see people not able to settle on their home. I don’t want to see people who are supposed to move from one place to another because the lease has run out unable to do so.
“We’re going to get some specific advice on that. We’ve already given it a fair bit of thought.
“I think the answer will be ‘yes’ if you’ve got a contract, an arrangement in place.”
He also stated he would have “more to say very, very soon” on whether residential and commercial eviction bans would be extended beyond their September expiration date.
Mr Andrews said Melburnians would only be able to invite tradespeople into their homes for “emergency support”.
“There’ll be no cleaners going to your house. There’ll be no one mowing your lawns,” he said.
“It’s not the time to be painting your house or having unnecessary, non-urgent work happen.”
The REIV understood regional Victorian property markets would be restricted to running private inspections, rather than open homes, and remote auctions when its stage three lockdown kicked in from 11.59pm Wednesday.
CONSTRUCTION INDUSTRY’S ‘PILOT LIGHT PHASE’
From 11.59pm on Friday, the city’s residential building industry would also be put into a “pilot light phase”, the premier said.
New houses being built will only be allowed to have five people working on them at a time.
“By going down to five people at one time that will mean that the house is built more slowly, but it will still be able to trickle along for this six-week period,” Mr Andrews said.
Any construction above three storeys, be it apartments or factories, will be capped at 25 per cent of their workforce continuing to operate — the “practical minimum”.
The need to shut such sites down completely was rejected as many would take weeks to stabilise.
Major government infrastructure projects, including rail line upgrades, have already been scaled back by half. But further efforts would be undertaken to push the number of workers on sites down.
It is possible where construction work continues, the hours will be extended, with the Urban Development Institute of Australia’s Victorian chapter today informing their members they would seek longer hours on site in return for scaling back workforces.
Urban Development Institute of Australia Victorian chief executive Danni Hunter said the industry had proven “innovative and adaptable” thus far.
To date, it has implemented temperature checks on larger sites, asked workers to wear masks a week ahead of the government edict to do so, and also begun an industry-centric contact tracing program that ensures they know which sites workers have been on.
Ms Hunter said she believed sales would be allowed to continue, with much of the industry now embracing digital solutions to the lockdowns.
“We’re finding ways to leverage technology, so we can give buyers the information and the visual experiences they need to make a home purchase with confidence,” Ms Hunter said.
Housing Industry Association figures show there are about 30,000 houses under construction across Victoria today, with a further 30,000 apartments being built mostly in Melbourne.
HIA Victoria executive director Fiona Nield said allowing construction to continue at restricted levels would shield hundreds of thousands of jobs across the state.
Ms Nield said they had already limited worker numbers on housing sites to six people at a time, and that the new changes would ensure minimal wait times for new homebuyers.
“This is an industry that can navigate its way through this crisis and stay open,” Ms Nield said.
Homebuilder group Burbank’s managing director Jarrod Sanfilippo said the industry had already come a long way in scheduling trades on site, and would use morning and afternoon shifts to allow as much work to progress as possible under the five person at a time cap.
“The industry has really come together well to allow it to continue, and that’s a crucial point as to why construction is still being allowed to happen in the residential sector,” Mr Sanfilippo said.
Melbourne’s new rules will apply until at least September 13.
-with Nathan Mawby
MORE: Victoria’s future real estate growth markets picked by expert
Melbourne’s top 20 suburbs for house price growth since 2000
Dartmoor fire sale could be state’s cheapest block at $15,000
The post Victoria stage four restrictions: How COVID lockdown will affect property and construction industry appeared first on realestate.com.au.
It was marketed as “the ultimate address” and now the eastern suburbs apartment that belonged to charitable group YourTown has become exactly that for Fox Sports presenter Megan Barnard.
The NRL Tonight host bought the new two-bedroom apartment for $1.47 million from the charity ending her four-month property hunt.
MORE: House price falls largest in 16 months
$25m Gothic mansion in Darling Point sells
The apartment was one of two bought in 2019 by the charity which aims to improve the lives of young people by helping them find jobs and gain work and life skills. YourTown paid $1.46 million for it in October last year and on-sold it to Barnard. The other property they bought was raffled off.
Agent Maclay Longhurst of BresicWhitney Estate Agents Darlinghurst said Barnard had been looking for a home in the inner city but instead fell in love with the eastern suburbs apartment and snapped it up prior to auction.
“She loved the fact it’s brand new and the proximity to the beaches,” he said.
“This apartment is a little different to most of the architecture in the area, it has a bit more of an industrial aesthetic and that appealed to her, being an inner city buyer.”
The open plan apartment is north facing and filled with natural light. It boasts a large undercover outdoor entertaining area that flows from the living space.
Both bedrooms also have access to their own balcony, which means the apartment has three separate outdoor areas.
Barnard, who has a passion for sport and represented Victoria in table tennis when she was 10, holds a Bachelor of Journalism from the Queensland University of Technology, Brisbane. Before she came to Fox Sports News in 2013, Megan was a sports presenter, reporter and producer with Sky News National.
– With additional reporting from Mercedes Maguire
The post Fox Sports presenter Megan Barnard buys two-bedroom eastern suburbs apartment appeared first on realestate.com.au.
The world has changed a lot in the last 6 months. So has selling real estate. Open houses are banned and physical showings of a property might not even be possible, and they could even put your listing at risk with random people touring a home.
For many of today’s luxury buyers, the perfect vacation property may be closer than they think. As international travel remains restricted, buyers are taking note of the second-home markets that have always been in their backyards — world-class treasures hidden in plain sight.