Playing On The Fear Factor Could Harm India's Real Estate
As he tried to convince a prospective buyer to make up his mind quickly, Ram Lochan, a real estate advisor, explained in great detail that this particular developer happens to be the only trusted name in the sector. The chances of the buyer losing his money might be great if he decided to go elsewhere—the market was full of fly-by-night players, Lochan said.
If one listened from a distance, one would know Lochan's prime motive was to instill in the buyer's mind the fear of getting duped first. His marketing pitch, with its negative undertone, worked and the buyer decided to meet him in a week's time to finalise the deal.
In the meantime, another property advisor contacted this prospective buyer and elaborated the benefits of investing in an upcoming project of a different developer. This agent has an even fiercer negative sales pitch. In the middle of all this, the buyer starts feeling disgruntled and decides not to go with either of the two agents. There is a great lesson to be learnt from this.
If a developer or an advisor pegs the success of his business based on instilling fear inside home buyers' mind, his leap, if any, would be anything but giant. A doubtful buyer would start seeing only negatives, as has been the case with India's real estate sector in the recent times.
In the past three years, several efforts of developers and authorities to bring fence-sitters back to the market have not yielded the desired results. This is because the negativity around the sector has done the damage and buyers still shudder to repose their faith in the property market.
Here are some points for developers and real estate advisors to consider before they go all guns blazing against their competitors: