REACH Canada Archives - REM https://realestatemagazine.ca/tag/reach-canada/ Canada’s premier magazine for real estate professionals. Wed, 15 Nov 2023 12:59:49 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.6.2 https://realestatemagazine.ca/wp-content/uploads/2022/09/cropped-REM-Fav-32x32.png REACH Canada Archives - REM https://realestatemagazine.ca/tag/reach-canada/ 32 32 Realtor.ca for profit? CREA holds SGM Wednesday to discuss online listing platform’s future https://realestatemagazine.ca/realtor-ca-for-profit-crea-holds-sgm-wednesday-to-discuss-online-listing-platforms-future/ https://realestatemagazine.ca/realtor-ca-for-profit-crea-holds-sgm-wednesday-to-discuss-online-listing-platforms-future/#comments Tue, 17 Oct 2023 04:03:55 +0000 https://realestatemagazine.ca/?p=24853 CREA’s October 18 SGM will explore and request directional support on what’s been done and next steps for Realtor.ca’s future

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QUICK HITS

 

  • CREA is holding a Special General Meeting on October 18 to get direction and support on a for-profit future of Realtor.ca.
  • Alberta Real Estate Association and others “don’t see a benefit to selling off a portion of Realtor.ca”.
  • Any technology looking to grow and scale or enhance its offerings requires capital – the question is how to capitalize while meeting member and consumer needs.

 

The future of Realtor.ca may be changing. For months, the Canadian Real Estate Association (CREA) has been working with stakeholders on whether it will move from its current non-profit status to a for-profit model.

“ … we’ve been working in consultation with realtors and leaders from boards and associations across the country (the Realtor.ca Task Force) and outside experts who have been leading initial due diligence on the consideration of moving Realtor.ca into a separate, taxable, wholly-owned subsidiary of the Canadian Real Estate Association,” says Pierre Leduc, spokesperson for CREA, in a statement.

 

CREA seeks endorsement and next steps at SGM

 

Tomorrow, CREA is holding a Special General Meeting (SGM) to request and collect directional endorsement on what’s been done so far and to go over next steps.

“This is an important and exciting journey, and we want to be sure we’re taking the time to listen and consult,” Leduc expresses. “The discussions on October 18 will help CREA’s Board of Directors in their decision-making on future work – which could include a formal vote on a detailed business plan at CREA’s AGM in April 2024. We look forward to sharing more when we know more.”

But, the process seems to have been a bit of a bumpy one in recent months.

 

Alberta boards take a stand

 

In an update to members of the Calgary Real Estate Board, Chair Christian Twomey wrote that he was invited to be on CREA’s Realtor.ca task force on May 16 and resigned from it on August 30. He wrote that initially, he felt the process had him in a state of unease and his apprehension did not go away during his time on the task force.

“Immediately after my resignation, it became clear there were significant challenges in aligning the Task Force and CREA on what is best for Realtor.ca. It is clear that there are forces involved that are undermining good governance and appear to be systemic in nature,” he wrote on September 19.

“On Sept. 12, CREA sent a notice of a Special General Meeting on Oct. 18 to all Boards and Associations across Canada. Interestingly, when writing this email, CREA has still not presented a motion for Boards and Associations to vote on. So far, CREA has advised the leadership across the country that we are expected to attend this meeting in person for a ‘directional endorsement exercise on the future of Realtor.ca’. For CREB, our goal is for Realtor.ca to continue to be a reliable source of business for our members.”

Brad Mitchell, CEO of the Alberta Real Estate Association (AREA), said part of the association’s concern is it doesn’t see a benefit to selling off a portion of Realtor.ca.

“Back in January, a number of CREA members saw (the board’s) plan to basically sell a portion of Realtor.ca. A lot of members got together and AREA, along with nine other boards in Alberta, submitted a requisition to have a Special General Meeting to propose bylaw changes to prevent the CREA board from doing it without a member vote,” says Mitchell.

“And so, this SGM is really about the future of Realtor.ca and how it’s going to work . . . the task force was struck, they’re going to bring forward some recommendations.”

Mitchell says the initial idea of CREA wanting to sell a portion of Realtor.ca came as a surprise, and it was felt that this plan needed more detail and more thought.

“We don’t like the idea. CREA hasn’t been able to demonstrate any advantage to bringing in outside investors and, of course, if you have minority shareholders (they) have significant rights. Right now Realtor.ca is owned by every realtor member in Canada and it’s a not-for-profit model. As soon as you bring in outside investors, of course, they’re going to want to make a profit.”

 

“Revenue should benefit all members in Canada”

 

Mitchell explains there’s only one way to profit: from the members themselves. “They’re the ones that have created the system. There are ways to generate revenue but that revenue should be for the benefit of all Canadians and all members in Canada, and not to a specific corporation or entity.”

He says AREA looks at one thing – protecting its members’ interests.

“When those members’ interests are threatened, we will act very swiftly and decisively to protect the people that we’re responsible to. So, any sale of Realtor.ca to anybody outside of the realtor members is a non-starter for our provincial association and many of the boards in the province,” he adds.

 

CREA’s agenda

 

In the SGM agenda package, a note from Larry Cerqua, chair of CREA, and Marina James, chair of the Realtor.ca Task Force, says the platform is instrumental to the success and reputation of realtors in Canada by putting realtors at the heart of consumer real estate journeys and delivering millions of leads to members each year.

“We know how important this asset is to the entire realtor association community. As stewards of Realtor.ca, we must prepare to lead future technological change while ensuring the long-term sustainability of this unique and extremely important asset that generates tremendous value to realtors and their clients,” they wrote.

The pair said the task force has been leading initial due diligence and helping it chart a path forward for the platform that would be turned into a separate, taxable, wholly owned subsidiary of CREA.

 

A huge force in property searches

 

Lynette Keyowski, Managing Partner of REACH Canada, a real estate technology scale-up program, says the national program is affiliated with the National Association of Realtors out of the United States – CREA’s equivalent in the U.S.

REACH has a venture capital arm called Second Century Ventures which invests in real estate technology companies for the benefit of their realtor members.

Keyowski says there are plenty of statistics and market data pointing to Realtor.ca being a significant force in property searches for Canadians.

 

The future requires capital

 

“From that perspective, it’s obviously a viable technology. It has grown its market share for a few different reasons. This comes down to a business model that is employed, and Realtor.ca – by virtue of its ownership through CREA – has enjoyed essentially a monopoly on its asset, which is the listing inventory.

No other portal can point to a monopoly on acquiring that listing data. Any other real estate portal needs to acquire the data through some other means, whether it’s monetary or financial, (and) whether it’s through affiliation or membership or through a partnership of some nature with the folks that own the data,” Keyowski comments.

She says CREA has been able to grow the Realtor.ca brand through that lens because they have the most listings available.

“From a pure future viability perspective, I suspect it’s around how do we continue to deliver the product that the marketplace demands, given our current ownership structure, regardless of the fact that we have a monopoly on input … I suspect that is likely the conversation being had,” she suggests.

Keyowski points out that, based on REACH’s knowledge and work, any technology function looking to grow and scale or enhance its offerings requires capital.

“So, the question then is how do you capitalize that growth, how do you capitalize that expansion, how do you capitalize continuing to meet the demands of a continually evolving and changing consumer base?

I think it really comes down to two things. It’s how you operate the business and it’s how you capitalize the business.”

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HonestDoor property valuation website raises $2.2 million in seed funding https://realestatemagazine.ca/honestdoor-property-valuation-website-raises-2-2-million-in-seed-funding/ https://realestatemagazine.ca/honestdoor-property-valuation-website-raises-2-2-million-in-seed-funding/#respond Wed, 23 Mar 2022 04:00:35 +0000 https://realestatemagazine.ca/honestdoor-property-valuation-website-raises-2-2-million-in-seed-funding/ HonestDoor, an online resource for property valuations, recently announced that it has raised $2.2 million in seed funding.

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HonestDoor, an online resource for property valuations, recently announced that it has raised $2.2 million in seed funding. Luge Capital led the funding round, with participation from Bluesky Equities, Conconi Growth Partners, Panache Ventures, Reach Canada, SAF Group, Startup TNT and Wheaton Group, along with entrepreneurs Sanders Lee, Ashif Mawji, and Blaine LaBonte.

HonestDoor says it will use the funds “to scale its real estate platform to facilitate the on-demand delivery of automated valuation models on any property in Canada at a consistently high level of accuracy.” The company also plans to test its model in select U.S. markets.

HonestDoor says it leverages real estate data, machine learning, data science and a team of data analysts to provide estimated property valuations on houses and condos. The company, which was founded in 2018, also aggregates property taxes, transaction data, permit data and neighbourhood growth rates to provide a resource for real estate information in Canada.

“Using HonestDoor, Realtors and existing/potential homeowners can make more informed decisions based on trends, predictive metrics related to the rental market or resale shifts in neighbourhood valuations, permits requested for a property they are considering buying, home assessments and more,” the company says in a news release.

The company says it will soon provide this information for almost every property in Canada, not just those listed for sale.

Daniel Belostotsky, founder and CEO of HonestDoor, says, “With this injection of capital, we can build on our success to date. That means scaling our platform and fine tuning our data models to ensure that Canadians across the country have real estate valuations at their fingertips, backed by an unmatched degree of accuracy.”

HonestDoor is currently a real estate resource for those living in British Columbia, Alberta and Manitoba. It says it has a median error rate of 2.48 per cent for listed properties and 7.55 per cent for off-market real estate.

“In the same way as Canadians sign up to receive updates on their credit score through companies like Borrowell and Credit Karma, since January 2022 roughly 10,000 users have signed up to monitor their HonestDoor price,” says Belostotsky. “We anticipate this number to increase substantially over time.”

HonestDoor says it has also become a resource for real estate agents and brokers that want easy access to land title transactions and are looking to provide their clients with home valuations by adding the HonestDoor widget (API) to their websites. Lenders and mortgage brokers also rely on HonestDoor to help inform decisions for mortgage applications, the company says.

“HonestDoor is the first of its kind real estate search engine to provide key data, facts and price predictions on properties,” says David Nault, general partner at Luge Capital. “The real estate market in Canada lacks a central resource for complete property data and price insights. HonestDoor’s comprehensive property and valuation reports are helping consumers, real estate agents and lenders make better decisions.”

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Why good proptech goes bad https://realestatemagazine.ca/why-good-proptech-goes-bad/ https://realestatemagazine.ca/why-good-proptech-goes-bad/#respond Wed, 07 Jul 2021 04:00:14 +0000 https://realestatemagazine.ca/why-good-proptech-goes-bad/ To untangle the thorny web that catches proptech entrepreneurs off-guard, I turned to possibly the most plugged-in industry leaders in Canada – Lynette Keyowski, managing partner of REACH Canada and Mike McAra, director of REACH Canada.

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North American buyers, sellers, landlords and tenants collectively spend billions on commissions when transacting. The collective amount of money flowing to real estate agents and brokers has attracted a variety of entrepreneurs hoping to tap into the vein of this massive consumer spend or hoping to get agents and their brokerages to spend some of their commission dollars on the entrepreneur’s latest product.

Time and time again, product after product has claimed to improve the lives of Realtors but has failed. Why? It’s easy to rely on traditional arguments for why good tech companies fail – poor timing, wrong “product-market fit”, poor leadership. However, like all things in life, it’s a bit more complicated than that. Especially if you’re intending to scale your product across borders.

To untangle the thorny web that catches proptech entrepreneurs off-guard, I turned to possibly the most plugged-in industry leaders in Canada – Lynette Keyowski, managing partner of REACH Canada and Mike McAra, director of REACH Canada, the Canadian expansion of the growth program for real estate technology companies created by Second Century Ventures, the investment team of the National Association of Realtors. Collectively, Keyowski and McAra have either built it, led it, tried it or invested in it. All of the advice shared in this article was generated from conversations with McAra and Keyowski. This is how good proptech goes bad.

Not appreciating the layers of complexity and various laws

 Markets dominated by traditional industries that have been slow to innovate are believed to create an ecosystem rife for disruption by a nimble competitor who could provide a faster, cheaper solution and pivot when needed. Not true. Especially in the real estate industry.

This glosses over the variety of regulator restrictions, legal hurdles and gatekeepers you need to contemplate while making sure your product is not just better, but “unforgettably magnetic”. That phrase is borrowed from Adrian J. Slywotzky’s 2011 book Demand: Creating What People Love Before They Know What They Want. Slywotzky says the level of magnetism a product creates is the sum of it being functional, exceptional and emotionally appealing.

It’s not enough to identify a gap in the real estate industry and create a snazzy technology to fill it. Identifying and creating a solution is only part of the process in converting an idea into a viable business. You have to understand the entire landscape, the stakeholders and most importantly how they interact and what they want. The enterprising individual who sees a blue ocean of opportunity to improve the homebuying process typically has limited awareness that the ocean is filled with threats that can impede their business.

Canadian real estate has several layers you have to consider, especially if you want to include market data. Learning this takes time, and companies are typically not capitalized well enough to survive during this research period.

Because of the Realtor association structure in Canada at the local, provincial and national levels, you cannot do whatever you want to do. You can’t simply have access to data and use it how you must in order to create a better search experience. This is true even if you’re compliant with all privacy restrictions and anti-spam legislation.

If you want to build a tool that would help agents make better predictions about the value of a home, for example, you will likely need to access data controlled by real estate boards and ensure compliance with each one. In Canada you can do this a few ways. One is by becoming a brokerage, where you need to hire agents, operate the brokerage, recruit staff, incur significant startup costs, untangle the web of rules for how such data can be accessed and used and go through provincial governing bodies, local governing bodies and MLS compliance. And then maybe you can use the data in the way you intend. Oh, and you have to do this with every single real estate board or association.

Compare this to Uber or food delivery apps – data is directly from their users. One single push of a button takes care of anti-spam and privacy laws. That’s it.

If you’re not heavily funded and don’t have leadership that understands that this is a long haul, you’re likely not going to make it. Privacy, disclosure requirements and Canadian anti-spam legislation are much more robust in Canada than the U.S., which adds on tech development costs, exposure to cease and desists and fines.

A lack of funding and understanding the market

U.S. entrepreneurs looking to expand their business to Canada see a simple numbers game. The Canadian population is roughly one-tenth the size of the U.S. population, so they anticipate a tenth of the size of revenues. To make a profit, entrepreneurs think their investment and budget needs to scale in concert with the revenue projection.

But that’s not how technology works. To build a good product you have to spend the same amount, regardless of anticipated revenue size. So many entrepreneurs restrict development for what they believe are logical financial reasons but end up with a product that’s simply not good enough for people to “make the switch”.

Canadians also don’t live in the dark; if they see an inferior product to what’s available in the U.S. and given the closely knit Canadian real estate industry, they’ll reject it and your reputation will be marked.

Canada also has a much smaller venture capital industry than the U.S. With a Canadian version of the NAR REACH proptech scale program, Keyowski and McAra are leading the charge to build on the foundational ecosystem, working with industry to spur further innovation and investment in the space. By working at the intersection of real estate, technology and capital, they have a unique lens as to what is needed and how best to navigate the ecosystem for all.

For example, prior to REACH Canada, many Canadian proptech startups would attempt to access government grant programs that were largely stand-ins for early-stage venture and angel investment. Unfortunately, with a government grant, tech entrepreneurs often end up spending so much time writing these applications that the product doesn’t get the attention it deserves and can end up being subpar.

To build the best product, startups are taught to talk to their customers, learn, iterate and test, not write government grants. This one example of a seemingly good thing can be a wolf in sheep’s clothing. REACH stands to work with budding proptech firms to navigate these ins and outs, avoiding common pitfalls along the way.

Overestimating their understanding of the Canadian market and consumer

Brokerages in Canada run on thinner margins than U.S. counterparts. So, despite billions and trillions of dollars worth of real estate being sold, the real estate agent is not pocketing this revenue – much less, the broker/owner.

Many technology founders don’t appreciate this. In fact, commissions are on the decline, splits are more favourable for agents versus the brokerage than ever before, operating costs on brokerages are ballooning and membership fees for Canadian boards and associations to participate on the MLS system are much higher than comparatively in the U.S.

There is little desire to take on a technology that may hurt today’s profits in exchange for an easier process tomorrow. As a result, the market is flooded with tech startups that want a slice of an ever-shrinking pie. It’s hard to sell where there are many sellers and where buyers cannot afford what’s being sold.

Given these factors, products and services cannot be just as good as the incumbent. They must be magnetic. They must also clearly and directly show the relationship between the agent or the agent’s client adopting this product and the agent’s ability to make more money.

Other requirements for a technology to be a win in Canada: No downtime for training and no additional costs are incurred to replace an incumbent product with the new technology. Founders should ask themselves, “Am I really solving a hair-on-fire problem for my ideal customer?”

An example of a successful technology is virtual showings. Why? Because virtual showings were the only way during the pandemic, in many circumstances, that an agent could facilitate a close. Not being able to show a property is a hair-on-fire problem. Virtual showing software didn’t require the agent to train staff, take time from serving their clients to learn a new tool, switch service providers and break contracts. It was a click away. Virtual showing technology was also clearly tied to an agent’s ability to sell a home. It also replaced commuting, something that was much more time consuming and done manually (sans-technology). All these factors combined made the virtual showing technology much more appealing than the traditional method.

The lesson is that your solution has to be as simple as clicking a button, with no training required and must undeniably solve a key pain. It must also replace an arduous physical act. And it must have clear links to driving revenue.

It you’ve just entered the proptech industry and need direction, I suggest you first apply to REACH Canada. As a mentor to the organization’s past year’s graduates, I can attest to the fact that you will have access to the industry ecosystem, stakeholders and key players mentioned above, all of whom are willing to give you the insights you need to soar.

And if you don’t soar, all is not lost. As Keyowski posits, your business can be reincarnated into a real viable startup once you’ve developed important insights, technology, talent…and a deep understanding of the complex landscape of the real estate industry.

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Real estate tech accelerator REACH now accepting applications https://realestatemagazine.ca/real-estate-tech-accelerator-reach-now-accepting-applications/ https://realestatemagazine.ca/real-estate-tech-accelerator-reach-now-accepting-applications/#respond Fri, 26 Jun 2020 05:00:56 +0000 https://realestatemagazine.ca/real-estate-tech-accelerator-reach-now-accepting-applications/ A Canadian arm of the REACH real estate technology accelerator is now accepting applications for its inaugural program.

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A Canadian arm of the REACH real estate technology accelerator is now accepting applications for its inaugural program. The program was created by Second Century Ventures, the strategic investment arm of the National Association of Realtors (NAR).

REACH offers “education, mentorship and exposure for technology companies aiming to launch into the real estate industry, accelerate their businesses and expand into adjacent markets such as insurance, mortgage and financial services,” it says in a news release. “REACH provides a unique opportunity for technology companies to earn sizable exposure within a $1-trillion industry made up of more than 100,000 small- and medium-sized businesses and generating over $12.5 billion in annual advertising spend in the U.S. alone. As part of REACH’s recent global expansion, REACH Canada will offer a select group of entrepreneurs access to a worldwide network of peers, mentors and investors in conjunction with its sister programs in the U.S., Australia and the U.K,” it says.

“This past year has highlighted how organizations of every size will need to innovate, evolve and adapt in order to succeed in the markets of the future. We’ve also been reminded of how small our world can be, and how critical global partnerships are in our search for solutions to the problems we face every day,” said Bob Goldberg, CEO of NAR and president of Second Century Ventures. “We are excited to officially open applications for REACH Canada, the second REACH program opened outside the United States, and we have immense faith in the REACH Canada team’s ability to source the top proptech innovators who will propel real estate in North America and beyond.”

REACH has attracted technology startups developing solutions for multiple aspects of the real estate industry, including marketing automation, pay at close renovation, agent safety, leasing, lending, transaction management and tokenization, it says.

REACH companies have in aggregate raised more than $350 million of follow-on financing and have secured key partnerships with DocuSign, Google, Facebook, Coldwell Banker, Re/Max and Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices. Graduating REACH companies have also seen revenue, customer and/or user growth rates increase between 50 and 2,000 per cent, says REACH.

“The COVID era is accelerating the adoption of technology in real estate along with many trends that had already been evolving, as consumers demand further innovation to support their ability to transact real estate in a post-COVID world.  Building on the expertise and proven track record of the REACH program in the U.S. and now Australia, REACH portfolio companies have an unprecedented opportunity to accelerate their growth and capitalize on the rapid revolution of the global proptech landscape, in close conjunction with the Realtor community,” says Lynette Keyowski, REACH Canada managing partner.

The accelerator says participants in the program receive numerous benefits, including:

  • Mentorship from more than 350 real estate and technology thought leaders and executives from major real estate brokerages and brands, technology companies and venture capitalists. On average, accelerator participants meet with more than 50 of these advisors in one-on-one sessions throughout the program.
  • Education on how to navigate the trillion-dollar real estate industry with the backing of the largest trade association in the U.S. and its $5 billion brand.
  • Exclusive access to more than a dozen of the real estate industry’s top conferences, tradeshows and networking events.
  • A global network of talented, like-minded entrepreneurs, including more than 100 REACH alumni companies and curated program sponsors.

Applications for REACH Canada will be accepted through July 31, 2020 at www.narreach.ca. The eight-month virtual and event-based program will kick off in October and run through May 2021.

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