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How to Choose a Property Investment Advisor in Australia

Who do you ask for property advice?

With so many mixed messages and vested interests, who can you really trust?

And in today’s property markets, there are very few advisers who have the perspective of having lived through and successfully invested in a number of property cycles and understand how to take advantage of the is the current stage of the property cycle as we emerge into a new strongly positive wave.

Yet there is a new breed of so-called property experts emerging.

What’s the threshold for being able to call yourself an expert?

Usually, experts have years of experience in their chosen profession.

They’re at the top of their industry, and they shape the path of progress.

And yet, there’s no shortage of so-called “property experts” and buyers agents whose only real experience seems to me they’ve done a short course and really love property.

The rise of these so-called “advisors” coincided with the practice of personal branding on social media.

While social media has undoubtedly created fantastic opportunities for real experts to connect and share their knowledge, it has also opened the floodgates for a tsunami of self-titled “property experts” looking to flog their books, consulting sessions, and training programs, or online courses.

Our Property Investor Consumer Sentiment Survey revealed the many and varied sources that property investors consult for advice.

But, since most property, investors fail to achieve the financial freedom they deserve, and with less than 8% ever owning more than 2 properties, a better question to ask would be…

Who could you ask for property investment advice?

Here are the people you could turn to:

1. No One — many beginning investors think they understand real estate because they’ve lived in or rented a home or an apartment.

That’s a big mistake and probably one of the reasons around fifty per cent of first-time investors sell up within five years.

While they may know their local neighbourhood, that’s very different from understanding the property market.

2. Friends or family — I understand people may do this, but the question to ask is: are they, financial experts?

How many millionaires do you have in your family? If not, don’t ask them because often their advice will be to avoid property investment because of the “risk.”

3. A real estate agent — Remember agents work for the vendor to help them achieve the best price, and they’re unlikely to tell you about the other great properties for sale in the area by other agents.

4. A mortgage broker — While it’s important to have an investment-savvy mortgage broker on your side helping you through the finance maze, most don’t understand the property market well enough to advise on what is an “investment grade” property.

5. An accountant — your accountant should advise you on tax matters and structuring, but most don’t have the intimate knowledge of the property market required to give investment advice.

6. Financial planners — While financial planners are licensed to sell financial products, most are not able to advise on real estate.

Not only because they lack a sound understanding of property, but the company they work for doesn’t allow them to.

Those who do recommend property usually have a biased view as they make commissions based on the investments they sell from their “stock list.”

7. A property marketer — while these salespeople may seem to be on your side, they’re really selling “product” for a property developer who is most likely going to make the biggest profit out of the deal.

8. Investment seminars and workshops — Ask yourself: Is the person conducting the event an investment expert in their field?

How long have they been financially secure, or do they make their money teaching others?

9. A property mentor — There seems to be an abundance of property mentors around — some who give great guidance, while others are really property sellers or marketers in disguise.

Let’s make it clear: It’s important to have mentors. They see your blind spots, give you guidance and support and expand the way you think. Just be careful who you choose and ensure they have achieved the results you want to achieve.

10. A buyer’s agent — These can be a great help in selecting the right property but most are just “order takers” — they don’t devise a plan that takes into account your family’s future needs and your risk profile.

However, when you look at this list you can now see why you need… an independent, unbiased property adviser or strategist.

In my mind, it is critical to have a trusted advisor when making property investment decisions.

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It’s just too hard to do it on your own or by trial and error. There’s a huge learning fee involved — of time, money, effort, and heartache.

I find it interesting that while most wealthy people have, and are prepared to pay for, trusted advisors in many areas of their lives, the average person has no advisers or they get their advice from salespeople who they perceive as advisers but are far from independent.

On the other hand, following the teachings and proven systems of those who’ve already achieved what you want to achieve and who’ve retained their wealth through a number of property cycles, while not guaranteeing your success, makes it much, much more likely.


NOW READ: Latest property price forecasts revealed. What’s ahead in the next year or two?


What do property strategists actually do?

I see my role as a property advisor as helping our clients grow, protect and pass on their wealth using property as a vehicle.

While people come to the team at Metropole for property advice, in fact, they’re really coming for something else.

Some are looking for financial freedom; others for more choices in life like working because they want to, not because they have to; and yet others want to leave a legacy for their family or the community.

So, property is really just the vehicle they’re keen on using to achieve their end goals.

While most property advisors come from a real estate background, the property strategists at Metropole come from a wealth, financial planning or banking background, but have a good understanding of property and are successful investors themselves.

You see…at Metropole our property strategists’ job is not to sell clients’ properties, but to help them safely increase their wealth over the long term.

Many years ago, when I first saw a gap in the market for sound strategic advice, I set about providing my services as a property strategist.

I was the first one I knew of — today many people call themselves property “advisors” or “strategists”, yet quite a few are thinly disguised salespeople, or are not really qualified to give in-depth advice.

So, let’s look at what a good strategist can and can’t do…

long term property investment

Things a good property advisor SHOULD do

1. A good advisor will first start by getting to know their clients’ hopes and fears and then be future-focused to help them achieve their long-term financial goals.

2. With so many mixed messages about property investing out there (many coming from parties with vested interests), a good property advisor will help remove his client’s anxiety by simplifying the complex.

They will provide clarity around the complicated world of wealth creation which involves much more than just property — but includes finance, tax, economics and the law.

They will advise their clients about the risks as well as the rewards of property investment.

3. While most buyers’ agents or property salespeople are transactional and think of the current “sale” or purchase, a professional property advisor will aim to develop a long-term relationship and help their clients understand the next two or three steps even before taking the first step.

A good property advisor will “sell” advice, not a product or a property.

That’s why at Metropole we always start by building our clients a Strategic Property Plan.

Planning is bringing the future into the present so we can do something about it now.

4. Many clients come to a real estate advisor looking for the next big thing — some are looking for a shortcut, or the next hotspot, or a way to get rich quickly.

Instead, a qualified property strategist will stop their clients from speculating by recommending proven strategies that have always worked.

5. A good independent advisor will not have any properties for sale, but will have a list of potential options and refer their clients to a buyer’s agent who is part of their team to find the best opportunity in the market to suit their client’s budget, plans and risk profile.

6. A strategic advisor will never put any pressure on their client to make an investment decision, but their knowledge, research and experience will help their clients select an investment property that is the highest and best use of their funds, and one that will work hard for them over the long term.

7. A wise property strategist will help their clients avoid the big mistakes made by the average investor and will earn their fees simply by helping their clients avoid the devastating errors made by many investors such as those who lost significant amounts of money by investing in mining towns, regional locations, house and land packages or off-the-plan properties.

Of course, a great advisor will do a lot more than that for their fee.

8. By being a student of history, a good strategist will be able to provide perspective, insights, and often optimism at a time when the media is being pessimistic, and vice versa.

9. They will also advise their clients to invest their money the way they do themselves — they must be experienced investors — not enthusiastic amateurs.

10. A good strategist will regularly meet with their clients to objectively assess the performance of their property portfolio and ensure they are heading in the right financial direction.

As you can see — it takes years of learning, experience, and the perspective that only comes from investing through a number of property cycles to become a great property strategist.

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Some things a property advisor CAN’T do

As you read on you’ll find that some property “advisors” will claim to be able to do some of the things on the following list — things they really can’t do.

I guess they tend to do this because they’re not able to deliver on many aspects on the list above — the things skilled, professional advisers can deliver.

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