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    Breaking the myths of ‘by invitation only’ properties

    The concept of ‘by invitation only’ (BIO) housing projects tends to make Indians’ antennae perk up, and not necessarily from a demand perspective. This is one of those ‘grey’ areas of real estate which carry with them very strong emotional markers.

    Breaking the myths of ‘by invitation only’ properties
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    Chennai

    Anuj Puri, Chairman, Anarock Property Consultants, says, “We’re not taking gated communities here – the acquisition of a property in a gated community rarely depends on anything more than a buyer’s net worth. By invitation only projects clearly exclude a certain segment of buyers, often for reasons other than their lack of purchasing power.”

    Market size

    This is a very ill-defined segment of housing, which means it cannot be ‘tracked’ in the classical sense of the word. The overall ultra-luxury sector represents about 5-6 per cent of India’s real estate pie. Any luxury project could be marketed as ‘by invitation only’ – either as a sales gimmick or on basis of actual selection criteria other than purchasing power. However, BIO projects may not necessarily refer to luxury at all - which makes it even harder to track.

    Geographies

    Mumbai, Chennai, Pune and Kolkata are fairly fertile grounds for BIO plays. In fact, when it comes to luxury in the general sense, most larger cities have their designated luxury ‘pockets’ – central areas which are usually defined by high demand and low supply.

    Amenities

    When a ‘by invitation only’ project is being marketed as such solely on the basis of the luxury factor, one can certainly expect a lot from it.

    The fairly standard crop of such amenities in an ultra-luxury project would include: 

    •  In-suite or rooftop swimming pools
    •  Concierge services
    •  Private elevators
    •  An in-house restaurant from which one can order by room service
    •  Ultra-high-tech security measures
    •  Multiple parking spaces per apartment
    •  World-class facilities management.

    Puri warns us that it is also pertinent to note that the BIO route is not necessarily applied only to ultra-luxury projects. In many cities, the luxury factor is defined by location, and the central locations are invariably space-starved. Therefore, a relatively small plot or redevelopment may yield a small boutique luxury project which, by virtue of space constraints, may not be able to offer a very high saturation of amenities.

    Prices

    Since ‘by invitation only’ projects cannot be classified as a market segment and is not necessarily defined by a clear luxury factor, attributing a real price range presents difficulties. Also, a BIO project may merely be one where the developer is attempting to engage in a specific kind of neighbourhood crafting or profiling. The project may get traction from the targeted buyer segment solely because of this factor and not on the basis of a very high luxury quotient.

    That said, the price for ultra-luxury apartments in the major cities can range from anything between Rs. 3-75 crore, depending on the location, builder’s brand and the overall aspirational clout of the project itself.

    Shades of grey

    According to Puri, a developer may market a project - even a more or less ordinary mid-range project - to buyers from a certain profession bandwidth, a religious segment or even dietary habits. It can, therefore, become BIO solely on the basis of this profiling and not on the basis of any significant luxury quotient.

    If a project is by invitation only based on such parameters, it may not be very expensive to own a property there; nevertheless, money alone cannot buy a unit in such a project. Aspiring buyers must meet the targeted social criteria, and if they don’t, no amount of money can make a difference.

    In many cases, the BIO tag is merely a marketing gimmick that attempts to lend an aura of exclusiveness to a perfectly garden-variety luxury project, and the only objective is sales generation. In such cases, the only criterion is a buyer’s gullibility to marketing ploys.

    Marketing Invitation Projects

    • In a BIO project grounded in the luxury factor, a developer will usually already have an inner circle of buyers and brokers who he knows are interested in such offerings and have the necessary financial wherewithal. If the project is not necessarily a luxury offering but one which seeks to craft a neigbourhood of specific social characteristics, invitations will be sent out only to buyers who meet those characteristics. An invitation can be by phone, email, a mailed letter or even word-of-mouth via a closed grapevine
    • In the case of BIO projects based on profiling other than financial net worth, there may be a certain degree of secrecy and confidentiality involved, as the developers will seek to avoid being tagged as discriminatory
    • There have been several instances where developers have targeted specific religions and people of a specific dietary persuasion. In many cases, such profiling has resulted in a negative backlash on the developer’s brand, owing to the mounting movement for inclusiveness and diversity at all levels of society, and the concurrent resistance to discrimination
    • In other cases, the ‘by invitation only’ tag has been successfully employed to woo HNIs to a luxury project, without any questionable characteristics to the whole exercise. In other words, the developer was not crafting a neighbourhood based on social profiling but rather on purchasing power. Of course, all real estate marketing happens with a great deal of forethought and study of the target clientele, so this is nothing but standard operating procedure done right

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