Archive for June, 2008


Published June 24th, 2008

Five Facts about Fractional Real Estate

Five Facts About Fractional Real Estate

1. Fractionals are here to stay. Fractional ownership has always been with us. Two or three couples team up to purchase a cabin by A clear mountain lake; a group of siblings opts to buy a seaside home to vacation together or separately; a ski chalet for one group of friends become a fall mountain retreat for another. Now the term “Fractional Ownership” has been formalized. Last March, Dick Ragatz of Ragatz Associates has reported at that more than $1.5 Billion in sales of Fractional Properties was achieved by this luxury component of the shared ownership industry.

Today’s Fractional Real Estate Owners have benefited by the lessons learned from Timesharing: they are protected with deeds and title insurance, have the ability to obtain consumer loans; they can even re-sell their property. Every major hospitality brand, from Four Seasons to Starwood to Ritz Carlton has given a commitment to Fractional Resort Real Estate. Star Resort Group, a sales and marketing organization in Phoenix verifies that nearly every mixed use development has a fractional component. There is no doubt that this permutation of luxury resort real estate works!

2. The most common share for high -end fractionals is a 1/8 share (6 weeks) Fractional properties are akin to second homes; division of the share ranges from 13 owners per share to quarter interest shares (four owners per unit). However, research shows that most shares for upper end fractionals are six weeks, depending on location and use. The beauty of a fractional use plan is another buyer protection of sorts. Whereas the siblings who bought a home on the Gulf in Florida to share often come to blows about who gets to stay on the Fourth of July, fractional properties can allot the time fairly and equitably.

3. Consumer loans are becoming more readily available for fractional purchases Proof that fractionals are a readily acceptable niche in the market is the growing availability of consumer financing. Mortgages with rates similar to those on traditional homes are becoming more and more the norm.

4. Fractional projects do not have to be far from home to be successful Although many fractional projects are located in exotic destinations such as Punta Mita or Cyprus, the drive-to (or short plane ride) family vacation is still the most popular. Witness the popularity of ski resort destinations such as Tahoe’s NorthStar Club (a two-hour drive from California’s Bay Area) or the plethora of golf resorts in Arizona (within a short plane ride from most of the Western US). The idea that a second vacation home is easy to get to makes it usable many more weeks out of the year.

5. The niche of luxury resort real estate takes experts in Sales and Marketing Just because fractionals have distinct advantages in the luxury resort real estate market does not mean they are a slam dunk in generating revenue. This is not timeshare, nor is it whole ownership. While a buyer may intuitively want to purchase, nagging questions about the use of a fractional and what the ongoing annual costs may cancel out many sales if not handled with aplomb. Your choice of a team to run the sales and marketing is all important. Look to experts who have had experience and have made their own investment in fractional projects

Carl G. Berry RRP, Managing Dirctor of Star Resort Group, which acquires, develops, and markets projects for its own account as well as providing sales and marketing, development and management expertise to other hospitality operators, landowners and builders. Berry has more than 30 years of resort and urban development experience. Founded in 1978 Carl’s company, California Resorts, Inc. (dba Resort Development & Advisors), is the market leader in urban share projects such as The Manhattan Club in NYC, San Francisco Suites and Powell Place City Shares in San Francisco. He is a co-founder of The World’s Finest Resorts (now part of RCI’s Registry Collection). He has served as Chairman of the American Resort Development Association (ARDA; and is a member of the Red Flight, Recreational Development Council of ULI.

Tags: fractional real estate, , , , real estate development, resort development, vacation ownership

Published June 23rd, 2008

Luxury Second Home Real Estate Five Ingredients to Ensure A-1 Sales

It’s been said that making sales in leisure resort real estate is not rocket science. Perhaps not, but it is a discipline that requires attentive strategies be employed to enhance sales pace and to mitigate risk. Consider the following tenets:

1. Coordinate Marketing and Sales Activities with a Properly Funded Budget. The marketing and sales function is the most important component to the profitable operation of any luxury second home real estate venture. This activity is as equally important, if not more so, than as the quality of the product itself - “the sticks, bricks and furnishings”, if you will. The long accepted adage of “Build it and they will come” is being challenged daily in today’s competitive real estate boom. Even among projects of equal quality, the better marketing and sales entity will inevitably capture a disproportionate share of the market.

As a point of definition, Marketing covers all of the activities required to get a qualified prospect in front of a salesperson. The Sales function covers what happens from that point forward. The two must obviously work hand in hand. We believe marketing and sales efforts must be dovetailed to achieve the common goal of cost-efficient sales that are retained long-term, in order to generate additional downstream revenues. It quickly becomes clear that a well-tuned and balanced marketing and sales campaign can have a very significant impact on the development company’s financial performance. A faster sales pace and shorter sellout reduces both the developer’s and lender’s exposure time and expense.

So, how to get there? Prepare and administer a coherent and appropriate marketing plan that is understood by all - one that can be modified as the circumstances dictate. One requisite of any such plan or campaign is the significant and rapid flow of money necessary to pay for the many promotions, especially in pre-sales start-up activities. There are always several programs that are simultaneously used that all require quick and significant funding.

Strategy: An adequately funded start-up budget to accomplish any pre-sales goals prior to lender funding is essential. Delays in paying for marketing activities can be disastrous. Worse yet, running out of dollars before your marketing program is launched is sheer project suicide.

2. Utilize One Sales Team to Represent All Leisure Real Estate Products. From our experiences in the industry both past and present, we know some simple truths about the leisure real estate buying market. The first fact is that no one buys a real estate product sight unseen. A second corollary is that the bulk of the sales will be generated from prospects that are repeat visitors to the destination resort area. And, the third corollary is that no prospect has a clear idea of which product is right for them until they hear of their options. No one walks through the door wanting to buy a fractional or a condo-hotel interest. The prospect’s opening statement may be that they simply want to hear about the condos for sale.

Relationship selling techniques are in vogue and are appropriate for leisure real estate sales. Here, a sales representative first builds trust with his/her prospects and then proceeds with a discovery phase to determine their prospects’ needs, attitudes, preferences and motivations along with a finding of how often they might use the second home product. The agent can then present the real estate options in light of the solutions afforded to that particular prospect and to advise each prospect on which of the multiple products is best for them. Prospective buyers resent being flipped to another agent after they’ve vested themselves in the one agent, who has now become their friend and trusted consultant. This overriding factor underpins our philosophical approach that emphasizes a single sales team approach to presenting leisure real estate product options.

Strategy: If you are a resort developer with a mixture of residential program offerings, cross train your sales representatives on all second home leisure real estate products. Consider abandoning the idea of maintaining separate sales teams that sell strictly lots, or strictly whole ownership or shared ownership interests or strictly condo-hotel interests. You’ll find that your product options will not cannibalize one another and the project will make more sales faster while experiencing less rescission.

3. Get the Right People on the Team. In order to have a successful ongoing marketing and sales operation, a team of talented, disciplined and motivated people must be assembled and paid well for results. We believe it is imperative to bring in a few key people experienced in the particular product format you plan on offering around which to build your team. It is much more costly to get off to a slow start or not get off at all for lack of talent or expertise.

To achieve the results projected, we believe in acquiring good people, training them and paying them well to retain them. Highly trained and motivated salespeople can maintain significantly higher closing percentages than those of average salespeople.

Strategy: Recruit, train and properly compensate a professional sales team for your leisure real estate project. Hold all accountable to performance standards for the project and tie compensation to performance as much as possible. Having the wrong people on your sales team can be very costly to the project, both in lost sales and wasted marketing dollars. The losses can amount to millions of dollars.

4. Deliver Well Qualified Prospects to the Sales Team
An exemplary and consistent flow of well-qualified prospects will yield much higher closing percentages for your leisure real estate project. Between marketing and sales, the more important and variable of the two is marketing. All other things being equal, the sales staff with its capabilities and closing percentages is predictable and controllable. The overall success of the sales offering is, more often than not, made or broken by the marketing component.

For most properties in resort destination areas, we expect to see real estate product sales consummated by prospective buyers that are generated from three general sources:

  • A. Group One: Those guests that are physically already there visiting the resort area.
  • B. Group Two: Those prospects who are planning on coming to the resort area, but who are as yet unfamiliar with the project’s real estate product offering opportunity.
  • C. Group Three: Those prospects who know the resort area, but who are not planning on visiting the destination this upcoming year.

Interest from prospective buyers tends to be piqued when they see a resort’s new buildings coming out of the ground. And, as that activity becomes evident and exciting, prospects will walk into the preview center to ask “what’s it all about” and investigate whether there is a significant opportunity for them. Until construction stages begin and during pre-sales activities, the question remains as to how to get those guests and prospects mentioned above to inquire about your real estate opportunity.

Strategy: The thrust of any project’s marketing and sales pre-sales plan, along with the attendant expenditure of marketing dollars, should be strictly focused on just this tactical approach - getting well qualified prospective buyers who are sold on the destination resort area to visit the preview center.

5. Get Sales Posted Quickly to Create a Project Buzz. The thrust of any marketing campaign for an upcoming pre-sales season should have an emphasis on “Awareness” - getting the word out on your project’s offering. For Groups One and Two, this awareness campaign will work to ensure that prospects will stop in the preview center to check out your opportunity while at the resort area. For Group Three prospects, the awareness campaign may actually serve to encourage those prospects to rearrange their schedules to accommodate a trip to the resort area sooner than they had planned.

All in all, the marketing campaign should direct prospects to your resort website or sales center, where they can opt in for more information and to set an appointment. The ability to generate walk-in traffic will be the key to absolute sales success. With a properly designed project that incorporates a use plan that makes perfect sense to the consumer, people will buy and sales will flow steadily.

Strategy: The immediate mission is to get sales on the board quickly in order to build momentum and the sense of a successful project. Salespeople need confidence. A sense of urgency must be instilled in them as well as in the prospects. Making sales steadily builds that confidence, creates a “buzz of success” for the project and satisfies everyone involved with the project - the consumers, the developer, his investors and lenders and the sales representatives. Win-win for all is the name of the game.

For more information on the sales and marketing of fractional ownership, private residence clubs, and on condo hotels, including listings and photos of current and past projects, visit the Star Resort Group website at www.starresortgroup.com

John R. Kazanjian, is Executive Vice President of Star Resort Group. He is a co-founder of The World’s Finest Resorts and has served as CEO of Resort Development & Advisors. His 30-year career has focused in fractional ownership resort real estate and vacation ownership development. Visit the Star Resort Group website at http://www.starresortgroup.com for more information on the sales and marketing of fractional ownership, private residence clubs, and on condo hotels, including listings and photos of current and past projects.

Tags: fractional ownership, , , , , , luxury real estate, marketing, private residence clubs, Resorts, sales

Published June 22nd, 2008

Sek Sork Cambodia’s Resurgent Natural-Historic Resort

“Why everyone is heading to Cambodia” (The New York Times)

This article is to response to the above-addressed headline of The New York Times.

Cambodia is a compact country in South East Asia with natural resources in both underground and on the ground. Those resources include mines (underground) and natural, cultural and historic resorts (on the ground).

“Sek Sork” is one of the resurgent natural-historic resorts of the Kingdom of Cambodia.

“Sek Sork” is a very old resort, but due to protracted civil and interstate wars, this resort has been ignored by the Cambodians and the world. Fortunately, this resort is now appeared again in the Cambodian people’s and foreign tourists’ hearts.

“Sek Sork” is a resort located in Battambang province, a province located in the most western part of the Kingdom of Cambodia. I will not explain to the prospective holidaymakers who are intending to go to “Sek Sork”, but I just want you to come to Phnom Penh first and contact with Cambodian travel agents. They will advise you on how to get to the resort (bus, package holiday, etc).

“Sek Sork” is located in Sek Sork village, Phlov Mars commune, Rattanak Mondul district, Battambang province, the Kingdom of Cambodia.

“Sek Sork” resort is covered by thick bamboos, both big and small plants and trees with eternal fresh air. Anyone looking for natural way of relaxation is suggested to go to “Sek Sork”. “Sek Sork” has a stream of 500 meters long surrounded by bamboos and other green trees. However, the holidaymakers can only bath in dry season, in rainy season the water flows too strong and so unable to bath. Do not get discouraged, you are advised to visit this resort in both dry and rainy season (in Cambodia, we have only two seasons).

This resort has been resurgent since 2004, after influx of investment to cater ten different recreational scenes for anyone.

For the scenery pictures, contact me - Vicheka Lay.

Anyone is authorized to translate this article into any language with due reference to me - Vicheka Lay.

Lay Vicheka is a translator for the most celebrated translation agency in the Kingdom of Cambodia, Pyramid Translation Co.Ltd.. He is now holding other two professions: freelance writer for Search Newspaper; focusing on social issues and students’ issues and Media Liaison Officer for Asia’s first free on-line IELTS consultation website. Lay Vicheka is the expert author for ezine and prolific article contributor to other websites around the world such as articlecity, 365articles, spiderden, talesofasia, etc (Just google him). He is also a volunteer Cambodian-newspapers columnist (Rasmey Kampuchea and Kampuchea Thmey). Lay Vicheka has great experience in law and politics, as he used to be legal and English-language assistant to a Cambodian member of parliament, migration experience (home-based business) and in writing. He is also member of a New York-based research company. Posting address: 221H Street 93, Tuol Sangke quarter, Russey Keo district, Phnom Penh, Cambodia. Tel: 855 11 268 445, vichekalay@yahoo.com

Tag: Cambodian resorts

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