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It’s an unusual week in the rental department of Caruthers Real Estate. The Director of the team, Emily, is behaving strangely. Has she been headhunted or is there a bigger story? Juliette is scheming to grab her job should she leave. At the same time she is trying to let a property for an annoying but oddly endearing landlord Bruno whose actions scare tenants away. Will she achieve the impossible and find him a tenant?
Caruthers is a compilation of many real estate companies Juliette has worked for and she takes us behind the stylish and flashy reception area and shows us what really happens on the other side.
We see this world through Juliette’s eyes. We watch her colleagues cope with bemused and difficult tenants, put-upon tradesmen, lovable and rapacious landlords and at the same time cope with their own personal problems.
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Veröffentlichungsjahr: 2019
It’s an unusual week in the rental department of Caruthers Real Estate. The Director of the team, Emily, is behaving strangely. Has she been headhunted or is there a bigger story? Juliette is scheming to grab her job should she leave. At the same time she is trying to let a property for an annoying but oddly endearing landlord Bruno whose actions scare tenants away. Will she achieve the impossible and find him a tenant?
Caruthers is a compilation of many real estate companies Juliette has worked for and she takes us behind the stylish and flashy reception area and shows us what really happens on the other side.
We see this world through Juliette’s eyes. We watch her colleagues cope with bemused and difficult tenants, put-upon tradesmen, lovable and rapacious landlords and at the same time cope with their own personal problems.
This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, businesses, places, events and incidents are either the products of the author's imagination or used in a fictitious manner. Any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, or actual events is purely coincidental.
Monday’s a crazy day at Caruthers Real Estate. Action on Saturday means mayhem on Monday. As if to prove this point the phone is calling for attention as I approach my desk. I grab it and slip into my chair and the day is off to a racing start.
It’s Lauren.
‘Hi, I saw you come in. Why didn’t you stop at my desk? I’ve got a couple of applications for Bruno’s property. You need to get on to them. He’s already rung this morning.’
‘Bring them down,’ I say.
‘Too busy. It’s flat out here.’ And she has gone. I raise my eyebrows. Then I remember Monday Mayhem. The name I have given this day.
One of my Monday Mayhem jobs is to help Lauren with her applications for the properties she has vacant. She is on my team. Before I can dwell on ‘too busy to bring me the applications’ the phone goes again.
I recognise Lisa, our receptionist.
‘Bruno’s on the phone. Lauren said you’re dealing with him.’
‘What?’ I say.
‘Bruno. He’s on the line.’ Lisa has gone and I have a Bruno’s voice in my ear.
‘Who am I speaking to? I want Lauren.’
‘It’s Juliette Davis. We’ve spoken before.’ I begin to sigh then I stop myself and swallow it instead. Bruno is the last person I want to deal with first thing on a Monday.
‘Oh, yes…yes…but where’s Lauren? Why isn’t she taking my call?’
I’m wondering that too. ‘She’s not available, so Lisa put you through to me.‘
‘Well, what I want to know is, are there any applications on my property? Two people went through on Saturday. I got the text. They took applications. It was in the text.’
I turn my mouth into a smile. ‘Yes,’ I say, lips stretched. ‘You got two applications, they both applied so that’s good. I’ll check them and get back to you.’
‘No. No. I want to know who they are. You can check them later.’
‘I can’t tell you that. They’re on Lauren’s desk.’
‘Well, wouldn’t you think I’d be interested in the applications? What good are they on Lauren’s desk if you’re dealing with them?’
He had me there – what good were they on her desk?
I say firmly, ‘When I’ve checked them, I’ll get back to you.’
‘Yes, check them now, I’ll want to get moving on them. I’ll have my phone with me all day.’ He always says this and he always answers on about the second ring. It is as if he has the phoned taped to his hand, or hung around his neck.
I sip my coffee. This is the beginning of Monday Mayhem. It’s good to take five, to sip my coffee.
Caruthers Real Estate has a busy property management office which I joined as the senior property manager about four years ago.
For Monday Mayhem I think carefully about what I wear. It helps me with the all the action. I like to dress for the weather, too – today I am wearing my favourite turquoise top and my summer boots. They have a pattern of pretty cut-outs along the side and at the toe – no good in the rain, but they are boots and they give me a feeling of power – ‘these boots are made for walking’ sort of power. Power and confidence.
My top matches the cloudless sky and looks good with my blue and white striped skirt. It is cheerful and uplifting. I like the look and it goes with my blue eyes. If you look around, you’ll see lots of people have brown eyes so I’m very pleased with my dark blue. My mother says it is the Irish coming out in me; black hair and blue eyes. I’m happy with that.
I used to be a school teacher but I got over that. The job became more and more stressful and exhausting. At the end of each week I would throw my hands in the air and announce to anyone who was listening that I needed the next week in bed with several bottles of wine. What I really needed was to move on.
Where to move to was the problem. A friend suggested veterinary nursing because that is what she would like to do. Another idea was the police force. I am not keen on uniforms but I added that to the list. A teaching colleague said, ‘Why don’t you drive a tram while you think of something permanent? That’d be fun.’
I love Melbourne’s trams but that’s another job with a uniform. I kept these suggestions, and others that came my way, tucked into the back of my mind and went on teaching.
One morning a voice in my head said, ‘property management’. I was surprised. I hadn’t given that suggestion much thought. But the universe had spoken so I went with it.
I have been in the job for a number of years and now I work at Caruthers, in one of Melbourne’s inner suburbs.
***
On Monday, there is no time for a chat over a morning coffee. I grabbed mine as I passed Café Yellow and took care not to slop it on my beautiful turquoise top as I pushed through the heavy glass doors into our stylish reception area. I gave a quick greeting to Lisa and a nod and a pat to the aged and huge do-it-all photocopier that is positioned behind her desk as if it was her assistant. It has a habit of playing up and we call it The Monster.
Lisa was on the phone so she ignored me, and The Monster appeared to be asleep. I am not sure how The Monster feels but Lisa, who has been with the company for years, believes she is the pivot that the office revolves around. She would notice if I didn’t greet her. Receptionists can wield a lot of power, and Lisa wields that power and she has broken us into her way of working.
Through reception is the comfortable shabby office where the real work is done. I marched down to the very end of this long narrow building to my desk.
I like it here by the back door. When the last incumbent moved out I threw my weight around as senior property manager and grabbed the desk.
Despite the occasionally cranky or stressed landlord, I am happy I chose this as my new career. There is no timetable to stick to – I can arrange my own. Monday is Mayhem but it is quiet down here at the end of this old building and it is seldom quiet in a school classroom.
I push Bruno’s applications to the back of my mind and look at my emails. There could be something there that is more important than Bruno although I doubt he would think so. I’m also hoping Lauren will get sick of them on her desk and bring them down. It’s not that I’m making a point. Well, perhaps it is but I am helping her out by checking them.
I scroll through my inbox. The emails are never-ending. A lot of junk of course. How is it that even with the filters Caruthers has in place, I get emails on how to enhance a penis and pictures of sexy Russian girls looking for husbands? I had two like that last week. I forwarded them to our IT company. These emails are more use to them, as they are an all-male organisation. They assured me they had the problem under control. Whatever ‘under control’ meant. Perhaps it is under control because my junk today is about courses on how I can become a better property manager, up-skill myself on dispute resolutions, or be more effective at time management. There are a couple from a fashion outlet called Corporate Dressing and others of the same style. Not a penis in sight. I go through trashing them and the list becomes manageable.
Nerida, a tenant, has written half a page complaining about how the junk mail is distributed in her apartment block. She missed out on a free gift of Twinings teabags. We should have some rules for distributing whatever arrives. The mail is just dumped on top of the boxes and we help ourselves. There’s got to be a better way.
Her complex must be full of tea drinkers. If you are a tea drinker, why wouldn’t you grab more than your share? And why does she think I care about her not getting her free teabag? The junk mail and its distribution is nothing to do with me. I email back and ask her if she has any ideas and to come up with a solution and I will look into it. I wonder if she will bother, or will she disappear into the background.
Tenants see us as the answer to everything that goes wrong in their lives. A while ago, a tenant rang and asked me what I could do about an old flatmate she had fallen out with. He kept coming around and harassing her about some money he said she owed him.
‘This is very distressing,’ she said. ‘You should be able to do something to stop him.’
‘Why?’ I asked.
‘You’re managing the unit and he’s not on the lease. He shouldn’t be here.’
‘You could go to the police,’ I said.
She came back with, ‘What are they going to do?’
‘I’m sure they can do more than I can. I’ll put that suggestion in an email to you.’
She slammed down the phone.
Does she think I am some sort of miracle worker? I always confirm my telephone calls in writing – it takes away any confusion.
There’s an email from Tom. He is a complainer. He lives in a top-floor unit and finds a myriad of things that need attention, which he fires off in regular emails. Over the weekend he heard a noise in the roof.
I bet there are rats up there, he writes. Well, it could be a possum. But I’m sure it is rats. The couple next door put their rubbish on the landing. Sometimes it’s there for the whole weekend before they take it to the bins. That’s going to encourage rats.
Personally, I do not see how a rat in a roof cavity, however brave and athletic, is going to make it to the hallway to rat-around in some rubbish. If it managed the feat, it would be spotted and the whole building would be up in arms. An animal in the ceiling is an owners’ corporation matter. I smile as I flick the email on to them; something to add to their Monday workload.
If I check the dates, I can see most emails are generated on Sunday. What is it with Sunday? It appears that most tenants in this beautiful city sit around doing nothing. Then to break the boredom, they decide to report issues to their property manager and so add to the flow of emails waiting for the week to begin.
Most people hate Monday but in an oddly masochistic way, I like it. There is drama and action. The week begins with a bang and it is like being in the centre of things. There are issues to sort and problems to solve. I wonder if this is a hangover from my teaching days, where Monday has the energy of the students arriving at school after a two-day break and there is a sort of excitement in the air. Of course schools and property management departments are both places of action. Neither is a ‘kick-back and relax’ sort of job. Action is something I am used to.
There are bad days in this job when I come home and slam my door and never want to open it. Those are the days when I can’t believe I chose this career. That I studied to get my agent’s representative’s licence and paid to do it. The bad days can be bad, but I always bounce back for more. I can’t get it out of my system.
Some offices have a meeting about 9.15 am on Mondays, where they review the properties that were opened on Saturday. This doesn’t work because everyone has that, ‘I’m bogged-down-I’ve-got-too-much-to-do’ look about them to pay attention to the manager, who’s making a show of being in charge.
Caruthers doesn’t do this. On Saturday, the staff who open the properties for inspections fill out a running sheet for each property. At some point during their hectic day they text the owners with an update – how many people looked at the property and how many took applications.
The effort we put in encourages landlords to see Monday morning as a time to check if they have applications on their property. Bruno was one of the first off the rank. These calls add to Monday Mayhem. A call comes from a landlord whose property was opened by Lauren on Saturday. She sent him a text to say two people viewed it.
‘I hear two people came through the open. Did you get any applications?’
I think, give them time to get their act together, but I say, ‘No. Not yet.’
‘Well you’ve got their names and numbers haven’t you?’
‘Yes,’ I reply. I smile again. Have you noticed that when you smile you lift your voice and you sound bright and on the ball?
‘Can you give them a ring? See what they think and if they’re going to apply, then get back to me? I’ll have my phone with me all day.’ The whole world has their phone with them all day – why do people keep telling me this?
‘Yes. I’ll try to get some feedback,’ my carefully red-painted-lips are still stretched over my teeth.
‘Yeah, do that,’ he says. ‘Get back to me by lunch time if you can. I’ve got to get the place let. It’s been open three times now and not a sausage. I can’t afford to be waiting around.’ I make a note on my to-do pad just in case I forget, and he rings again. I will email him so I have a record of what I have said. It’s quicker that way too, as I won’t have to discuss it with him.
I hope the people who visited are happy to have me call. Prospective tenants can sound annoyed when they are phoned after an inspection. Their frustration at being disturbed can make them short and at times rude.
As a tenant, you should think of it from the owner’s point of view. You may have hated the place you viewed or thought the advertising was misleading, and you would not live in it if you were paid to. If that’s what you think, be kind. Keep it to yourself. Visualise the anxious landlord hovering near the phone and say something positive. Being a landlord can be stressful.
This is not the time for me to tell this stressed landlord that a sausage has not applied for his property because the place is too expensive. That conversation is better left to later in the week, when I am speaking to him again about the lack of sausages and what we are going to do to get more of them through at next Saturday’s open.
With all this going on, you would think it would be the last day of the week a property manager would call in sick. Yet, every Monday our manager of property management, Emily, emails a list of the names of the poor souls who have identified themselves as being sick. There is at least one, and sometimes two or three, who are taking a sickie.
Today Kylie, who is in my team, is on the list.
I wonder about her. She likes a good time. Perhaps she called in sick because she is so hung-over, she can’t lift her head without throwing up? Perhaps her alcohol level is so high she cannot risk driving. Real estate people know how to drink. Maybe, just maybe, she has been struck down with a nasty strain of flu. Or perhaps Emily has shared her bugs with her.
Emily’s emails never give the reason for the staff member’s absence. When the missing people turn up on Tuesday, they usually answer our concerned questions with, ‘Much better. Thanks’. If they mention the cause of their absence, it is likely to be ‘gastro’. Too much action at a night club can cause that and those Champagne brunches on Sunday that spill over into the rest of the day can encourage a tender tummy to rebel.
Today we can access our emails from our iPad or phone. If you can raise your head off the pillow even for a moment you can leave a message about returning calls and emails on Tuesday. If you don’t do this, people who view themselves as ‘a-very-important-person’ will contact you several times, leaving more and more angry and frustrated messages. That means more to wade through on Tuesday.
As Kylie’s manager, I will make time to check her emails. I want to look as if I am on top of this job.
Bruno! He won’t stay buried in my mind.
It looks as if I will have to collect his applications myself. I am starting to worry he will call again before I have got onto them.
I ring Lisa. ‘If Bruno calls, can you take a message? I’m not available.’
‘Don’t be unavailable too long. He won’t give up.’
‘Thanks,’ I say. ‘I have to check his applications before I talk to him again.’
‘Well, hurry up and do it. I don’t want him having a go at me,’ she says and she’s gone.
I head off to get the applications. I want to buzz Lauren and ask if they are still on her desk. But I don't. I tell myself it is good to get up and walk – it is healthy. I am always reading that.
I collect them and the running sheet from the edge of her desk and she has the grace to say, ‘Sorry. I’ve been flat out.’
‘It was good for me to have the walk,’ I say. ‘We all need to move around more.’
She picks up the phone and begins to dial without a comment.
I glance at Bruno’s applications. One couple has put themselves down as having two dogs. They’re not going to be suitable. Bruno will not have a dog near the place. His no-dog policy is set in concrete.
I ring them and tell them, so they can move on to another property.
Checking Bruno’s applications finds me caught up in a strange, rather surreal game that I have played before. Seeing this situation as a game helps me to cope with it, and in a bizarre way, to enjoy it. It must be something about chasing a ball and a desire to win; perhaps just the desire to win.
I regularly check applications for this two-bedroom villa unit in a beachside suburb. It’s usual for one or two applications for the property to be waiting for me on Monday. I ring the references and confirmed the information the tenant has given us is correct. The next move is to take the applications to Lauren the property manager. Then we really begin the game. Kick off goes like this:
‘This application on Princess Street checks out. The other one’s no good – two dogs,’ I say.
I wave the good application. ‘This guy sounds fine. All you have to do is put it to Bruno.’
Property managers are the contact for landlords, regardless of what goes on behind the scenes.
‘Oh god! Bruno!!’ A large sigh. ‘I don’t want to ring him.’
There is a pause. I wait.
‘Could you ring? I’m so busy this morning, just look at my desk.’ Her desk certainly looks like it is shrivelling under stacks of paper, but then her desk always looks like this. Invoices disappear for weeks in there. It’s as if they have been eaten.
‘I’m sure he would rather talk to you,’ I try. ‘You’re his property manager and he wanted to talk to you this morning.’
No one wants to talk to Bruno. We are into our fourth month of having this property vacant. There have been a number of applications for it. Some have checked out very well and some tenants have seemed keen. There is a catch to closing the deal.
‘No, you ring.’ Says Lauren, ‘Give him some excuse; say I’m out at an appointment. Anything! Say I’ve drowned myself. He’s already rung twice and Lisa said I wasn’t available. I’m still not available.’
I wait.
‘And really, I think I am sick, I’m not up to it today.’ She stops again and I wait.
‘Just the thought of ringing him makes by stomach churn, and I want to throw up. I can’t do it!’
‘Okay! Okay, I’ll ring him.’ I pick up the application and walk back to my desk.
This is part of the game plan. In the end I do this for almost every application. I am not keen to ring Bruno either, but then I don’t deal with him on a regular basis. What is hard for us and upsets Lauren is that we really want to let his property. That is our job and we have worked hard at it. To have it empty for so long gives us all a feeling of failure.
I have tried to tell Lauren about seeing it as a game and a challenge, but she doesn't get it. She is too emotional about it.
After we have been through this, I dial his number. I am playing the game, and remembering that it is a tough one. I play often but I have never got the ball into the goal. For three months we have been lining up our shots. Each time the goalkeeper is too good. In my mind Bruno is the goalkeeper. This is the wrong way around because Bruno should be on the same team as us. It does not make sense. Sometime I find myself getting really angry, but the game scenario lets me detach from the emotion.
Bruno of course picks up on the second ring. I bet he would pick up even if he was underwater discovering a lost treasure.
‘Well, at last someone’s returning my call. I’ve been waiting all morning,’ he says, as soon as I say who I am. He doesn’t have my direct line in his phone or he would have answered with those exact words. He likes to get to the point.
He is off again before I can tell him that Lauren has drowned herself. ‘How did the applications go? You said there were two. I want to know the details.’ I open my mouth to start but he hasn’t finished. ‘You know I’d be interested in these people, but I have to wait and wait to hear anything.’
‘One’s no good. Two dogs.’
‘Why didn’t you tell me that earlier? Wouldn’t you think I’d be interested to know that? I’ve been thinking about two applications!’
I don’t remind him that I didn’t know when we spoke earlier, although Lauren would have known if she had glanced at the applications.
We move into the next stage of the game. In the office, we wonder if he is using the property for some sort of classy tax dodge. Every tenant we think is suitable has to be checked by him.
Definitely no pets of any sort. I believe he once turned down a bird. There is a reasonable sized outdoor area leading off the lounge and the place is not pristine. You could call it lived in and you could think it was ideal for a pet but you would be wrong. The subject is best avoided. If there is a badly behaved dog or cat or bird or even fish out there they have crossed Bruno’s path at some time, and the experience has not been a happy one for him. We have yet to find out how the animal viewed the encounter.
Once, earlier on, I mentioned an applicant who had a dog with references for good behaviour and he asked me to find out what sort of dog it was. It was a kelpie.
‘Fancy anyone living in the city with that type of dog, and why would they think I would want it in my property?’ I wanted to ask him if he had seen the Australian film Red Dog, where the main character was a kelpie-cross. I’m glad I didn’t, because when I thought about it, I saw it proved his point. Red, the dog, did not live in the city. He lived in the Outback. We have ‘no pets’ in the advertising, but people try anyway, especially those who can’t read an ad properly or have a reference for their dog or cat.
Bruno also needs to meet his prospective tenants face-to-face.
In his words, ‘I need to know what sort of person I am going to deal with. Will we get on? This person may grate on me. You know you can never tell exactly what a person’s like on paper. I need the meeting to get the feel of them.’ The excuse for this is because Bruno does his own maintenance.
Today’s prospective tenant is a single older man. Unfortunately, the Privacy Act does not allow us to ask him whether he has been married or has a girlfriend or if he has any children who are not going to live in the property but will visit. This disappoints Bruno, and I imagine he will ask when he meets him. Bruno is not worried about the Privacy Act.
I fax the application through to him and arrange a meeting with the guy and Bruno at the property for the end of the day. Some people do not want to meet the owner and be shown around the property again by him and be asked personal questions. They pull out at this stage.
Kylie once said, ‘For god’s sake, he’s looking for a tenant not a best friend.’ I wonder if that is a good thing. He is very attached to his properties and if he has personal difficulties with the tenants we could all suffer.
I am surprised he has not taken this property away from us. Many owners would have done that long before we reached the four-month-vacant mark.
While I have been doing this I have had several phone calls. I don’t mind the interruptions but phone calls like this one on Monday annoy me.
‘I put in an application for 3 Railway Avenue on Saturday. When am I going to hear something back?’
‘Did you give it to the property manager at the property?’
‘No, I came into the office and dropped it off, so I know you got it.’
‘Right. What’s your name and I’ll let the property manager know you called. I have to tell you, you won’t hear back until we have contacted your references, and that could be later today or tomorrow.’
He knows we got their applications, so why call so early?
Vince manages that property. I email him to check that the application has reached his desk.
Another interruption is from one of Kylie’s tenants.
He starts with, ‘At last someone’s taking my call. I’ve been put through to a voicemail three times.’
‘Right,’ I say, ‘talk to me.’
‘We’ve got a dripping tap we want fixed.’
‘Right,’ I say again. ‘Have you emailed your request to Kylie?’
‘No! I’m talking to you now.’
‘We need all our maintenance in writing. Then we have a record of it.’
‘You mean that if my hot water bursts and the power goes off, I’d have to send you an email before you’d take any action?’
‘No, that’s an emergency, so you should contact us immediately.’
‘Well, what about my tap?’
‘It’s not an emergency, so you have to send your request in writing. That way we can keep track of it.’
‘What do you mean track of it?’
‘A paper trail. A record. How long has the tap been dripping?’
‘On and off for a few months. So we want it fixed.’
‘Right.’ I am getting good with ‘right’. ‘Email it through to Kylie and she’ll get onto it. I’ll let her know you’re doing that.’
‘Well, I suppose I’ll have to do that.’
‘Yes. The sooner you do it, the sooner it’ll get fixed.’ I can hear him draw breath, so before he says anything else I say, ‘Thank you for calling. Have a nice day,’ and disengage.
It’s frustrating to have to waste time on things like this. Kylie should have trained her tenants better. If the maintenance is not an emergency, we require it in writing. We put that in the documents we give a new tenant. But then who reads those? Not this tenant or he would know that a tap that has been ‘dripping on and off for a few months’ is not an emergency.
Bruno’s applications, even the unsuccessful ones on his property are carefully filed away. Normally I would shred the unsuccessful ones after a few days. We do not want people’s personal details floating around the office. But not Bruno’s. He is likely to ring up and ask about someone he turned down weeks ago or even how many people went through on a certain date. I have no idea why he wants this information and I can’t see how it can be of any use to him. I wonder if it is just to catch us out. I file his running sheets too.
The running sheets are my bible on Monday. Prospective tenants must have been through the property before I consider their application. If their name is not on the running sheet I put the application aside to follow up later. If you are someone who refuses to give your name at the open for inspection, beware. Your application does not take priority. We need proof that you visited the property. I also check for any comments, good or bad, that are beside the names.
Good comments go a bit like this: ‘Lovely to deal with.’ ‘Liked them.’ ‘She’s really keen.’ ‘They have a dog.’ ‘Nice.’
Positive comments are the most usual ones, but there are the negative ones. I have seen ‘No! No! No!’ and ‘No Fucken Way!!!’ written on a running sheet.
Why would anyone go to an open and behave so badly they get ‘No fucken way’ written beside their name? It’s beyond me. Often the property manager conducting the open will also manage the property. Are they likely to put someone in who they think will make their job harder? If you have ‘No fucken way’ against your name you are not going to be accepted as a tenant. No one is going to want to deal with you.
Then there are the time wasters. A year or so ago I showed a couple through a property that belongs to Bruno’s daughter. It has an aubergine coloured feature wall. Aubergine painted on by the fair hands of Bruno’s daughter. It is not a large wall, so not a lot of aubergine, but definitely aubergine. It helps divide the half-formed dining alcove from the kitchen.
The couple looked through every cupboard and robe, they flushed the toilet, turned on all the taps to check water pressure and asked about the neighbours (not that I knew anything about them). They stood on the balcony and gazed at the unit’s car park – a space along the drive below – and discussed its location and convenience to the entry door. It was opposite. They asked if the landlord would consider a lower offer for the rent. The answer to that was ‘no’. They took applications. When they were leaving she turned to me and said, ‘The landlord will have to paint out that dreadful colour if we take it. We couldn’t live with that!’
I have no idea what Bruno thinks of the colour but his daughter is very pleased with it. She thinks it gives style to this very ordinary two-bedroom apartment.
How can it possibly matter how the toilet flushes to these people, when they cannot live with the colour on the feature wall? Wouldn’t their first utterance be, ‘Oh my god, I can’t stand that colour! I couldn’t live with that. Will the landlord get rid of it?’
With the answer, ‘No, she likes it,’ we could all leave and get on with our day. Actually, the colour shows on the internet advertising, but I guess you have to see it to get the full effect.
Bruno is allowed to do the maintenance on this property but his daughter selects the tenants. A wise move on her part and I wondered at the time how she kept him from meddling in her decision.
Shortly after the ‘I-couldn’t-live-with-it-inspection’ we found tenants who paid the asking rent, and never once mentioned the feature wall. I have no idea if they liked it, hated it, were colour blind or just did not care. I was careful not to ask their opinion. Lauren manages it, and now I am thinking about it I wonder if they have discussed the colour in the negative with Bruno. I am sure he would complain to Lauren. He is very proud of his daughter, who is overseas, and her taste in home decoration. Not so pleased that he has given her free rein in his Princess Street property. That is very bland.
An email from Lauren pops onto my screen. It is addressed to everyone.
Has anyone seen an application from Trevor Walker for 10/22 Railway Avenue? He said he dropped it off on Saturday.
There, what did I tell you? However annoying it can be for a property manager, tenants should follow up on their application. I wonder how Trevor’s application travelled from reception. There are a number of routes and many hazards along the way.
I’m tempted to ask Lauren if she would like me to look through the stuff on her desk for it. But it is probably tactful to wait a while and see what happens.
Instead of ringing Lauren I ring the people who went through Sausage-Man’s place on Saturday. Neither of them answers their phone and I leave a message asking them to ring back if they are interested in the property or have questions about it. Then I email my lack of results to Sausage Man.
My screen pings and there is another email from Lauren.
You can stop looking for Trevor Walker’s application – I know that’s what you’re all doing. I’ve found it!!
As she doesn’t say where she found it, I deduce that it was on her desk the whole time. It is nice to be right sometimes.
Now that I’ve got Bruno sorted out I move onto other applications. Monday is all about applications.
I have a good application on a property in Barkly Street that I had trouble with last week. The tenants who applied last week added extra stress to my Monday by making an offer on the rent.
At Caruthers the rent is what’s advertised. Sometimes if the property has been on the market for some time, we may be able to persuade the landlord to take a slightly lower offer, but we advertise the rent the landlord has agreed on.
If the property is advertised for $650 per week, as the Barkly Street property is, the landlord is not expecting to receive $620, which is what this prospective tenant offered.
She explained to me, ‘When we saw the property we discovered it was smaller than we thought it would be.’ She enlarged on that, ‘Therefore, being smaller it should command less rent.’
‘Smaller than what?’ I asked.
‘Smaller than we thought it would be. It’s not as big.’
‘Not as big as what?’ I couldn’t resist. It was such a ridiculous thought process.
‘Well, we thought it would be bigger. If it was bigger we would pay more.’ Of course this sort of conversation goes nowhere and it’s not one that is wise to pass on to the landlord.
I said, ‘The landlord is not going to be interested in your offer. If you want the property, you’ll have to pay the full rent.’
‘I’ll talk to my boyfriend and I’ll see what he says. But he thinks $620 is what it’s worth.’
‘Right, do that! Come back to me if you’re happy to go ahead at the advertised rent.’
Her boyfriend wrote the following email:
We are writing to say that we like your property but we think it is too expensive. We have been looking at properties in the area for some weeks. We have got a very good idea of what rents should be. We are making an offer on the rent. We think it is only worth $620 in today’s market.
You’ll find us very good tenants. We have excellent references and we will look after the property as if it was our own. Please call any of our references. They will be expecting a call.
Please pass this email onto the landlord.
We look forward to hearing from you.
As I was asked to pass it on to the landlord, I forwarded it to Barbara.
She was on the phone immediately.
‘I’m offended. This is an immaculate apartment with two great bathrooms and two off-street car parks. Do they think I don’t know what it’s worth?’
‘I thought I should forward their offer to you, as they asked me to.’
‘You should be offended too, because they’re telling you that you don’t know your job…you don’t know what a property is worth. How dare they?’
As a property manager I have a thick skin that I’ve developed over time. I can’t afford to be offended so easily.
Barbara is a great landlord and very good to her tenants. She gave her previous ones a Christmas hamper. They moved out a couple of months later. Funny they did not want to stay for another hamper. It was a good hamper.
I emailed the new applicants with her refusal and left it at that.
They came back two days later with a higher offer – almost the full rent. Barbara had taken such offence; she didn’t want to discuss it. It was all over for them.
I’m sure this couple felt in command of the situation when they decided to put in the offer. I can see them sitting round a computer starting to fill in the online application.
‘What do you think? We’ll go for it. Right?’ says Gung-Ho who later writes the email that loses him any chance of the place.
‘Well! It is a bit small. We wanted something bigger,’ replies his partner.
Gung-Ho looks for other problems. ‘The carpet in the bedrooms has had a bit of wear but I could live with that. And you won’t notice when the furniture’s in there.’
‘No, you won’t but did you see that stain on the carpet in the robe?’
‘Yes, I wonder what caused that. It didn’t look too good.’
‘Our shoes will cover that, so it’ll be all right.’
Gung-Ho goes on, ‘The light fittings are the ones that insects die in. You know the ones. The cover clips on.’
‘It’s hard to get it off to replace the globes. Mum had some like that but she changed them for those hanging ones.’
‘They’re not that bad. I could change the globes. That’s not a big deal. Let’s make an offer.’
Gung-Ho’s partner is a little doubtful. ‘Do you think we should? I really like it. I don’t want to miss out.’
‘We’ll make an offer. They can always come back with another offer and we can negotiate. Let’s knock it back by, say $30 and see what happens.’ Gung-Ho turns back to the computer.
‘No. No, that’s too much! We don’t want to miss out. It’s the best we’ve seen.’
