| |May 201719CIOReviewThough real estate mostly involves transaction of physical assets, technology has been disrupting the transaction lifecycles of different real estate asset classes globallyto keep their financial transactions and asset management entirely online.Technology transforming consumer behaviour, acting as catalyst to online transactionsOnline shopping is increasing in popularity. As far as real estate is concerned, consumers have access to on-ground images and information about properties available on the market across the country. In some cases, the selling price also. The transparency involved in maintaining a sophisticated online presence has raised standards among developers and, in turn, empowered buyers. India is experiencing high urban inward migration, particularly among people of working age. This is due to the movement of our huge IT workforce. Until the 1990s, people typically bought their first house towards retirement. Now, people are buying homes in their late 20s, just a few years into their career. The consumer base is younger and more tech-savvy than ever before, and expects to be able to shop online for all manner of goods and services ­ real estate included.It is not only end users wanting a new home who are heading online; investors are also showing a keen interest. And while home buyers still pay at least one visit to the property before parting with their money, investors are increasingly happy to keep the whole process online.Earlier, buying a house was a long and tedious process. Today, however, the Internet is helping streamline the house-hunting process and also improve transparency - almost every developer has a website divulging at least some information about available options, including a location map and photos of the current state of construction.Tech Transforming Real Estate Requirements Across the GlobeTech-enabled workplaces are becoming more common across the globe. In USA, research on the budgets of clients' interior build-outs are showing very interesting results, with IT costs as a proportion of overall construction budgets increasing rapidly. Earlier, they were around 5 percent of the overall construction budgets over the last decade. More recent build-out budgets show the expansion of IT services from cabling and wiring to more than a dozen items for technology, including access devices, infrastructure, mobility, connectivity, data security systems, wireless connections and upgrades, business-specific apps, company-specific conferencing and presentation capabilities. All of these items can add up to 35 percent or more of the budget of a truly technology-focused company.This theme is seen in every tenant build-out today, from traditional law firms to new campuses built by companies like Facebook and Apple. The aesthetics and prestige of an office, which were formerly the primary considerations, are beginning to take a back seat to the technology and the connectivity within buildings. Going ForwardIt will not be long before corporate occupiers in India start displaying the same trends. Today, technology is already enabling services like street view, 360 degree view of a property's neighbourhood, property walkthroughs and landscape photography carried out by drones ­ all of which help buyers, investors and lessees in their decision-making process. Technology is both a driver of the digitization of all kinds of real estate data and also an enabler in disseminating and analysing this data. With increasing digitization in India as also improvements in data-capturing techniques, a more granular and timely assessment of real estate markets will be possible. Anuj Puri
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