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Interview: ‘I’ve loved every minute since I became an estate agent – 49 years ago!’

So says Mike Day after winning a Lifetime Achievement Award at the recent The Negotiator Awards - so what's changed since getting his first job?

Nigel Lewis

mike day estate agent

Mike Day is one of the most experienced and best-connected estate agent industry figures and although his career is far from over, he recently won the Lifetime Achievement Award at The Negotiator Awards.

His CV alone justifies the accolade. Starting work as a sales negotiator in 1975, he worked at several independents before ending up at Prudential Property Services and then later holding several senior management positions at Connells.

In 2003 he set up consultancy Integra Property Services through which he provides both business advice and training, but more recently has also busy at OnTheMarket, Propertymark, Agents Together while also chairing the RICS’ Residential Faculty.

But he’s now, perhaps sensibly (given a triple heart bypass operation in 2021) decided to slow down and his New Year’s resolution was to go on holiday more, although it sounds like he’ll be still working from the beach or cruise deck.

Estate agent

“What Covid changed in many sectors including ours is that many of us can now do our jobs from anywhere in the world, although nothing replaces face-to-face meetings,” he says.

“I think the days of doing everything via Zoom is beginning to fade a little and more people are asking to do things in rooms rather than on video.

“A good example of that is at OnTheMarket where I gather, following the CoStar acquisition, its staff are being asked to return to the office.”

Young people both inside and outside the industry are fast losing the ability to communicate other than via text or email.”

“But what concerns me most is that young people both inside and outside the industry are fast losing the ability to communicate other than via text or email – no one picks up the phone and talks to people direct any longer.”

Day says that you can argue that this is what the consumer wants as tenants, landlords, buyers and sellers are all busy people too.

But it means that agents “don’t get under their skin” and understand their customers’ motivations and needs, and that the industry is becoming too transactional – the Rightmove factor if you like.

“If agents lose that questioning and communication skillset, they will be missing a trick – technology should be used to underpin these core face-to-face skills, not replace them,” he adds.

When Day joined the industry nearly 50 years ago, such ways of doing business were all agents had, along with their branch window, card index system and ads in the local paper.

Michael Portillo

“I began looking for a job after finishing my ‘O’ Levels at at Harrow County Grammar School for Boys, where Michael Portillo was the Head Boy incidentally, after deciding that ‘A’ Levels and a degree were not for me,” he says.

“I wasn’t sure which sector to go into but didn’t want to be stuck behind a desk and fortuitously a local firm was advertising for a trainee-cum-apprentice estate agent – and the rest is history.”

Day, who thinks Labour’s assertion that all estate agents should have at least an A-level is ‘nonsense’, says that although his starting salary was ‘a pittance’ he soon overtook friends working in other sectors as he qualified and then began moving up the career ladder.

What he says hasn’t changed is that, largely, estate agency remains an industry that pays intelligent and hard-working people good salaries once their initial training is completed.

£75,000 potential

Recruiter Andrew Deverell-Smith recently revealed that a successful sales negotiator working at a big-name urban estate agency can usually earn from £40,000 to £75,000, not a bad salary for someone only a few years out of school or college.

Day says he was paid £11.50p a week at his first job, more than half that of a similar job at a retailer as a trainee – but the difference was by the time he got his second job, his income had become performance related.
Another change that Day has noticed is that, when he was starting out, he got to work in all the different departments on the firm.

“Now, entrants to the industry often have to decide there and then which sector – commercial, lettings, sales, property management – they want to go into at the outset,” he says.

“I think that’s a disadvantage – I was helped by having a broad view of the industry and not being immediately pigeon-holed.”

Asked what achievement he would pick out from his long career to date, Day says it’s the large number of people that he hopes have appreciated the help he’s given whether it be mentored colleagues, home movers, people he’s trained or those seeking help via Agents Together.

Despite his promise to take it easier, it’s going to be some time before he stops doing that.

February 27, 2024

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