Keys to the smart cities of tomorrow: Technology partnerships and the Internet of Things

Keys to the smart cities of tomorrow: Technology partnerships and the Internet of Things

Keys to the smart cities of tomorrow: Technology partnerships and the Internet of Things

Importance of Proptech

Keys to the smart cities of tomorrow: Technology partnerships and the Internet of Things

The 2018 Consumer Electronic Show (CES) that was held earlier this month was as much about collaborations and partnerships as it was about new technology. Many of the companies at CES were promoting products for the “smart home” such as smart locks, sensors, smart thermostats, smart appliances, and smart entertainment controls that are integrated with voice assistants — such as Google Assistant or Amazon Alexa.

smart cities and technology partnerships

Via REUTERS

One in six Americans now own a smart speaker — up 128 percent in since January 2017. The rise of voice-enabled digital assistants (and the products that can be used with them) highlights how an easily accessible technology platform allows companies to work together to create new services for consumers. It also shows how consumers are finding it easier to manage the underlying artificial intelligence that is changing how people interact with technology.

When tech companies collaborate in this way, content and information flow faster, allowing technology to be “smarter” or easier to use and making data easier to access. More user-friendly formats enable both consumers and companies to benefit from technological innovation without having to be experts on every device. Smart speakers are a good example of a simplifying device that allows users to integrate technology throughout homes and businesses.

The promise of these technology advancements is multiplied when combined with large data sets. The CES show included a whole area dedicated to highlighting a new area of technology collaboration: smart-city projects. By partnering with tech companies, cities can enhance their services with real-time data, and the companies at CES highlighted how municipalities could be more responsive to citizens by using cloud-based technology platforms to monitor the efficiency of city-wide services.

Improving customer service and lowering the cost of these services are part of the vision for integrating Internet of Things (IoT) technologies into smart cities projects. A simple example could be making common objects like lampposts and garbage receptacles “smart” by adding small sensors and connectivity to a monitoring platform. This way, city employees can be more responsive to sanitation and safety needs in neighborhoods.

In Boston, the city uses crowdsourcing and an app called “Street Bump” to improve its response to road maintenance challenges. Drivers with the app installed contribute to the city’s road repair efforts, as the app records and reports the geolocation information of road hazards like potholes to the city. This example shows the power of crowdsourcing and how local governments can use open-source processes and real-time information to incorporate citizen feedback into efforts to improve services and make decisions on how they spend resources that are often limited.

Public safety, transportation, and citizen engagement are three core areas that “smart cities” technology is targeting. Cloud-based technology platforms enable the sharing of data that boosts productivity, enhances services, and improves transparency into government decision-making in all these areas. Using data-driven efforts brings new thoughts, better procedures, and new teams into city planning for more efficient and effective outcomes. Constituent services can now be handled more like customer support, using the same tools that enterprises have had in place for years.

As society becomes more accustomed to using data in daily life, it makes sense for municipalities to benefit from the same data flows that retailers and suppliers use to maintain customer relationships. Data scientists are working with visualization experts on how to solve problems with analytics and provide insights that allow cities to be more responsive in providing services to citizens. Partnerships with tech companies are an ideal way for city governments to upgrade their capabilities and become more responsive and can help bring to government the customer-centric approach that is already deployed by many corporations.

IoT and smart devices will enable smarter transportation planning and better use of local resources and will help direct services to where they are needed most. Creating transparent data sets can show how a city is prioritizing its resources and managing its services. These tools should enhance the productivity of city governments and the openness and efficiency that citizens want in from government. Soon, we may be saying, “Hey Google, report the broken light on my street to city hall.”

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How Stratafy helps?

Stratafy is on the journey to be a property innovator for building management. This means we are looking to the future to connect your customer properties to the smart city and smart building sphere. Which increases their property value but also being relevant for the next generation of proptech. 

We aim to be the technology partner of choice in the property management space with end to end user experience.

Forget the Millennials, The Connected Consumer is Who You Should Be Chasing

Forget the Millennials, The Connected Consumer is Who You Should Be Chasing

Forget the Millennials, The Connected Consumer is Who You Should Be Chasing

Importance of Proptech

Forget the Millennials, The Connected Consumer is Who You Should Be Chasing

One of my top requested questions in the last couple of years has been on the topic of millennials. How to market to them, manage them, engage them, retain them, <insert favorite business verb here> them. And, while there are certainly valid generational preferences, and knowing them can indeed help boost revenue and retention, there is an even greater opportunity at play here. Millennials, Gen X-ers, Baby Boomers, Gen Z, all fall into a broader category, one which comes inherently by living in the digital age. We call them connected consumers.

While the term connected consumer may initially conjure images of the young, hip, digital native Snapchatting their favorite Spotify playlist, it is much greater than that. Imagine a baby boomer couple researching their next cruise, or a Gen X father searching for appropriate videos to teach his toddler. With more than half the world now using mobile devices to connect, communicate, research, and purchase, the connected consumer is diverse in identity, yet homogenous in many of their needs. How they connect with their building is no different.

These empowered consumers have knowledge, choice, and high expectations of companies they choose to do business with. They aren’t looking for just simple and fast. They are asking for personalized and proactive, and the companies which can deliver will have the numbers and market share to show for it.

Here’s what you need to know about the Connected Consumer –

Constant connectivity is the new state of being. 

This goes beyond just using the smartphone to check emails and make calls…ok, mostly to text. Connectivity no longer exists as an on and off switch. We don’t toggle between the physical and the digital. As you read this, is your smartphone within reaching distance? Or are you reading this on a smartphone while in transit? When you are at a bar and a friend poses a trivia question, how quickly does everyone turn to Google? When you are considering a new vendor, how long do you wait before you look them up online? What this means is that your customers and clients need a seamless approach. Potentially a Stratafy Approach

According to a recent state of the industry report released by Salesforce, 58% of consumers agree that technology has significantly changed their expectations of how companies should interact with them. If companies want customer satisfaction, the customer, and a keen understanding of their needs and wants, has to drive their strategy.

In influencers we trust. 

While advertising will always have a place in attracting attention, trust in advertising continues to decline as trust in influencers and peer recommendations (offline and online) continues to be a growing factor in decision making. According to a study by Nielsen, six in ten YouTube subscribers would follow advice on what to buy from their favorite creator over their favorite TV or movie personality.

Loyalty is earned, not given. 

Findings from the Salesforce report reveal “Half of consumers say they’re likely to switch brands if a company doesn’t anticipate their needs. This seismic shift isn’t only happening among consumers. The connected business buyer is also in control — bringing expectations of innovation, humanity, and personalization to the more cumbersome and expensive purchasing processes within their companies. Sixty-five percent of business buyers say they’re likely to switch brands if their company is not treated like a unique organization.” Not only do individual consumers want a unique experience, so do organizations.

A strong digital footprint matters more than ever before. 

The connected consumer is no longer a passive one. Not only do they drive their own buying journeys, they have extensive power to influence their peers. Most brands by now have come to the realization that they cannot bully or fake a brand reputation across the digital landscape. They cannot control the tidal wave of consumer-generated content such as social media posts and reviews, but they can help guide that tidal wave in a more positive direction by focusing on the customer experience. The focus needs to be less on creating a forced narrative and more on being a sherpa of sorts, working in collaboration with the connected consumer. Stratafy helps you build that experience quickly and effectively.

Immediacy isn’t a preference. It’s expected.

While focusing on millennials and Gen Z and understanding how to cater to particular demographics is certainly helpful, keeping in mind that there is a much larger undertow, i.e. the Connected Consumer, is going to be key for those brands and businesses who want to continue to grow and gain market share in the digital age.

Stratafy focus’s on the next generation and the changing trends

While being connected is extremely important, everything at the touch of a button on a device that is with them 24/7 is paramount. Here at Stratafy we are focusing on the customer experience first, which entails everything from the single customer view through to full app experience that is unique in the market globally. No building is too small or big to implement Stratafy with all modules fully customised per buidling.  Get in touch, Stratafy is the next wave in building management.

 

How Stratafy helps?

As a mobile first focus, Stratafy becomes the key to ensuring the owners and tenants are front of mind.

Apartment boom continues as development approvals jump

Apartment boom continues as development approvals jump

Apartment boom continues as development approvals jump

Importance of proptech

The Australian residential building boom continues to defy expectations of a downturn, led by a surge in approvals for apartments.

Key points:

  • Building approvals jumped 11.7pc in November led by a 30.6pc rise in apartments
  • More than 21,000 dwellings were approved for construction, the third highest on record
  • Most analysts expect the bounce to be short-lived and the building boom to ease off

The latest data from the Australian Bureau of Statistics revealed a 30.6 per cent rise in apartment approvals in November, while house approvals fell 2 per cent.

Overall dwelling approvals rose 11.7 per cent during the month, seasonally-adjusted, smashing economists’ expectations.

Those surveyed by Reuters were expecting a 1 per cent fall, with even the most bullish forecast from Laminar Capital tipping a rise of just 3 per cent.

A total of 21,055 dwellings were approved in the month, the third highest result on record. The estimated value of approvals rose 9.4 per cent.

Looking at the trend, total approvals have been on the rise for ten months. House approvals fell for the first time in eight months, slipping 0.1 per cent.

Location, location, location: towers on the rise

The outperformance of the apartment sector reflects buyer preferences, according to IFM Investors chief economist Alex Joiner.

“It seems the trend towards living in a more desirable location continues to win out over the traditional house on its own block,” he said.

As some first homebuyers give up on the dream of a backyard, Mr Joiner said some are looking to tower blocks in the CBD and inner suburbs.

Others are buying townhouses slightly further out.

Victoria continues to lead the charge

Across the states and territories, Victoria was the clear leader, continuing its upward trajectory.

Total dwelling approvals rose 5.6 per cent in the state in November in trend-terms, marking six months of gains.

“The number of approvals in Victoria over November was more than double the 20-year average,” said St George senior economist Janu Chan.

We would expect that to be a one-off spike because it was so huge, even though there is probably quite strong demand in Victoria because population growth is so strong.

JP Morgan economist Tom Kennedy noted the surge in higher-density approvals was primarily concentrated in Melbourne.

“This likely owes to the approval of a single very large project, and clearly leaves the flow of approvals in unsustainable territory,” he wrote.

“Australia’s other major capital cities experienced outright declines … which increases our conviction that the resurgence in Melbourne is to prove short-lived.”

Elsewhere, approvals in New South Wales fell for the third month, down 0.9 per cent in trend terms, while approvals in the ACT slumped, down nearly 22 per cent.

Can the building boom continue?

After November’s surprise surge, Alex Joiner expects a pullback in approvals of medium-density dwellings.

“From there I would suggest that approvals will continue to decline modestly in trend terms as interest rates remain unchanged,” he said.

“We would expect a gradual decline in approvals given that, nationally, house prices are starting to ease, auction clearance rates are off their highs and also the measures by APRA on lending,” added Janu Chan.

In the meantime, more buildings going up could mean good news for those looking to break into the market.

“Additions to the supply of property should continue to take price pressure off the market,” said Mr Joiner.

“Pressure should also be taken off rental market vacancy rates.”

St George expects prices to continue to ease but is not forecasting a crash in the near term.

“The increase in housing supply through apartments should, over time, keep prices under pressure,” said Janu Chan.

“But at the same time, we’re not expecting a collapse in prices at all.”

Article Source: View Original Article Source here

How Stratafy helps?

With the growth rate rising and the demand for better managed buildings becomes paramount. New buildings will yell for a software their owners and tenants want. Stratafy add to the value of new buildings & focus’s on the customers from the very beginning from moving in through to ongoing engagement.

Apartment building approvals ‘back with a vengeance’ led solely by surprise Melbourne jump

Apartment building approvals ‘back with a vengeance’ led solely by surprise Melbourne jump

Apartment building approvals ‘back with a vengeance’ led solely by surprise Melbourne jump

Importance of proptech

Australian building approvals are “back with a vengeance”, with official data striking its third-highest level on record in November, marking a 15-month high.

But the latest figures from the Australian Bureau of Statistics show the charge is being led solely by Victoria, which recorded a stunning 37.9 per cent gain in the month, compared with a 2.3 per cent fall in NSW.

The Victorian figures pulled the national approvals data higher, with the construction of new homes nationally rising a seasonally adjusted 11.7 per cent in November to 21,055, strongly outperforming market expectations of a 1 per cent decline and eclipsing the previous month’s 0.9 per cent gain.

Meanwhile, in the year to November, building approvals gained 17.1 per cent, the ABS reported in Tuesday’s release.

Approvals for private sector houses were down 2 per cent in the month, and the “other dwellings” category, which includes apartment blocks and townhouses, was 30.6 per cent higher.

“After a faltering about nine or 12 months ago, building approvals have come back with a vengeance,” Market Economics chief economist Stephen Koukoulas told Domain.

Assuming the approvals turn into construction, the news will boost economic growth and employment figures, according to Mr Koukoulas, and so will be taken as welcome news by the Reserve Bank or Australia.

A spike in supply could also lead to dwelling price weakness.

“[The jump in building approvals] is good news in terms of adding to GDP, and for those hoping for as moderation in home prices it’s probably going to be good news because we’ll likely have a lift in supply coming though.”

Melbourne had powerful growth, with 14,858 dwellings approved in just two months, which might usually be taken as a warning of a looming oversupply, but roaring population growth seems to quieten those concerns.

 Alongside Victoria’s 37.9 per cent gain in November, NSW slipped 2.3 per cent, Queensland dropped 2.4 per cent, Western Australia rose 3.9 per cent and South Australia lost 3 per cent.“There was some concern that Melbourne was going to have a glut of property… but Melbourne has the strongest population growth in the country, so the demographics are making any oversupply issue not all that acute,” Mr Koukoulas said.

While the November uplift was driven by a jump in Victorian approvals, up jumping from an already-strong 21 per cent rise in October, the “lumpy” nature of the data could lead to a correction, according to Westpac’s Simon Murray.

“The increase in Victoria was concentrated in private apartment approvals, in particular the high rise component (four or more storey blocks),” Mr Murray noted.

“The high rise series is typically volatile, and November’s surge likely reflects a lumpy project pipeline. This raises the risk of a sharp correction lower in apartment approvals in coming months even though Victoria has been seeing strong population growth.”

Article Source: View Original Article Source here

How Stratafy helps?

With the growth rate rising and the demand for better managed buildings becomes paramount. New buildings will yell for a software their owners and tenants want. Stratafy add to the value of new buildings & focus’s on the customers from the very beginning from moving in through to ongoing engagement.

The business case for building smart cities & regions

The business case for building smart cities & regions

The business case for building smart cities and regions

Importance of Proptech

The business case for building smart cities and regions

Building smart cities and regions is about a lot more than integrating intelligent technologies into our infrastructure and digital systems. The core ethos boils down to impact – improving the quality of life for all people regardless of socioeconomic or geographical barriers. This idea of putting people first is not new, but has just recently been accepted as the appropriate plan of attack for elected and public officials across the country. This means that we don’t rush to play with the shiny object in the room, but instead, collaborate together to solve real problems, for real people, using smart technologies as a tool to support.

Implementing smart technologies and strategies into our systems and infrastructure planning helps leaders:

  • Cut costs

  • Generate revenue

  • Create value
     

So what is the business case for improving people’s lives? It just so happens that taking an approach aimed at putting people first, revolving around building smart regions doesn’t only bolster social mobility, but also catalyzes economic development in our urban, suburban, and rural cores where residents and visitors have easy access to information, transportation, and opportunities. Additionally, smart planning helps to alleviate otherwise strained municipal budgets by helping governments cut costs, generate new revenues, and create better experiences for residents and guests. Cost savings and revenue generation is enabled by optimizing or altogether replacing outdated systems and infrastructure. The ‘three t’s of smart planning’ can ensure economic growth and opportunity: technology, transportation, and tourism. Enable access to information and opportunities via technology, move people around the city to jobs, education, healthcare, and leisure with smart mobility solutions, and inject new dollars into local economies through tourism and strategic growth.

 

The Three ‘C’s’ of Smart Cities

  • Community

  • Collaboration

  • Connectivity

The Three ‘T’s’ of Smart Cities:

  • Technology

  • Transportation

  • Tourism

Venture Smarter has been dedicated to helping leaders in government, business, and academia navigate smart cities and the digital transformations therein. Several questions must always be answered: What is a smart city? What applications can be used to benefit people or to optimize outdated infrastructure and systems? What is the cost and how will it be funded? How can we track and measure outcomes and impact? Can we use a budget neutral planning model?

As the vision changes place to place, so does the strategy. But certain focal points must not be overlooked if smart planning is meant to ensure systems interoperability, fiscal sustainability, and risk mitigation.

  • Technology and planning process standards should be in place,
  • interdisciplinary stakeholder groups must be engaged, and
  • projects must be launched with specific outcomes in mind that work together to create better places to live, work, and visit. 

 

Article Source: View Original Article Source here

How Stratafy helps?

As a mobile first focus, Stratafy becomes the key to ensuring the owners and tenants are front of mind.

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