Are you looking for a house to
rent? Keep calm; troop to Instagram, Facebook, or even Tiktok
and your needs will be met.
“Gone are days when prospective tenants would move from an
estate to an estimate scouting for
houses. We post houses of different sizes across the city and its
environs and charge small ‘viewing’ fees. We earn more once we
connect a tenant with a landlord,”
Winnie Chege told the Star.
The 27-year-old business administration student at a local
university is among tens of enterprising Kenyans riding on the Internet of Things to connect tenants
with landlords, earning between
Sh1,000 to Sh5,000 per gig.
The online house agent who has
since grown her Instagram page to
145,000 followers says she saw the
opportunity after her elder sister
searched for two weeks looking
for a house to rent without success.
“My sister who had just relocated to Kenya’s capital city from
Eldoret not only spent more than
two weeks looking for a two-bedroom house but was also conned
by a man masquerading as a house
agent for an apartment in Ruaka.
That was an eye-opener,” Chege
who boasts of successfully connecting at least 35 tenants to their
dream homes said.
She explains
that Covid-19 movement restrictions gave her ample time to grow
her social media pages and work
on a business plan.
“I participated in almost all the campaigns I
came across,” she said.“I started
as a junior agent for a mid-size real
estate company after pitching my
idea to the manager I met online. I
helped the firm set up social media
pages and campaigns. I didn’t last
there six months as my ambition
was even greater.”
She works hand in hand with
construction companies, real
estate firms, house agents and
owners.She does house reviews
and posts them on her social media pages.
She has since employed
two of her cousins who help in
responding to numerous inquiries
by clients. “I have two other employees who accompany clients
during viewing”.
“Once a client is interested in
a house, a Sh1,500 viewership
fee must be paid. I have worked
different packages based on location and house size for landlords,
agents and real estate firms for every complete business,” Chege said.
The enterprising lady earns close
to Sh200,000 on a bad month,
which she shares with her team.
She charges a commission of
Sh1,000 per tenant connected for
a 2-bedroom house for eight consecutive months and a one-off payment of Sh6,000 for one-bedroom.
“I get at least Sh14,500 for every three-bedroom house. This, I
charge house owners. I enter such
arrangements with few tenants,”
Chege said.
EvaTheRealtor who
runs an online house agency on
Tiktok targeting tenants looking
to relocate to Kamakis, Ruai and
Ruiru in the outskirts of Nairobi
has long term plan for the business.
After searching job-hunting
for three years, the communications graduate says she is happy
where she is now, earning at least
Sh90,000 by connecting tenants to
house owners.
“I hear people curse
Tiktok but I can only count my
blessings. I have connected more than 100 tenants and helped tens
of house owners find customers.
This is the future of real estate,”
the online realtor who refused to
give us her official name said.
Rachel Anyango, a tenant in
Sigona has all the praises for the
rising innovation in the real estate
sector, saying technology has made
things easier for all stakeholders.
Last year, the senior police officer in Nairobi found a three-bedroom house online, paid via mobile money and found movers
on social media who helped her
family settle in the new house.
“I
have never met the owner. This is
my seventh month now. All is well.”
A housing expert Albert Kamotho says that innovation is
simplifying the sector which has
for decades been shrouded in complexities.
“Buying, selling and renting
houses was treated with secrecy,
imperialism and complex jargon
that threatened to deny it the
benefits that come with technological advancements. Today, an
18-year-old, armed with nothing
but a smartphone can sell a house
worth millions,” Kamotho said.
He said that these are some
of the emerging trends likely to
breathe life into the sector that
is currently on the recovery path
from Covid-19 ruins.
Kenya’s real estate sector has
been on a growth trajectory in
recent years, supported by strong
economic fundamentals and a
growing middle class.
The sector contributed 8.6 per
cent to the country’s GDP in 2024.
The real estate market exhibited steady growth in 2024, driven
by increasing urbanisation, infrastructure development, and a
growing middle class.