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Making an impact in Canberra: Guy Randell

If you’re involved in commercial real estate in Canberra, you’ve likely heard the name Guy Randell. An award-winning agent and director of Burgess Rawson, Guy is renowned for his in-depth approach to commercial investment. Here, he tells Kylie Dulhunty how he got his start in the industry and why his first-hand experience sets him apart in a competitive market.

Not many people can claim theyโ€™ve helped shape the way their nationโ€™s capital city looks, feels and runs, but Guy Randell can.

As the managing director of Burgess Rawson Canberra, Guy is intricately involved in creating the $160 million DKSN precinct.

Co-developed by Doma and Englobo, the 16,252sq m precinct is set to reinvigorate the suburb of Dickson with more than 50 commercial opportunities, private office tenancies, an eat street with more than 20 restaurant opportunities, a medical centre, retail, a gym, childcare centre and 300 residential units.

Guy and the Burgess Rawson team not only helped the developers come up with the concept but are now involved in selling and leasing the commercial spaces.

โ€œThe developer had to tender for the site and put their vision forward, and then they said, โ€˜Guy, youโ€™re going to be doing the commercial as you have done for our other projects. What do you think we need, what do you think we can do?โ€™โ€ Guy explains.

โ€œIโ€™ve worked with them to come up with some ideas and said, โ€˜This is what I think we could do’.

โ€œWeโ€™ve worked together to create this amazing concept.

โ€œItโ€™s changing a suburb.โ€

Working together

Guy says he loves collaborating with developers and engineers to craft a project and then obtain the best sale or leasing results for his commercial clients.

โ€œI love being involved from day one where, as a team, you collaborate with the engineers saying this and the development manager adding their bit, before the overarching developers say, โ€˜Hereโ€™s the intent, hereโ€™s the cost and hereโ€™s how weโ€™re going to stage it’,โ€ he says.

โ€œThen they allow us to go, โ€˜OK, letโ€™s get the most amount of return we can out of every square metre. Letโ€™s deliver the best interactive precinct and give everyone whoโ€™s buying here a bit of surety that weโ€™re not going to put the same thing next door to them’.

โ€œEveryone has an opportunity to make their mark, right down to the last tenant moving in.โ€

Burgess Rawson has invested in the precinct too, locating its office on Challis St, and Guy says next year theyโ€™ll move to a bigger office again at DKSN.

A commercial real estate agent with 12 years experience, Guy says heโ€™s long held an interest in real estate and investment, but he hasnโ€™t always worked in the field.

Initially a member of the Royal Australian Navy, Guy then worked for 20 years in the public service writing national policy for the construction and building industry.

He started investing in commercial property himself, and after he bought and leased out a couple of units to national tenants at a big waterfront precinct, the developer suggested he become an agent.

โ€œHeโ€™s been an institutional client of mine from day one, and heโ€™s just been brilliant,โ€ Guy says.

โ€œThatโ€™s what I love, working on the new stuff (commercial properties) and understanding the design of it, the interior design, the external, looking at the mechanical and hydraulic aspects, and the way people move.

โ€œThen I started studying retail inside and out and found the niches that I loved, which ended up being the investment side and the development side.โ€

First-hand experience

One of the things that helps set Guy apart is that he has a lot of first-hand experience in the same sectors his clients operate in.

Over the years, Guy has owned retail franchises that taught him about franchising, leases, mall leases, fitout contracts, variations and builds.

He has designed and owned pubs where he was involved in everything from buying the building to tendering, managing contracts, completing the design with international firms, importing furniture, cost analysis and supplier contracts.

Heโ€™s also built a childcare centre, a service station, and strata units.

โ€œThis has enabled me to understand business operations, costs, imposts, occupancies, turnovers, builds and leases,โ€ Guy explains.

โ€œI always ensure I have a mentor, and then I look to those elements I donโ€™t understand, or Iโ€™m not adept at, and learn from them.

โ€œIt might be town planning, development management, architects or mechanical contractors, so when we plan a development, we understand exactly what is required to make it work.โ€

His own agency

Guy worked for other agencies initially, but decided to bring Burgess Rawson to Canberra about five years ago after being impressed with the results the brand was generating in Sydney and Melbourne.

โ€œI saw that lacking in Canberra, and I saw a niche that was missing,โ€ he says.

A few conversations and quite a bit of organisation later, and Burgess Rawson opened in the ACT.

โ€œIt was just two guys and a plastic table sitting in a completely vacant space,โ€ Guy says of the agencyโ€™s humble beginnings.

โ€œWe got our first listings and we sold a bank and then a gym.

โ€œPeople started seeing the results we got and went, โ€˜Wow, thatโ€™s Sydney yields coming to Canberra’.”

Guy says about 90 per cent of the agencyโ€™s transactions have been interstate buyers, and thatโ€™s something heโ€™s immensely proud of.

โ€œIt means weโ€™re introducing Canberra to Australia,โ€ he says.

โ€œThe property market in Canberra is one of the most exceptional in Australia and everyone is starting to realise that now.

โ€œDuring COVID-19, investment has poured into Canberra because itโ€™s a very safe market with low vacancy rates, the highest incomes, the highest dual incomes and a stable workforce. 

โ€œThereโ€™s been price increases and rent increases. Itโ€™s a great market.โ€

Full-service agency

Since those early days of two men and a plastic table, Burgess Rawson has grown to a team of 13 and has expanded its service offering.

Guy says the agency has always offered commercial, projects and commercial property management, but now also includes residential projects, single residential and residential property management.

โ€œWeโ€™re a full-service agency here in Canberra,โ€ he says.

โ€œWeโ€™re growing, and weโ€™re very smart about how weโ€™re doing it. Weโ€™re doing it slowly, and we want to deliver the same exceptional service that weโ€™re renowned for in the commercial space.

โ€œItโ€™ll take time to get that reputation, but thatโ€™s our ethos, and in Canberra now, weโ€™re accepted as a really big player.”

In the past 12 months, the agency has doubled in size, and Guy says over the next 12 months they hope to do the same again.

Success built on trust

He says one of the secrets to his and the agencyโ€™s success is creating long-lasting relationships built on mutual trust and respect.

Over the years, Guy has become a trusted advisor to his clients, valued for his hands-on experience as well as his ability to research and upskill if thereโ€™s an area heโ€™s not well versed in.

โ€œI love being in meetings where Iโ€™ve got no idea whatโ€™s being saidโ€ฆ Iโ€™ll sit back, Iโ€™ll learn, Iโ€™ll study, Iโ€™ll go and talk to people and have a coffee with them to learn,โ€ he explains.

โ€œThen, all of a sudden, Iโ€™ll understand what theyโ€™re talking about, and the next time I come across the same thing, I can speak about it.

โ€œYou try to get yourself a great understanding of as much as you possibly can.

โ€œWeโ€™ve got developers that are very sophisticated people in the world, and they donโ€™t need any help, but they rely on your expertise. Then weโ€™ve got some that are just starting out and donโ€™t know anything.โ€

Guy says many investors also come to him for advice on what type of business would suit a particular block of land or source the ideal property.

โ€œIโ€™ve got many clients Iโ€™ve sold to many times, and they trust you,โ€ he says.

โ€œYouโ€™ll come up with something and show them and take them through everything. You donโ€™t just go, โ€˜here it is, itโ€™s good for youโ€™. You explain why and how it will fit what theyโ€™re looking for.”

Evidence of that trust is that Englobo has already brought Burgess Rawson on board for another of its projects, this time in Gungahlin.

Guy says the project will be three times the size of DKSN and provide work for the next 10 years.

The value of that work and the relationship he’s built with Englobo, and other clients, is not lost on Guy.

โ€œIt is something that’s next level,โ€ he says.

โ€œYouโ€™re a trusted advisor.โ€

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Kylie Dulhunty

Former Elite Agent Editor Kylie Dulhunty is a freelance content producer for the Elite Agent audience, leveraging her extensive copywriting and real estate expertise.