New database laws will have ‘enormous implications for agents’, warning

Agents are being warned to contact everyone on their databases now and prepare for the introduction of the General Database Protection Regulations in May next year.

They are also being told that the potential implications for their businesses of leaving plans too late are enormous.

For example, businesses will only be allowed to hold data on customers and clients for the purposes for which it was provided and will have to securely dispose of that data once that purpose has been fulfilled.

The warning comes from  industry trainer and business mentor Michael Day of Integra Property Services and traceWiseUK.

At the end of next March, Day said the shutters will come down on the part of the traceWiseUK business which supplies agents with home owner information.

He said: “Most of the information we supply is to letting agents seeking to contact landlords. Land Registry data will identify the owner of a property but, more often than not, the landlord actually lives somewhere else.”

“At traceWiseUK we cross check literally dozens of Data Protection Act compliant databases to establish the correct address (and often telephone numbers too), and supply this to agents.”

“The issue is that under the GDPR, it will no longer be possible for us to provide this data to enable agents to contact landlords for marketing purposes because under GDPR, the person whose data we access must have specifically opted in to the end user for the purpose required and not just generically, as at present.”

“GDPR is going to be a huge issue for agents who will need to ensure that any datasets they use comply with the new rules.”

For traceWiseUK, the issue is that property owners have not specifically opted in to a service to supply their details to specific agents. The issue of agents using Land Registry data for marketing purposes clearly becomes questionable under GDPR.

For agents there are other potential issues beyond not simply getting the leads that they are now receiving from some organisations.

Day said that a vendor instructing an agent and an applicant registering with them often end up on a database that is then used to stay in contact subsequently.

However, under the new Regulations, once the deal has been done, then the original purpose has been achieved. Under GDPR, agents will not be able to keep data on either vendor or buyer and use it for any other purpose (e.g. marketing) unless they have specifically opted in to receive future information that might, for example, included updates on the local property market.

Day said: “Agents have until May to clean up their databases and get people to opt in, but no one should wait until then.”

Day is predicting that at some state, there will be a high-profile test case over how well agents are fulfilling the new database requirements.

traceWiseUK is now only offering agents property owner tracing until the end of March, at rates between £12.50 and £15 plus VAT dependent upon volume.

traceWiseUK will however continue to offer its anti-money laundering ID check service to agents. Online ID checks cost just £1.50 plus VAT (£1.80)

The firm’s recent flyer sent to agents suggests they should “fill their boots” between now and then on local landlord leads.

www.tracewiseuk.co.uk

 

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6 Comments

  1. Chris Wood

    This is going to crucify some major firms, portals and business models current modus operandi which, in some cases of blatant data misuse, is no bad thing.

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    1. DanHareReapit

      There is so much scaremongering on this legislation. The Information Commissioner’s myth-busters are well worth a read:

      https://iconewsblog.org.uk/2017/08/09/gdpr-sorting-the-fact-from-the-fiction/

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  2. Anthony Hesse

    GDPR is going to have an equally significant impact on recruitment agencies, with many of us busy trying to understand what the new legislation will mean for our businesses and how to prepare for the changes. GDPR will also affect any estate agencies that have their own in-house talent acquisition teams or recruitment departments, the majority of which are busily trying to grow their own databases of potential candidates for the future in a bid to lower their overall recruitment costs. These candidates are often introduced to them by recruitment agencies in the first place, and just because the recruitment agency may have that candidate’s permission to use their personal information (CV, etc) does not mean that the estate agency has! Interesting times ahead.

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  3. Peter

    “At traceWiseUK we cross check literally dozens of Data Protection Act compliant databases to establish the correct address (and often telephone numbers too), and supply this to agents.”

    “The issue is that under the GDPR, it will no longer be possible for us to provide this data to enable agents to contact landlords for marketing purposes because under GDPR, the person whose data we access must have specifically opted in to the end user for the purpose required and not just generically, as at present.”

    So there is some good coming from GDPR then!

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  4. BillyTheFish

    This may well level the playing field a bit for smaller agencies who do not have large marketing budgets.

    Experience tells me that if TraceWiseUK and their counterparts are any good they will find a workaround and the merry go round will continue. It will just be a different approach (EG loads of annoying ‘opt in’ tick boxes on forms).

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  5. Arthur06

    “the person whose data we access must have specifically opted in to the end user for the purpose required and not just generically, as at present.”

    Someone does not have the first clue how to act under the DPA, let alone GDPR.

    Third Party or Generic Marketing consent is just as unlawful now as it will be in May 2018. Simply google Optical Express at the First Tier Tribunal.

     

    Amazing that industry professionals can still peddle this nonsense.

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