June 2021

Go in With Your Eyes Wide Open

Recently Tanya McGeehan spoke with Aine Toner from The Belfast Telegraph, please see below Tanya’s thoughts on the property market in Northern Ireland. ‘Like many involved in the Northern Irish property sector, Tanya McGeehan, director and founder of MCG Investments Ltd, is aware of the market’s current buoyancy.’ “Absolutely, 100%. Anybody in this field is only going to say the same answer to you across the board, UK wide. It’s extremely buoyant. There’s just so much activity out there,” she says. “Funny, a lot of people would ask me is that just in the sales end but it’s in the sales and the rental market space. It’s simply down to the change in lifestyle and what people are looking for through the pandemic. Nobody in a million years, not the best economists in the world, could have forecasted what has happened. See the link for the full article; https://www.belfasttelegraph.co.uk/life/house-home/tanya-mcgeehan-on-investing-in-property-my-advice-go-in-with-your-eyes-wide-open-40556017.html  

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Tanya is Building Strong Relationships across the board

In the High Flyers spotlight this week is Tanya McGeehan, managing director of MCG Investments, which specialises in residential property investment opportunities in Northern Ireland offering a range of services including sourcing, acquiring and re-furbishing buy-to-let properties and delivering extensive residential refurbishments for re-sale working with investors and joint venture partners. What was your first job? My first job was aged 13 washing dishes in a Magherafelt hotel as my parents believed in getting us experience and appreciating the value of money. My first real job after graduating was in a foreign exchange dealing room for an international bank in Dublin 20 years ago. What qualifications do you have? I have a 2:1 BA honours degree in hospitality and business management, Prince 2 project management and various property related qualifications. What do you attribute your success to? Success for me is always somewhere I am always striving to get to and I suspect that will never change. But my drive for success comes from growing up watching my parents work hard at growing their property business and instilling in me and my three sisters from a very young age, the importance of working hard to achieve success. My success is based on hard work, being authentic and consistent in everything I do. How would you describe yourself to someone who’d never met you? I would say that once you meet me for the first time, you will know plenty about me and quickly realise that I’m far from shy and love to chat! I would regard myself as a very friendly, approachable, open and honest person. Who do/did you look up to in business? My dad (sadly deceased in 2012) was my absolute idol, building a successful property business still operating strongly today. Others that I admire include local businesswoman Mairead Mackle of Homecare Independent Living and the genius of Jeff Bezos on a global scale who has literally changed the world. How do you get the best out of people who work for you? I value trust and integrity when working with people and I treat everyone fairly and work on the basis that the best way to develop my business is to build strong, long lasting relationships with employees, supply chain and my investors. I am the same person in work, as I am in my personal life, something which I feel allows people around me, to be more relaxed when working with me. If you could change one thing about doing business in Northern Ireland, what would it be? The conveyancing and planning processes are far too slow and bureaucratic and require radical overhaul. We could deliver more projects each year if we saved some time on those aspects. Which website or app could you not do without? LinkedIn for business What was the last book you read? I just finished Michelle Obama’s ‘Becoming’ and am currently reading Ollie Otherton’s ‘Battle Ready’. What car do you drive? Audi Q7 Jeep Tell us something interesting about yourself? I recently completed a fitness challenge running four miles every four hours over 48 hours known as the David Goggins challenge with my husband Stephen and others, raising over £13,000 for the Alzheimers Research UK charity. It was mentally and physically exhausting! What’s your greatest passion outside work and family? I love holidays to sunny destinations, so this past year has been a real challenge. As soon as restrictions are lifted, I will be on a plane somewhere hot! Link to full article by Irish News: https://www.irishnews.com/business/2021/06/15/news/tanya-is-building-strong-relationships-across-the-board-2351061/

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Property is in my ‘DNA’

Co Londonderry woman Tanya McGeehan tells HELEN MCGURK why she is on a mission to become Ulster’s top female property entrepreneur.   Who hasn’t watched a TV show like Homes Under the Hammer and dreamt of buying a dilapidated property with a 1970s avocado bathroom suite and Artex ceilings, doing it with up swish new fittings, and selling it on for a cool profit? Let’s face it, the idea of ditching the humdrum nine-to-five to make a quick buck doing up a horrible house is a seductive one. But, of course, TV programmes make property developing look like a cinch, when the gritty reality – as NI property entrepreneur Tanya McGeehan points out – is it takes strong foundations of “resilience, determination and passion”… and, one should point out, money. The 43-year-old Magherafelt woman who has completed some 15 ‘flips’ (industry lingo for buying a property doing it up, then selling it on for a profit) developed her ‘love’ for property out of very tragic circumstances. “My mother and father had their own property business, which my father started after taking early redundancy as a bank manager when he was 36. In the early 1990s he purchased his first buy-to-let property and went on from there to build up quite a successful property business. “I have grown up with property from I was a very young age. I always say it’s in my DNA. I am also the eldest of four girls, so we were all very much familiar with property. All my dad’s portfolio was primarily in Belfast, so we spent many times when we were at university driving around collecting rent from students. Myself and my friends in my first year at the University of Ulster lived in one of my dad’s properties off the Lisburn Road.” Tanya, however, did not go straight into the property business; instead after university she worked for her local council. “During this time my dad started to get unwell and at the very tender age of 53 was diagnosed with early frontal dementia – he was literally struck down in the prime of his life . “None of us girls worked in the property business, it was something he ran himself along with my mum, a community nurse. In April, 2009 my mother reached out to me, being the eldest, and asked me to help her with it. “So, due to the tragic circumstances of my father, I ended up going into the family business, not having had any real desire previous to that to work in it. But I ended up falling in love with the industry.” Tanya’s father died nine years ago at the age of 57 and she still looks after his property portfolio. “I was really loving the whole industry. I had a lot of experience working in the rental side of things at that point, as well as managing the properties, as you are constantly having to upgrade and maintain them, but I wanted to get into refurbishment, the ‘flipping’ side of the business.” Tanya established her business, MCG Investments, and set about following her dream, working alongside a team of tradesmen her father had worked with to transform run-down properties into desirable homes. “We are about to start project 16. The properties are all in Belfast, mainly around Ravenhill, Ormeau, Saintfield. We’ve just completed three units in South Parade and we’re just about to embark on one on the Malone Road and one in Rosetta. “We tend to go for highly-sought after areas with high demand from professionals; the more affluent, higher income areas.” With the ‘flips’ going well, she saw a niche in the market and decided to branch out. “Primarily when I first set out it was just with a view to doing ‘flips’ for myself. I was fortunate enough to have a pot of capital that I was able to start off the business with, and then I simply worked for myself and nobody else was involved. “Then at the start of last year I did a property training course in Glasgow. On the back of that training we pivoted the business and started opening up to investors to come on board with us and started promoting the business and talking about what we do and how we can help other people who have absolutely zero experience or knowledge of property, but are interested in getting a foot on the ladder. “Also, we identified a real gap in the market for people that want to invest in property long-term, as a buy-to-let investment, whether it be for a pension or to hand over to their children, whatever their reasons, and are simply too busy with their own primary jobs or businesses. “That is one of our main services, a consultancy service where people that are time-poor hire us as consultants to do all of the work for them – from sourcing and acquiring the properties, negotiating the price, doing all the searches and viewings and communicating on behalf of the client with their conveyancing solicitor, broker, surveyor, whatever professionals are required. “We’ll also set up an appointment with a letting agent to find suitable tenants and also a management agent that once the tenants are placed they are managed by a local agent. The only involvement that the client has is collecting their rental income at the end of each month. It is a very seamless, one-stop shop service, which has proved very popular.” As anyone who has ever bought a house knows, the process can be incredibly stressful, but Tanya believes the key to being a successful property entrepreneur is passion. “It is stressful at times, but I absolutely love it, you must have a passion for it.” The attributes she deems crucial are organisational and numerical skills. “You have to be a numbers person, which I am. I can very quickly calculate the numbers of a deal.” When she does up a house and it’s looking gorgeous, isn’t she ever

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