Grant Harrod quits LJ Hooker

Grant Harrod quits LJ Hooker
Jonathan ChancellorJanuary 17, 2017

The chief executive of the real estate franchise business LJ Hooker, Grant Harrod has resigned.

It follows a decision by the board to ditch plans for its $400 million float on the ASX.

"The company was looking to IPO and when I came onto the board in 2014 it was a key objective," Mr Harrod told The Australian Financial Review.

"Now the board has made the call of not wanting to proceed and that has made the role redundant for me.

"My skills are not going to be utilised."

He advised that the company had no debt issues and its funding lines were secured until 2020.

Mr Harrod was hired three years ago after serving as chief executive of listed companies including the communication technology group Salmat Limited and office products company Corporate Express.

LJ Hooker's national market share sits behind Ray White with around 7 per cent.

The agency now hired global talent acquisition firm MitchelLake Group to conduct a search for a new chief executive.

LJ Hooker is one of the nation's best-known brands with more than 700 franchise offices and 8000 people across Australia and in New Zealand, the Pacific and Asia. 

Grant is also a director of Local Measure, a location based social media monitoring and customer experience management start-up technology company.

Jonathan Chancellor

Jonathan Chancellor is one of Australia's most respected property journalists, having been at the top of the game since the early 1980s. Jonathan co-founded the property industry website Property Observer and has written for national and international publications.

Editor's Picks

City Beat January 2025: Sydney property market cooldown slows as new apartment pipeline ramps up
26 Vista Street, Surfers Paradise apartment development, hits 70 per cent sold
Latent Defects Insurance 101: What is the Technical Inspection Service (TIS) Program
City Beat January 2025: Gold Coast property values continue to grow as off the plan enquiries hit near 12-month high
Live parkside in Melbourne for under $500,000