When the Flood Came, the System Held
Benjamin Ling
19 March 2026
Molly Stewart has been a property manager long enough to know that things rarely go to plan. But even by the standards of regional New South Wales, the timing of her office's migration to Ailo was extraordinary.
“"It was a very big deal," Molly says. "The migration from our legacy system to Ailo. And then the floods hit."”
— Molly Stuart, LJ Hooker Taree
The Manning Valley floods forced LJ Hooker Taree to operate with a single person in their physical office. The remaining 40 staff worked remotely, scattered across the region, managing portfolios through a platform they had only just adopted.
“"Ailo definitely made it a lot easier during the floods to have all our staff working remotely," Molly says. "We all knew where we were up to."”
— Molly Stuart, LJ Hooker Taree
That line lands quietly, but it carries weight. In the middle of a natural disaster, with a team dispersed and an office underwater, nobody lost track of what needed to happen next. The system held.
Molly is also clear about what the shift has meant for her tenants. When asked whether the technology has created distance, she pushes back.
"The relationship with our tenants has grown," she says. "It's definitely gained, not lost."
Tenants now communicate with their specific property manager directly through the platform, rather than emailing a generic team address. For Molly, that has made the service more personal, not less.
Sheridan Gibbs joined the LJ Hooker Taree team after the migration, so she has no memory of the old way. For her, Ailo is simply how property management works. And she is remarkably clear about what that means day to day.
“"I love coming in and my day's kind of set," Sheridan says. "My due dates are there, what's due today, and I can tick that off as I go."”
— Sheridan Gibbs, LJ Hooker Taree
When pressed on whether the structure has changed how she works, Sheridan doesn't hesitate.
"It makes it a lot more personal. They're messaging you directly and they're working with you directly."
“Her favourite part of the platform is projects. "It's all there for me. I don't really have to remember. I can't forget what I've got to do."”
— Sheridan Gibbs, LJ Hooker Taree
Both women are optimistic about what comes next. When asked whether the platform is unlocking her potential, Molly pauses for a moment before answering.
"Yes. I definitely think it's unlocking my potential."

