Martin Cooper

Martin Cooper

businessman New Zealand

Martin Cooper is the managing director of Cooper & Co Real Estate, a successful real estate company in New Zealand. He has played a significant role in the real estate market, particularly in the Albany area, and has been involved in complex business partnerships and disputes, including a recent legal battle regarding agency operations.

Born on Apr 03, 1973 (52 years old)

Global Media Ratings
Dominance
0.00%
Persistence
1 wks
Reach
25,587
Power
779$
Sentiment
8.46
Countries Mentioned
Country Mentions Sentiment Dominance + Persistence x Population = Reach x GDP (millions) = Power
New Zealand 6 5.17 0.26% +10% 4,822,233 13,868 $210,000 604$
Greece 1 9.00 0.04% +0% 10,423,054 4,413 $190,000 80$
Romania 1 9.00 0.04% +0% 19,237,691 7,306 $250,000 95$
Totals 8 34,482,978 25,587 $650,000 779$
Interactive World Map

Each country's color is based on "Mentions" from the table above.

Recent Mentions

New Zealand New Zealand: Martin Cooper, managing director of Harcourts Cooper & Co, talks about the decision in the case between he, Matty Ma and David Rong. 5

The New Zealand Herald – country’s largest newspaper, est. 1863: Students reportedly injured after car incident outside University of Auckland

New Zealand New Zealand: Martin Cooper, managing director of Harcourts Cooper & Co, talks about the decision in the case between he, Matty Ma and David Rong. 5

The New Zealand Herald – country’s largest newspaper, est. 1863: Te Rangitu Netana creates bespoke print for new Air NZ uniform

New Zealand New Zealand: Martin Cooper, managing director of Harcourts Cooper & Co, talks about the decision in the case between he, Matty Ma and David Rong. 5

The New Zealand Herald – country’s largest newspaper, est. 1863: Watch - ‘Hugely damaging’: Online extremists target NZ children in sadistic extortion campaign

New Zealand New Zealand: Martin Cooper, managing director of Harcourts Cooper & Co, talks about the decision in the case. 6

The New Zealand Herald – country’s largest newspaper, est. 1863: Why MP Willie Jackson intends to stay