Название: Success as a Real Estate Agent For Dummies
Автор: Zeller Dirk
Издательство: Автор
Жанр: Зарубежная образовательная литература
isbn: 9781119371854
isbn:
You’re already on the road to real estate success, demonstrated by the fact that you picked up this book to discover what it takes to become a great agent. This first chapter sets you on your way to success by providing an overview of the key skills that successful real estate agents pursue and possess.
As an original dummy in real estate sales, I’m the perfect author for this book. On my very first listing presentation, I went to the wrong house. Can you imagine arriving at the wrong address for your first presentation? The worst part is that the man who answered the door let me in. To this day, I’m not sure why he let me in and let me begin my listing presentation. I was nearly halfway through my presentation before I figured out the mistake! He just sat quietly listening to me talk about listing his home. He actually did have an interest in selling his home in the near future, so he just listened. I finally realized I was in the wrong house when I glanced over and saw the address on a piece of mail on the table. I had transposed a number on the address, which put me in the wrong house. All the while, the real seller was waiting for me down the street. The good news was that I successfully listed the man’s home a few months later.
In the end, it really doesn’t matter where you start in your career or what mistakes you make in the early stages. Everyone makes mistakes in new endeavors. What matters most is having a plan or process that keeps you moving down the track toward your goals. Most people would have quit with such a rocky start as mine. However, the sure way to lose is to quit. The only way you win is to keep going.
One of the first steps toward success is knowing what you want out of your real estate career. However, “financial independence” is not a specific enough answer.
I’ve been in real estate, either working in direct sales or teaching, speaking, training, writing, or coaching people, for nearly 30 years. I’ve spoken to sales audiences on five different continents. I’ve met hundreds of thousands of agents, and nearly every one started selling real estate with the same goal of financial independence. Countless times I’ve asked the question, “Tell me, how do you define financial independence?” What I usually hear in response is some variation of “So I don’t have to worry about money anymore.”
The key to eliminating money worries is establishing a financial goal – an actual number – that you need to accumulate in order to achieve the quality of life you want to enjoy. Financial independence boils down to a number. (It can be a gross number, net income, created annually or monthly from your asset base.) Set that number in your mind and then launch your career with the intention to achieve your goal by a specific date.
By having your financial goal in mind, you find clarity and can see past the hard work that lies ahead of you. When you have to endure the rejection, competition, disloyal customers, and challenges that are inevitable along the way, your knowledge about the wealth you’re working to achieve helps you weather the storms of the business.
I must share that this focusing on your financial independence number is more real to me today than ever. I realize these steps I just shared with you I did myself 30 years ago. I created a plan as I exactly have described for you. I have worked that plan for 30 years and it has compounded to the point where I don’t have to work. The financial piece of the puzzle has been accomplished. I choose to work because I enjoy what I do, not because I need the money it brings. That is true freedom and financial independence. I wish that for you as well.
Real estate agents join doctors, dentists, attorneys, accountants, and financial planners in the ranks of licensed professionals who provide guidance and counsel to clients. The big difference is that most real estate agents don’t view themselves as top-level, highly paid professionals. Many agents, along with a good portion of the public, perceive themselves as real estate tour guides, as home inventory access providers, or even as mere cogs in the wheel of the property sale transaction. The best agents, however, know and act differently.
The Internet and the open access to real estate information have accentuated the view that agents are simply home access providers. Consumers in the real estate market are able to find so much information online that they often view themselves as the experts and agents as simply the key masters. The increasing strength online of third-party sources of real estate information like Zillow, Trulia, and Realtor.com has created another gap between agents and consumers. I’m not advocating a return to the dark ages of MLS books the size of a local telephone book with property information printed biweekly. That is certainly a bygone era. But, to succeed in these technological times, we must expand our offerings and showcase that our services go well beyond basic real estate information and access into homes. We must clearly communicate with the online consumers what they don’t have access to, what information they are lacking, along with our benefits and value – even in their early researching period.
Real estate agents are fiduciary representatives and financial advisors – not people paid to unlock front doors of houses for prospective buyers. A fiduciary is someone who is hired to represent the interests of another. A fiduciary owes another person a special relationship of honesty, commitment, exclusivity in representation, ethical treatment, and protection. Build your real estate business with a strong belief in the service and benefits you provide your clients, and you’ll provide a vital professional service while being recognized as the valuable professional you are.
Serving your professional representation
Real estate agents represent the interests of their clients. As an agent, you’re bound by honor, ethics, and duty to work on your client’s behalf to achieve the defined and desired results. This involves the following functions:
❯❯ Defining the client’s objective: To serve as a good fiduciary representative, you need to start with a clear understanding of the objectives your client is aiming to achieve through the sale or purchase of property. Too many agents get into trouble by starting out with uncertainty about the interests of the people they’re representing.
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Delivering counsel: In the same way that attorneys counsel clients on the most effective way to proceed legally, it’s your job to offer similarly frank counsel so that your clients reach the real estate outcomes they seek. That counsel can vary based on the clients’ goals and objectives, as well as the state of the marketplace. You will counsel a client differently in a seller’s market than in a buyer’s market. Turn to Chapter 3 to understand how market conditions influence what to say and do.An attorney may encourage a client to proceed with a lawsuit when the client has a high probability of winning, or she may recommend an out-of-court settlement when odds point toward a court loss that could leave the client with nothing but legal bills to pay. Likewise, you need to be able to steer your clients toward good decisions regarding the value of their homes, the pricing strategies they adopt, the marketing approaches they follow, and the way their contract is negotiated in order to maximize their financial advantage.
❯❯ Diagnosing problems and offering solutions: A good agent, like a good doctor, spends a great deal of time examining situations, determining problems, and prescribing solutions. СКАЧАТЬ