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Provide value no one else offers

Posted by David Bennett Sat, 17 Jun 2006 17:06:00 GMT

  
It is important to stand out from the crowd. Any of the 3000 other agents in this area can hand over a list of tasks they will perform. What is key is that you tell your buyers and sellers what you do that is different from anyone else. Here are some examples:
 
·          Before you go on the listing presentation, do complete research on the property from A –Z. If you know more about the property than the seller does, you will be sure to impress them.
·          Offer a free appraisal or home inspection of the property before it goes on the market.
·          Give guarantees that the seller will net what they want in the sale.
·          Give your sellers a complete seller’s guide which explains the entire process from start to finish.
·          Give your customers sample forms they will need to complete, a list of service providers that will be involved in the process and similar helpful contacts.
·          Give buyers should not only receive a buyer’s guide similar to the one seller’s get, but include a kit that has everything they’ll need to be an integral part of the process including a local map, compass, inexpensive digital camera, and even an email address and service that gives them the capability to receive faxes or messages from on their home computer.
 

Offers benefits no other agent does, so if a client wants to work with you they must pay what I ask

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'Wow' factor wins repeat real estate business

Posted by David Bennett Wed, 28 Jun 2006 03:43:00 GMT

Client retention tips leave a lasting impression
Tuesday, June 27, 2006

By Howard Brinton
Inman News
 


We have all heard the old adage that it is easier to keep an existing client than to find a new one. So why do we so often look to uncharted territory when striving to build and strengthen our client base? By taking special steps to help cultivate and build strong relationships with your past and current clients, you will discover that there is more promising potential to grow and develop relationships with existing clients than seeking out new ones. Here are a few simple techniques to keeping in touch with your referral gold mine, otherwise known as your existing client base.

Give your Service the "Wow" Factor:

We constantly check with top-performing agents to find out what helped them become so successful. These agents tell us that the vast majority of their business comes from repeat or referral customers, so they know what it takes to make their customers happy. We call it adding the "wow" factor to your services, as in "Wow, I can’t believe my real estate agent did such a nice thing for me." When customers say that about you, they are going to recommend you to others and come back to you for their next transaction. Judie Crockett, a member of the Crockett Team in Mentor, Ohio, creates a "wow" factor by mailing out new address labels to buyers after the offer letter is signed. The labels include a small photo of the clients’ new house. Customers love these labels and they are so impressive they once even saved a deal when a buyer tried to back out due to financing problems. The buyer’s wife said she would borrow money from her parents if necessary, but she was not backing out because she had already sent out her new address labels.

Add Value to Your Client Relationships:

What is the actual impact of what you do? When you become consciously aware of the value that you provide to your clients through your work, you allow yourself to focus more deliberately on increasing that value and making it more apparent in your daily work. Clarify which activities provide the most value in your clients’ mind and focus on conveying this value, not the costs of your services. No one will complain about your fees if you can show them you were a worthwhile investment. In the end, your clients don’t necessarily care how many houses you sold last year or what your annual sales revenue was. The real essence of the value to them is all about the actual impact of the services you provide. The creation of value in everything that you do, and your contribution to it, is the very thing that delivers your paycheck and will be the most rewarding part of your job.

Stay in Touch Regularly:

The power of frequent contact should not be underestimated. Research tells us that you have to get in front of clients often to win repeat business. Lifelong clients are developed through regular, frequent and consistent contact.

Here are a few easy ideas for keeping in touch with your clients and turning your customers into repeat clients: 

  • Once a year, send out replacement 9-volt fire alarm system batteries with one of your address labels attached.  
  • Send out gift certificates for local restaurants every time your clients give you a referral.  
  • Get personal by keeping a record of key dates, such as birthdays and anniversaries, and send them a card to let them know you remembered.

     

Ultimately, you can’t buy customer loyalty…you must earn it. Your past clients are your very best market, as they will return to you and refer others to you as long as you stay in touch and provide excellent service. Past clients can lead to a steady flow of new clients through people you have already built a base of rapport and trust, and an increase in the level of referral and repeat business.

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A Model to Create a Value Proposition

Posted by David Bennett Mon, 05 Jun 2006 21:22:00 GMT

Do you find it difficult to describe the services you provide to consumers?   You’re not alone. The real estate industry is rich and complex and there are many service models, many aspects to a transaction, and many ways to approach each situation. In order to communicate the value of your business as a whole, you first need to find the common thread that runs throughout everything you do.
 
To help you get started, consider the triangle below:
 
 
 
 
The top level represents your brand value, your value proposition and your key marketing message (or messages) that apply to your business as a whole.
 
The lowest level represents the individual components of the services you provide to your clients and customers. For example, on this level, are such items as advertising on the internet, placing a yard sign, holding an open house, negotiating a contract, doing a CMA, etc.
 
 The middle levels depend on your business model, standards, and levels of service. For instance if you list properties and sell properties both, the second tier might contain listing services, buyer services, property management, price opinions. The third level might be oriented toward your niche: sellers, buyers, investors, second homes, commercial, etc.
 
Each level should be a combination of the marketing messages from the level below it. The highest level should convey, obviously not in any detail, a description of what you do.
 
You can choose at which level you want to being selling to your potential clients and customers. The ultimate is to sell them at the highest level the first time around – that is give them the big picture early in your relationship. If you get stuck selling your value at the lower levels all the time, you will find that you have to constantly re-sell something every time you do business with that client/customer.
 
The reality though is that although you want to sell yourself at the highest level, clients/customers may often know what they want at the lower levels. Therefore, you do need to have your marketing message at all levels.
 
How to apply this to your business:
 
  1. Create a triangle and start at the bottom with the lowest component level services you could offer.  
  2. Could any of these services be grouped into an easily describable higher level service? If so add this description to the next level. Do this until you have grouped all the lower level services. If a particular component doesn’t fit in anywhere, reconsider whether you should offer it. By the same token, if a higher level service group is incomplete, you probably need to add an element at a lower level.  
  3. Repeat this process until you get to the top of the triangle.  
  4. Now use the Key Message Marketing formula to create your messages for all the levels. 

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Activities in Selling a Home

Posted by David Bennett Sat, 17 Jun 2006 16:36:00 GMT

 
1.     RESEARCH
 
  • Understands the market and how current activity affects a specific property
  • Researches your property in the public records, MLS and other resources
  • Researches data on nearby homes that have sold (or failed to sell) recently
  • Creates a comparative market analysis
  • Prepares a property profile
  • Validates the accuracy of the information in the property profile.
2.     SELLER CONSULTATION SERVICES
 
  • Analyzes the needs and goals of the sellers
  • Prepares and delivers a pre-listing package
  • Determines the pricing strategy with the sellers
  • Provides a seller’s net sheet
  • Advises on information regarding local customs and regulations
  • Educates the sellers on the home selling process
  • Provides broker representation disclosure
  • Obtains property disclosure form is completed
  • Educates sellers on forms of brokerage relationships and how real estate professionals cooperate
  • Provide seller with all transaction documents
3. MARKETING
 
  • Tours the property from the buyer’s standpoint. 
  • Establishes a marketing plan
  • Advises on how to prepare and stage the home for the market
  • Arranges for signs
  • Arranges for the lockbox
  • Sets up showing procedures
  • Advises on home warranty coverage
  • Takes or arranges for photographs
  • Enters property information and photographs in the multiple listing services
  • Arranges for Internet listing displays
  • Arranges for a virtual tour
  • Adds virtual tour links to the MLS and other websites
  • Provides features of the home sheets
  • Arranges for flyers and marketing materials
  • Arranges for an office tour
  • Arranges for a broker’s open house
  • Develops a targeted marketing campaign that maximizes the home’s value.
  • Sends just listed mailings or makes just listed calls
  • Holds open houses
  • Provides feedback from showings
  • Advises on price changes
  • Updates the MLS and websites
4.   BUYER PROSPECTING AND SERVICING
 
  • Develops a buyer prospect list
  • Responds to calls, email, Internet requests for showings or information
  • Follows up on buyer leads
  • Screens out unqualified buyers
  • Sets buyer appointments
  • Provides appropriate disclosure forms.
  • Ensures buyer obtains pre-approval for financing
  • Shows the property to qualified buyers
  • Evaluate offers
5. NEGOTIATING
 
  • Negotiates the purchase contract
  •  Helps you write a legally binding, win-win agreement that will be more likely to make it through the process.
  • Alerts you to potential risks
  • Provides an estimate of the closing costs   
 
6. TRANSACTION AND CLOSING SERVICING
 
  • Educates the seller about the closing process
  • Establish contract to closing file (may be electronic)
  • Establish communication with all parties
  • Advise all parties on timetable to closing
  • Ensures disclosures required by law are completed
  • Assists in selection of service providers
  • Initiates the title/closing process
  • Coordinates with home inspector
  • Advise on repairs
  • Assist with appraisals
  • Coordinates with the lender and maintains close contact
  • Coordinate all aspects of closing process
  • Protect and negotiate for the seller’s interest during this phase
  • Provide moving and relocation information
  • Schedule the closing
  • Confirm the distribution authorization
  • Review the closing paperwork (HUD-1)
  • Attend the closing
 
7. POST CLOSING SERVICES
 

·         Maintain archive copy of file

·         Provide post closing information
·         Insure all filings and notifications are done
·         Assist with relocation

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Are You Worth What You're Paid? Yes?!

Posted by David Bennett Tue, 11 Jul 2006 21:00:00 GMT


From Florida Realtor magazine, July/Aug 2006 | page 35 | by Bridget McCrea
Are You Worth What You're Paid?
“We’ve never been good at articulating to the general public what it is that we do and how we earn our money." says Michael Less, president, EthnoConnect , and a vertern real estate associate.
Use these 10 strategies to show clients and customers why it’s more important than ever to use a Realtor® and why you’re worth every penny.   

   Melody Torrens knew what she was facing when she drove up the driveway of the FSBO she’d been courting for several weeks. No sooner was she in the door than the owner asked for her commission rate. Quoting the rate, Torrens was immediately asked by the owner to reduce it in favor of a much lower one being offered by a discount broker who’d been there before her.
   “He was ready to list with a [real estate professional], but he really liked the discount rate,” recalls Torrens, a Realtor®-Associate with Coldwell Banker Residential Real Estate in Coral Gables. Luckily, Torrens was armed and ready with an educational campaign explaining the difference between full service and discount brokers, with an emphasis on how even a low percent rate would double once the property hit the MLS. Torrens then hit him with a bulleted list of every task she would perform for her fee—right down to her 24/7 availability.
   “It was Sunday afternoon at 4 p.m., and I asked him to try calling the discount broker,” says Torrens, who sold $2.7 million in properties last year, her fifth in the real estate business. “He didn’t even get voice mail, but rather a message saying to call back during normal business hours. He then called my number, and was instantly patched through to my cell phone.”
   That got his attention, says Torrens, who walked away with the listing on the single-family home, which sold for $750,000.
   This scenario is playing out across Florida—and nationwide—as discounters, flat-rate brokers and price-conscious consumers chip away at the commission rates of full-service real estate associates. As that happens, salespeople like Torrens are taking measures to prove their worth in the transaction while at the same time selling their services and creating value for both buyers and sellers.
   “Thanks to the Internet, buyers and sellers believe they can handle the transaction—or at least parts of it—on their own, without an agent,” says Michael Lee, president, EthnoConnect in Dublin, Calif., and a veteran real estate associate with 30 years of experience. “Plus, we’ve never been good at articulating to the general public what it is that we do and how we earn our money.”
   The good news is that there are many ways in which you can prove your worth and effectively sell your services to both buyers and sellers. Here are 10 effective strategies for making that happen:

Brand Yourself
   “Remember, perception is reality,” according to Don Hobbs of Hobbs/Herder Advertising. “Agents often want to argue the reality of all the legwork involved in a sale. That doesn’t always matter. Look at any product out there, be it a car, laundry detergent or running shoes. Arguably, every product does what we need it to do, so why would anyone pay more for a pair of Nikes over a pair of no-name sneakers? What are these products doing that makes them worth more? It’s all about how people perceive their value. And the pressure is on you to demonstrate your own value and let your customers know exactly what your services, expertise and knowledge are worth,” he says.
   How do you do that? By branding yourself. “Your goal is to own a piece of your customer’s mind so people think of you as their agent before they even need one. Remember, people prefer to work with people they like. And if you’re able to connect with them on a personal level, they will trust you, feel more comfortable with you, and the percentage of commission you charge will rarely ever come into question. To take this a step further, if you brand yourself within a niche—as, say, the “Condo King” or the waterfront specialist—you are offering your customers even greater value with more specialized expertise,” says Hobbs.
   He notes that as the market is normalizing, those homeowners who were looking for the cheap answer will become more conscious of finding a sales associate who instills confidence. “Your brand communicates that and the frequency with which they see your branded message will speak to people and heavily influence their decisions and their willingness to pay you what you deserve.”

2. Show Them What Can Go Wrong
   Murphy’s Law rears its head in many real estate transactions. Associates who clearly articulate this up front, says Walter Sanford, president at Kankakee, Ill.-based Sanford Systems, have a better chance of proving their worth when it comes time to negotiate fees.
   He advises associates to compile a complete list of issues that can come up before or during closing, and present it during listing appointments. On it, include issues—and the time it can take to resolve them—like these:
   • The lender does not properly prequalify the borrower (can delay the closing by two weeks or more).
   • The lender decides at the last minute that it does not like the borrower (two weeks or more).
   • The cooperating agent does not return phone calls (one to three weeks).
   • The cooperating agent does not prequalify the customer for motivation (two weeks).
   • The buyer does not tell the truth on the loan application (one week).
   • The buyer submits incorrect tax returns to the lender (one week).
   • The escrow agent fails to obtain information from beneficiaries, lien holders, title lien holders, title companies, insurance companies or lenders in a timely manner (one week).
   • The escrow holder allows principals to leave town without getting all necessary signatures (one to three weeks).
   “When clients understand all the problems that can occur,” says Sanford, “they’ll be more apt to hire an individual who can solve them.”

3. Start at the High Level
   During her listing presentations, Torrens focuses on three key areas: a concise marketing plan for the property (showing exactly how she’s going to sell the home), her client communication plan (weekly update phone calls and regular updates on showing activity) and her professional communication plan (with the public and with other sales associates).
   Torrens follows up a couple of days later with a personalized marketing plan. “That will contain specific dates and publications for advertising. And, I always use a professional photographer for still photos and video,” she says.
   “An educated seller is an important part of any transaction,” says Torrens, “so I always take the time to walk through these three core areas of what I do and then drill down to the more detailed tasks that I perform.”

4. Give Them Your Stats
   Neiman Marcus and Nordstrom’s get top dollar because of the value they add to their transactions, says Sanford. “You are a department store of real estate services that (perceived by the seller) can be obtained in many places. The only reason that you’re full retail plus is because you offer more value.”
   Sanford suggests the following:
   1. Offer to provide a home inspector (free of charge) within days of obtaining the listing agreement. “Tell the sellers, ‘It will provide many valuable clues regarding the condition of your home and allow time during the marketing period to have repairs done prior to a buyer making an offer,’” says Sanford.
   2. Go over your statistics, including your sales volume and number of days on market compared to other sales associates vying for the seller’s business. “Find out your competition at the pre-listing stage,” he says. Also, go over the average list-to-sale ratio from your local Association. “Show them how you can beat that ratio,” he says.
   3. Detail your marketing. “Go over your networking strategy, Internet marketing, telemarketing, database research, and other. Sanford says to use this wording, “My marketing brings more potential clients to your home. With more potential clients, the chance of better offers is heightened substantially.”

5. Go Beyond the Norm
   Knowing the premium that her clients put on exceptional customer service, Linda Lindsay, a Realtor with Downing-Frye Realty Inc. in Naples, says the best way to convey her value to them is by delivering “above the norm” service in a professional, courteous manner at all times.
   In real estate for nine years and a top producer at her office, Lindsay serves as a “411 information line” for her clients, always provides service after the sale, dresses professionally at all times and stays on top of market trends and information (which she in turn shares with clients). “I find ways to go out of my way to exceed their expectations,” says Lindsay.

6. Offer a Money-Back Guarantee
   Other associates may have laughed behind Phyllis Staines’ back when she introduced a “money-back guarantee” a few years ago, but this broker-associate, with RE/MAX Coastal Real Estate in Ponte Vedre Beach, says the strategy has helped her prove her worth in a competitive market. Staines writes the guarantee into her listing agreements, which state that in the event that the seller needs or wants to cancel the agreement, she will wish them well—no harm, no foul. “I call this the easy-exit listing agreement,” she says.
   “Everything we buy, from toasters to cars, comes with a guarantee of some sort,” says Staines, who has been licensed since 1998 and sells $7 million in properties annually. “But when a seller hires a [real estate professional], there’s no guarantee that we’ll do what we say we’re going to do, and the only recourse is litigation. No wonder the average seller is gun shy to sign a listing agreement.”

7. Explain How Commissions Really Work
   It’s no secret that some consumers see sales associates as professionals who earn high fees in exchange for a minimal amount of work. To make sure her sellers are better educated on how the commission process really works, Lynn Sands sits down and explains it to them.
   “They need to understand that while they’re committing to a certain percentage, it doesn’t all go to me,” says Sands, a sales associate with Boca Raton-based Coral Shores Realty Inc., who has been in real estate for 10 years and who sold $3 million in properties in 2005. She tells sellers that half of the fee goes to the agent who brings the buyer and that a portion of the other half is shared with her broker. “I let them know that I don’t make a fortune on one listing,” says Sands, “and that it takes a lot of listings to make a living in this industry.”

8. Personalize the Presentation
   Torrens brings along a listing presentation book on all appointments with sellers, but it’s not the same one used by other associates in her office. Instead, she has customized the publication to include information about her own experience, knowledge and interests. She includes information on recently sold homes, her career experience, hobbies and interests, which in some cases help her connect directly with her prospective clients.
   “My presentation is in book form that stands so it faces the client. As I speak about each area (myself, my company, my marketing plan and past business), I turn the pages for visual reinforcement,” says Torrens. “My policy is not to leave anything with the prospective client (other than my business card) unless they’ve signed a listing agreement. Then, I leave them a copy of the agreement, the CMA, a brochure on preparing the home for sale and a copy of my marketing plan.”
   “I personalize what I’m bringing to the transaction,” says Torrens, “as a way to stand out from the many other agents doing business in Florida.”

9. Make a List … and Share It
   To distinguish yourself from the many other sales associates vying for listings, Lee suggests creating a document that lists the many activities that you perform for every single listing.
   Segment these lists into marketing activities, buyer-related activities and those performed for FSBOs or expireds, for example, and jot down the 100-plus steps that you typically handle for your clients and customers.
   “The average client’s eyes will glaze over as they go through your list(s),” says Lee, “and realize what it really takes to sell a home.”

10. Get with the Program
   The fact that the average consumer doesn’t understand what real estate associates do for their commissions is the industry’s own fault, says Staines, who feels that sales associates have historically done a poor job of conveying their value and worth to the public. But all is not lost, says Staines, who sees plenty of opportunity for you to reverse those misconceptions and help buyers and sellers truly understand the value that a trusted advisor can bring to the table during the purchase or sale of a home.
   “This is a business, and those of us who are not in it as a business need to get out of it,” says Staines, “and those of us who are in it as a business—and who aren’t working it as a business—need to reevaluate what we’re doing.”
   A good first step, says Staines, is to stop pointing fingers at discounters and online brokers and instead to welcome the competition. “With competition come more options for clients,” says Staines, who compares real estate to the airline industry, where flyers chose between coach, business and first class. “Just as a flyer would, sellers can make the best possible choices for their own situations.”

Bridget McCrea is a Clearwater-based freelance writer.

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