There’s always something to howl about.

Would You Hire Yourself?

There is an ongoing argument as to the value of a real estate agent in today’s real estate market. It can’t be settled with rhetoric and mantras. In order for there to be an effective resolve, the Realtor industry must reach out to the American consumer and seek to validate the need for their existence in a transaction.

This should not be a hard feat. However most agents, for some unknown reason, find it to be beneath them to quantify their “value” much less dollarize it. When posed with the notion that they may be required to actually prove their worth, many ignorantly say that doctors and lawyers and professional athletes don’t have to justify their fees so why should they. Oh really?

Is that the answer you want the Consumer to walk away with? If you are not willing to justify yourself to the Consumer, how about justifying your commission and worth to yourself?

Would you hire yourself? Be honest. You know what you have done…lately. Don’t tell me, the Consumer or yourself that you USED to be great. At one point Carl Lewis was the fastest man in the world. At one time Bear Stearns was a respected fixture on Wall Street. At one time you may have been a high performing agent.

Banks only allow appraisals going back 6 months, some are only allowing data that goes back just 3 months. In doing a realistic appraisal of yourself, it’s not accurate to say what you have done. The Consumer wants to know what you have done LATELY.

So let’s assess ourselves accurately, shall we?. In order to do so we’ll need to collect actual qualified data. Not just a self-adulating pat on the back. So let’s ask ourselves some questions and come up with a dossier as to why we would even entertain hiring ourselves.

1. Experience:
a. How long have you been a real Estate Agent?
b. When were you licensed and has your license been continually active?
c. Please explain any interruptions in service since the time you were first licensed
d. What, if any, continuing education or niche specific training have you taken and completed since you obtained your license? (Please be specific with course descriptions, length of courses, certifications conferred, and date of course)
e. Have you ever had any complaints lodged against your real estate license? If yes, please explain
f. How long have you been with your current broker? If you are a broker yourself how long have you been a broker?
g. Have you ever been sued by a former client? If so why? What was the outcome?

2. Sales Experience:
a. How many listings have you had in the last 24 months?
b. How many of those listings have terminated, for any reason?
c. How many of those listings were cancelled by the Seller?
d. How many of those listings expired unsold?
e. How many of those listings that expired were re-listed by another agent?
f. How many of those listings closed successfully?
g. Of the listings that closed successfully, what were the average days on market? (including any re-listing of a property..please include total days on market)
h. Of the listings that closed successfully what was the average ratio between original list price and closed sale price?
i. Of the listings that closed successfully how many of those closed sales did you also bring the buyer to the table?
j. How many homes have you listed in the last 24 months are within a 2 mile radius of MY home?

3. Marketing Experience
a. Do you have a blog outside of participation on a social network?
b. Where does your site / blog rank in Google in MY specific city or neighborhood area?
c. What is your Alexa traffic ranking?
d. How often do you post to it?
e. Do you write about issues specific to MY neighborhood?
f. Will MY property be featured prominently on your blog?
g. If I list with you where will you syndicate my listing?
h. What newspaper advertising will you do on behalf of my property?
i. Please detail the size of the ad, frequency, reach, duration, and cost of the ad (if the ad is shared by the advertising of the agent and other properties please amortize cost specific to proportional display)
j. What brochures will you be designing, if any?
k. Please detail the size of the brochure, distribution, quantity, production proof, frequency of distribution, and cost of the brochure (if the brochure is shared by the advertising of the agent and other properties please amortize cost specific to proportional display)
l. What, if any other marketing will you be executing in the sales effort of MY property? (Billboards, Radio, Television, Postcard Campaigns, Video Production…etc)
m. Please provide a detailed explanation along with verifiable costs in support of your answer to this question)
n. With the dollar being so devalued, what if any marketing do you do to attract foreign buyers?

4. Infrastructure & Team Support
a. What are your business hours?
b. Will there be someone live that will answer a call from a prospective buyer if you are unavailable?
c. Do you have a virtual assistant? Or any assistant? How do I contact them?
d. Do you have an e-fax or direct fax so that no offers go unattended to?

Now that wasn’t so hard was it? By asking yourself a couple of simple questions and answering them honestly, you now have the basis for truly validating your value to the Consumer. Or perhaps the results were not all that great and you don’t want the consumer to know. Either way, this kind of information would help a consumer determine AND understand your value in a transaction.

But how many agents would be willing to do this? Many answer the worth question with an inane comment that the customer does not ask them to justify their commission. Should they have to ask? Shouldn’t you be willing to prove yourself to your prospect? I for one don’t think a performance based businessperson should rest on their laurels and expect their clients to blindly accept that they can still perform.

You may have been a box office king or queen at one time, but how do I know you can still bring it? How does the consumer know you still have the goods.

I believe that the real estate business is relationship oriented as many agents do. I believe that the consumer who is entrusting a very valuable asset to an agent would have much more confidence in an agent who disclosed this type of information willingly.

Why nonsensically brag that you are priceless and of extreme value if said value can not be measured. In this age of transparency, you are going to have to be willing to show the consumer fact instead of fiction. The consumer does not want to “take your word for it”. 

To survive in today’s real estate market, an agent must expect that they will be called upon to show in advance that they can still perform. You had better get ready to show and prove your worth under the spotlight of disintermediation.

Otherwise you may end up being the Norma Desmond of real estate agents.

Are you ready for your close-up?