More

The truth about the real estate business is there are not enough transactions to go around.  If you were to take the total number of closed sides each year and divide them equally between all of the real estate agents and brokers in the business . . . well, everyone would starve.

I remember years ago, when I moved my office from one part of town to another, all the other brokers were friendly.  They acted like they were glad to see me and said things like, ‘there’s plenty of business for everybody.’  Then, of course, they went home to stick pins their voodoo dolls and hope for my demise —  because there’s NOT enough business for everyone.  I knew it;  they knew it.  If I was going to make it I was going to have to get more than my share. . . and that meant I was going to have to take it away from them.

Getting more than your share . . . more listings, more buyers, more sales . . . that’s what Help-U-Sell is all about.  It’s  a strategy for getting more and ultimately for becoming a dominant force in your local marketplace.

More.  It’s basic business.  All businesses, from the corner grocery store to the Fortune 500 multi-national live and die by their ability to get more and do more.  In business school we learn there are two measures of success in business:  Market Share and Profitability.  Market Share is about getting more.  Profitability is about being efficient.

In days gone by, doing more usually meant having more people, more feet on the street, a bigger operation.  But people are expensive, and building market share by hiring more and more people usually results in low profitability.

That’s why businesses over the past 20 years have focused on downsizing and on automation and systems.  Nobody wants a pink slip, but let’s face it:  General Motors builds a much better, safer, more fuel efficient automobile today with far fewer people than it did 20 years ago.

Sadly, the evolution of business has had little impact on the ordinary real estate world, where success is usually defined as having more salespeople than your competitors.  The broker’s job is not to sell more and more real estate but rather to recruit more and more agents (who in theory will take care of all that selling).  With per agent productivity hovering somewhere below five deals a year and commission splits still in the stratosphere, you might recruit the entire population of, say, Washington State to be your salesforce and still not make a profit!

It doesn’t have to be that way.  Just as other businesses have evolved to where doing more is a function of fewer people using systems to manage an ever increasing flow of business, the real estate business can evolve.  With the Help-U-Sell consumer offering and operating system, you can get more and do more with fewer people and lower cost.

Last year, I stopped into Chino Hills, California and saw Patrick Wood.  He’s in an attractive 750 square foot Help-U-Sell office in a strip center.  It’s a small operation:  just him, his assistant, Val and a couple of buyer agents.  But, together, they routinely out produce whole offices of ordinary real estate agents.  While the competition is closing offices and consolidating, Pat and his team are focused on getting more, doing more and building a business worth having.

Help-U-Sell is simple.  It is a handful of carefully constructed systems that work together to produce a predictable result:  a successful business – one that does more than its share of transactions.  The systems are vastly different from what’s common in the ordinary real estate world, and the two simply don’t mix.  Evaluating your Help-U-Sell business on the criteria of your agent-oriented competitors is like trying to tell how tall you are by stepping on the scale.

It’s 2011.  It’s once again time to know who we are, what we’re doing and how we’re doing it.  Simplify.  Focus on systems:  systems for generating leads, systems for capturing, incubating and managing those leads, systems for staffing, for listing and for managing transactions.  And remember:  it’s all about more.

Get FHA Listings

HUD recently announced the latest version of its REO disposition program.  It’s called Management and Marketing III (M&M III) and it seems to have some interesting new twists.

On June 1, HUD began contracting with Asset Managers who are charged with the responsibility of marketing REO properties within their geographic Homeownership Center (HOC).  Asset Managers must be licensed real estate professionals with expertise in the neighborhoods in which REO property is located.

Asset Managers are instructed to allow all brokers an equal opportunity to list and sell HUD-REO properties.

If you are interested in listing HUD-REOs, you must work through the Asset Manager.  A list of Asset Managers by geographic area is located HERE.

In order to participate in the M&M program, brokers must register for and receive a Name Address Identification number (NAID) before either listing or selling HUD-REO properties.  If you already have a NAID number you don’t need to apply for a new one.  Registration for a NAID number can be found HERE.

Centuries ago, when I sold real estate, HUD contracted with one broker in each area to manage their REO properties.  Any other broker could sell HUD homes and receive a full 5% commission.  In this new program, HUD homes are listed at up to 6% commission with the mandate that commissions be shared equally between listing and selling offices.

HUD currently has a lot of REO property to move and more are coming.  I think it’s well worth the time and effort to get the NAID number and contact your local Assett Manager.  Go get ’em.

(By the way, to search for HUD REO homes for sale, go to http://www.hudhomestore.com)

Pretty Sharp Marketing

Kimberly Zelena and Leigh Anne Losh at Help-U-Sell Direct Savings Real Estate in Verona, Virginia have definitely got their marketing hats on!  Like Mike Klein at Help-U-Sell Prescott Valley, they jumped on using QR codes.  Here’s a picture of their office Facebook page:

The QR code is that black and white box at the top/left.  If you get a QR code reading app on your smart phone (like Google Goggles . . . go ahead:  Google it), point your phone at the QR code and click it, the browser on your phone will take you to the Help-U-Sell Direct Savings website.  No need to fumble around with your fat thumbs typing in a URL on that tiny keyboard;  the QR code does it for you!   Hey:  why not get a QR code reader on your phone right now and make your first click on Kimberly’s QR code right here in the Set Fee Blog!  Go on; we’ll wait.

One of the things Mike Klein and Kimberly are doing is using QR codes with their listings.  They get a unique code for each listing then include it on property flyers so a customer can get more information instantly.  Kimberly told me she was going to start putting the code in a plastic sleeve and attaching it to the sign post.  Once buyers learn how to use this technology, they’ll be able to simply walk up to the sign and click their phones to get the details.

Next, notice the first post on the Help-U-Sell Direct Savings wall, the red thing.  Since the above is just a photo of the page, the link in it doesn’t work, but if you clicked it live on the actual Facebook page, you’d go HERE.  It’s basically an ETM:  pictures and descriptions of homes for sale, sold and saves, testimonials and a description of the seller offer.  Now the challenge is:  how to drive prospective sellers to that page and Facebook is a good start.

I know:  technology can be confusing and difficult, but sometimes it just makes things work better!  I’m glad we have sharp brokers in Help-U-Sell who see the possibilities and work to take advantage of them.

Pending Home Sales Jump in October

Remember May, 2006?  That’s when the Pending Home Sale Index hit its last big high before the market began to tighten:  112.6.  We got close to that last October when the first Homebuyer Stimulus Program came into play:  112.4.  Not surprisingly, the index had another peak last April when Stimulus Program number 2 happened:  110.9.

The good news right now is that the Pending Home Sale Index showed a strong increase in October, without the additional help of a Stimulus package.  The index surged 10.4% over September’s level to 89.3.  My guess is that ridiculously low mortgage interest rates coupled with a little flicker of consumer confidence has led to the increase.

There seems to be a lot of good economic news right now.  Retailers are having a better time of it this Holiday Season and a number of pundits are predicting a break-out surge in the stock market in the near future.  My mental image is America, like Mohammed Ali,  leaning against the ropes with gloves held up in defensive passivity as negative economic forces pound away;  then suddenly coming to life to win the match.  I think the negative forces are growing weary and our rope-a-dope response is about to end.

Just makes me want to go out there and sell something!

To read the full article from NAR (and get a video dose of the coolest economist in the biz, Lawrence Yun) go HERE.

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