URL Tip

I just learned something.  Remember when I exhorted you to ‘Do This . . . and that was to go to Google and search ‘Sell Real Estate’?  Help-U-Sell usually shows up near the top of the organic (non-paid) results, which is great.  Robbie — who knows everything — told me why:

Our web-pages — corporate and broker sites — make abundant use of the phrase, ‘Help-U-Sell Real Estate.’  That’s especially true in boilerplate on the broker sites.  When you search the string, ‘Sell Real Estate,’ Google is seeing that combination every time ‘Help-U-Sell Real Estate‘ appears on one of our sites.  Duh!

There’s a lesson in this.  As you get to the point where you’re ready to remove the ‘beta’ from the tail end of your NEW broker site URL (i.e. go from acmerealty.helpusellbeta.com to acmerealty.helpusell.com), you will likely have a URL conflict with your existing OLD website (chances are you’re already using acmerealty.helpusell.com on the old site).  If your plan is to shut that site down, there’s no problem.  But, if the OLD site is producing leads for you and you want to keep it, you’re going to need to go get a new URL at GoDaddy or whichever registrar you use.  You should choose that new URL very carefully.

Do your Google Analytics to see what search terms people in your local market use when they search for real estate.  Try to come up with a URL that uses that information.  For example, ‘www.homesforsaleinSarasota.com’ might be a pretty good choice, as would ‘Sarasotahomes.com’.  Make your URL something that people use when searching.  Then point that URL to whichever site you want to get that traffic.

Even if you’re not ready to remove ‘beta’ from your NEW site, you may want to begin searching for the perfect URL.  If you can come up with one or more that will draw well, you can tie them up now and redirect them as you see fit in the future.

And as always, if you need help with that, contact Tami, Lori, Robbie or me at corporate.  We live to boost your lead count.

The Electronic ETM

The ETM or Entire Target Market Mailer (I guess that would actually be ETMM) is one of the Help-U-Sell core marketing pieces.  The idea is:  you regularly blanket your target market with flyers via some direct mail vehicle, usually supermarket circulars, Pennysaver inserts or post cards.  In years past this was a monthly event in most Help-U-Sell offices and was one of the more expensive parts of the marketing program.

The down market and changing consumer habits have seen the old fashioned ETMailer go by the wayside.  Oh, many brokers still do them but it’s usually with a different delivery method:  hand delivered or in plastic bags hung on doorknobs.   We’ve dubbed that ‘Low-Cost/No-Cost’ marketing in this new world.

(Brief Pontification):  Please don’t think the ETMailer is extinct.  As the market comes back, so will it.  It’s a powerful and — in a normal market — cost effective way of driving your business.

But we said there were two things that changed, remember?  The down market and consumer habits. What’s changed there?

We’ve seen an absolute explosion of Social Networking.  Facebook has gone from being a blip on the horizon to having more visits that Google.  That’s a story all in itself!  Remember when MySpace was the big thing?  That was only a couple of years ago.  But somehow, about the time they were rocked with the cyber-bullying scandal and news of predator use, they began to tumble and suddenly Facebook was on the map.  With 400,000,000+ members world wide and growing, it’s a position they are not likely to lose.

So how does the rise of Facebook mean a new view of the ETM for you?  If you could find a means of contacting all the Facebook members in your target market (that’d probably be 50%-60% of the households)  you might use that as a great way to electronically (read: cheaply . . no, affordably) deliver the same message you used to deliver with your ETM.  What if you could get the email addresses of all the Facebook members in your target market?  And their permission to stay in touch via FB or Email?  You can, you know.

(Pay Attention!) Why not build a Facebook page for your community?  Say:  www.facebook.com/Sarasotafun .  Make the point of the site something to do with the community that everyone will be interested in:  fun things to do in Sarasota this week.  Start posting to it and inviting members.  (Use Advanced Search 2.0 Beta to locate Facebook users by their location).  (e’hemmm!).  Work it for a few months and as you gain enthusiastic users, make some of them administrators so that it doesn’t take so much of your time.  When you have lots of members — say 1/4 of your target market, slowly start to weave in Real Estate . . . maybe on a separate tab.  You now want all of those people who love your community page to realize that you are in real estate.  Once the page is established, it’s ok to drop a little newsy tidbit about the local market from time to time or an invitation to your next open house.

Check out Get the Audio.   Created by REALTORS, it has nearly 10,000 members.  That’s 10,000 people in the local market who may need to buy or sell or who may know someone else who does.  Not bad.

Are you driven enough to try this?

If you are, Ms. Patzer and I would love to hear from you.  We’ll help in any way we can, with the idea that we’d have a shining example in our midst to point to in a few months.

Oh, that bit about getting the email addresses of all the Facebook users in your Target Market?  Build your community page and start inviting people first.  Then we’ll show you how to do that.

This idea comes from a great real estate/Facebook consultant, Ross Hair.  If you ever have a chance to sit in on one of his online (or live) meetings, do it.  Pay attention, take notes, and within 6 hours of leaving, do what he tells you to do. Your bottom line will thank you.  More great ideas are on his website:  Get the Audio

Get the Audio version of this post

Measuring Success

There are lots of ways to measure success in life.  I guess the most fundamental measurements have to do with happiness, satisfaction, fulfillment, a feeling of accomplishment and worth.  We all aspire to those ideals.

In the real estate business we measure success in two ways:  Market Share — which we talked about the other day (see previous post) and Profitability.

The important thing about Market Share is to recognize that it is both a goal and a process; or, as we said in the previous post,  both static and dynamic.  If we are aggressive and positive, we will never achieve our Market Share goals . . . because we will always be adjusting them upward!  The important thing is the process:  are we always growing our Market Share or expanding our reach into new areas?

Profitability is a different kind of challenge.  First we have to achieve it.  Then we have to maximize it . . . and we have to know when we’ve done that.  Then, if we want to continue to grow, we have to replicate what we’ve done in a new outlet.

Step one in any discussion of profitability in real estate is to define it.  This can be confusing because there are many people with strong opinions about it.  For example, your accountant wants to cram as much ‘stuff’ as possible into your balance sheet to minimize the bottom line and, therefore, your tax liability.  That’s fine; but that’s a different purpose.  Your purpose is to measure the success of your business, not the performance of your accountant, so you need to employ a different process, a different formula.

Start with Revenue – the top line.  If it comes into your office bank account as payment for the goods or services of your real estate company, it’s Revenue.

From Revenue, we deduct ‘Costs of Sale.’ A Cost of Sale is any financial obligation that is triggered by the generation of Revenue.  The best example I can think of is your Franchise Royalty.  As a Help-U-Sell member you pay 6% of your Gross Revenue on each transaction as a Royalty (well . . . it’s 5% through Dec. 2010 to help everyone get through the current difficult market).  The Royalty is triggered by the production of Revenue so it is a ‘Cost of Sale.’  If you have Buyer Agents on your team that you compensate by splitting commissions as a traditional broker would, their portion of the commission is also a Cost of Sale.  It’s Revenue you don’t have available for Expenses because as soon as it is generated it is sent somewhere else to cover an obligation.  What you have left after Costs of Sale is Net Operating Income or what’s commonly called ‘Company Dollar.’

From Company Dollar, we take the Expenses.  You have the hard expenses of Rent and Utilities, Support Staff Salaries, MLS Dues, etc. and you have the somewhat less fixed expense of Marketing.  Interesting:  at Help-U-Sell we approach marketing in a very systematic way so that, over time, your monthly marketing expense shouldn’t fluxuate much, becoming a nearly fixed item as well.

A couple of mistakes real estate brokers make when calculating expenses are not paying themselves for their production as agents and not paying themselves for managing the agents that work for them.  The result is an inflated bottom line — not an accurate picture of what’s going on in the office.  You have to think:  what would I have to pay someone to do what I do in the office if I ran away to Tahiti tomorrow.  Then, be realistic, crank it back down to earth and plug it in.  At Help-U-Sell, if you work with a Buyer and make a sale, you should compensate yourself (at least on paper) just as you’d compensate one of your Buyer Agents.  We consider that the Listing belongs to the company and that the system (not the agent) markets the listing, so the set fee you earn when the Listing sells can remain in ‘Company Dollar’ without an allocation to you, the broker, personally.

What’s left after we take out Expenses is Profit (or Loss).   It is a dollar amount but becomes meaningful when we convert it to a percent of Gross Income (or Revenue).  Take the bottom line and divide it by the top line.  What you get is your profit (assuming the bottom line is positive).  Traditional brokers often delude themselves about profitability by taking the bottom line an dividing it by ‘Company Dollar,’ but this is folly.  It’s not an accurate measurement of the success of their offices because it doesn’t take into account the huge splits they generally pay their agents.

How much profit do you have to make for your office to be ‘worth owning?’  That varies especially when you factor in the human elements we discussed in the first paragraph.  But here are some thoughts.  If you are Wall Mart, you’re probably happy with 3% -5%:  you make scads of money on volume.  If you Agnes’s Boutique, you probably need to see something more in the 20% – 25% range:  the risk is higher  for your small business and you are much more susceptible to market fluctuations.  In 15 years of profitability consulting for traditional brokers I never saw anything better than 4%.  I had some who tried to convince me they were making 10% or 12%, but they were usually running ancillary service Revenue through the company or not compensating themselves as agents or managers.  ‘Oh, I just leave my commission in the company,’ they’d say. ‘Uh-huh.’  Again, that’s fine.  It’s just not an accurate reflection of the success of your business.

My goal for Help-U-Sell offices is 15% – 20%, figured properly.  That’s a successful office and a good income.  It’s also very attractive when it comes time to sell your business — something you can do much easier than your traditional broker counterparts because you build your Help-U-Sell business on systems, not personality.  If you do it right (and the new ownership doesn’t monkey with it!) the business should continue to function long after you’ve gone away.

 

 

 

Marketshare

I’m working through the old Operations Manual and just read through the section on marketshare.  We used to tell everyone they should get 25% marketshare.  That was the goal.  For everyone.  Did we have members who did that?  Yes, quite a few, actually.

We calculated marketshare by taking a carefully defined geography — the area(s) in which the member intended to do business, into which he or she directed marketing — and discovering what portion of the total number of closed sides done in that area were the member’s.  Further dissection of the marketplace into smaller units, like carrier routes or individual neighborhoods, might reveal that the member had 24% marketshare in this neighborhood and 14% marketshare in that neighborhood and so  on, each adding up to a total share of the target market.  We wanted to see target markets in the 10,000 – 15,000 household range with overall turnover rates in the 4% – 5% range.

The problem with this prescriptive approach is that it does not take in to consideration the vast differences that exist between markets.  Factors like:  the sheer number of competitors working the same area, the density of households, the impact of REOs on one market versus another, urban vs. suburban vs small town vs. rural areas . . . these were not considered.

Suppose your target market is a densely populated urban neighborhood.  You have 15,000 households and could probably walk your entire area in a few hours. Mostly it’s condos in the $200,000 range.  You set your fee at $3,950 and you figure with a 50/50 mix of buyer sides and seller sides, your average fee per closed side will be about $4,500.  You build a first year budget with expenses at about $12,000 a month.  Non-REO Turnover is at 4.2% — that’s 630 sales a year or 1,260 available closed sides.  Break even would be at about 32 closed sides:  a 2.5% marketshare.  This becomes our first milestone:  the point at which you start to look for ways to expand the number of transactions you can do by adding staff or improving systems.  You’d expect to hit that milestone within the first year and to be at 3% -5% marketshare  (36 – 63 closed sides), in your second year — and making a good profit.  Getting into your third year,  you’d want to be hitting  5% – 10% (63 – 126) closed sides.  This is usually where the ‘snowball’ effect takes over and as long as you’re willing to invest in more staff and better systems, an increase in marketshare and profit becomes very attainable, even up to say, 20% or 25%.

Now think about a smaller town, say 13,000 households.  Turnover is much lower:  3% in town and 2.8% in the surrounding county.  Although expenses might be lower and competition less fierce, average sale price and average fee are lower, too:  $3,200 per closed side.  A 10% share here (that’s 42 closed sides) — which was the tipping point in the above example — is just getting by.  It’s a nice job, but to be making money and building a business (not just a nice job), you’d need to be at 20% or more, and your snowball might not start until you were at 30%.

The first office needed 5% – 10% marketshare to be ‘thriving.’  The second needed more than 20%.

You have to think about more than just numbers of closings, too.  You have to consider the cost of doing business in each marketplace, the number of closed sides required to break even and how many it will take to get to a reasonable profit.

To further muddy the waters, you have to consider how you’re calculating marketshare.  We use closed sides.  Period.  That’s our yardstick and it makes sense from a dollars and cents perspective.  However, I met a Re/Max consultant once who told me they calculated marketshare on numbers of agents.  Production didn’t matter at all.  Just bodies.  When you think about it, it makes sense for their model. Re/Max operators make money by renting space and services to agents, so numbers of agents is a good measure for them (I’m not sure it’s the best measure for the consumer).

But even beyond that, marketshare is both static and dynamic.  Your static marketshare is a shapshot of a period of time.  It’s what we used in the examples here:  a one year shapshot  —  of all the closed sides done in your marketplace in the past year, how many did you have?  But your marketshare this month or this quarter is probably very different from your market share 8 months ago or two quarters ago.

Use the static, annual marketshare as your report card, the measure of the success of your business, the metric you use to set your goals.  But continually monitor the dynamic marketshare to make sure you are always progressing toward the next milestone and as an early diagnostic tool for problems in your operation or your marketplace.

 

 

Marketing Moments of Truth

The Client Lifecycle depicts the flow of Leads into the office, their conversion to Prospects, then Clients and Sales.  Marketing  generates Leads  into the office and our effective handling of them results in our gaining contact information and permission to stay in touch.  This is when the Lead becomes a Prospect.  At some point early in the relationship, the Prospect becomes a Client when a loyalty commitment is made.  For sellers, it’s a Listing Agreement.  For buyers it might be a formal Buyer Broker Agreement or something less formal.  Our Clients become Closed Transactions and enter our Client Base.  If they are particularly happy with our service and savings (they often are), they may become advocates for us in the marketplace . . . and isn’t that nice?

It is important to understand that at each transition point in the Lifecycle, the Lead can be lost.  These junctures are decision points where the customer decides whether to continue working with us.  These are indicated in the diagram by the red diamonds.  The overall success of the office is determined by the effectiveness with which the Staff handle each decision point.  I call these ‘Moments of Truth,’ because careful analysis of Leads Management data can reveal where the office is strong and where weakness exists.  For example, if there a lots of Leads, but not many Propsects, an examination of how leads are handled should be undertaken.  If we’re marketing, but not getting many Leads, the first thing to check is how calls and emails into the office are handled.  Is each customer inquiry being logged?  Even if contact information is not obtained?   If so, an evaluation of the marketing is in order.

The Lifecycle can be a roadmap for improving your office but it is dependent on having and faithfully using a Leads Managment System that gives the Broker/Manager visibility at each Moment of Truth.  The first step in any of this is to begin using the Help–U-Sell Buyer and Seller Data Sheets every time the phone rings.

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