Wednesday, December 10, 2014

REPOST: Six Powerful Prospecting Tips to Build Your Business

What does it take to deliver a top-notch sales performance? Realtor.com shares six strategies to help agents and brokers build a prospecting strategy that yields stunning results.  

Image Source: realtor.com

 Why is it that some sales reps consistently earn a six-figure annual income while other reps, putting in the same hours, selling the same products, and trained by the same sales manager struggle each month financially to make ends meet? The answer to this question is painfully simple; the six-figure sales reps understand the importance of business development and never forget to ask for referrals.

Top producing sales reps set high standards for themselves and spend the majority of their time either actively prospecting for new business or closing sales. Successful sales reps set productivity goals, establish priorities, and don’t waste their precious time hanging out in the break room or taking two-hour lunch breaks.

Top producers don’t need to be reminded to ask for referrals on a daily basis or follow-up on hot leads, because they understand that prospecting for new business is a necessity and not just an activity. The good news is that prospecting for new business, like any other learned skill set, can be trained and developed into a habit.

Six Powerful Prospecting Tips to Build Your Business

Tip One: Don’t Forget to Ask for Referrals


When it comes to asking for referrals, timing is everything. Research indicates that the most effective time to ask for referrals is right after you’ve made the sale or provided a valuable service for your customer. Asking for referrals prior to closing the sale is a big mistake and may even jeopardize the sale itself. Once the sale has been completed, your customer will be on an “emotional high” and far more receptive to the idea of providing you referrals. When you ask for referrals, your goal is to get as many names written down as you can. Just keep asking… Who else? Once your advocate has given you all of his or her referrals, then go back over the list of names to get details on each prospect.

Tip Two: Train and Reward Your Advocates

An advocate is a person who’s willing to go out of his or her way to recommend you to a friend or associate. Most customers are initially reluctant to provide referrals without some basic training and motivation.

Once you’re given a prospect, it’s a good idea to take the time to role-play with your advocate to demonstrate how to approach and talk to their referral. A brief role-playing exercise will build your advocate’s confidence and keep them from overeducating their referrals. During your role-play session, be sure to prepare your advocate to expect some initial resistance. This training will pay big dividends by making your advocate more effective and less likely to become discouraged when faced with rejection. Always take the time to thank your advocates and give them feedback on the status of their referrals. I recommend that you call them and then follow up by sending a thank you card and or gift.

Tip Three: Strike while the Iron is HOT

Prospects, like food in your refrigerator, are perishable and therefore need to be contacted quickly. Each day you let slip by without making initial contact with your referral dramatically reduces the probability of you making the sale. Develop the habit of contacting your referrals within two-business days or sooner. Have a system to keep track of your referrals so they don’t end up falling through the cracks. It’s critical to have a computerized client contact management system to record your remarks and track future contacts and appointments. Relying on your memory alone is a very poor business decision that will cost you dearly.

Tip Four: Schedule a Minimum of Two-Hours a Day for Phone Calling

Make your phone calls in the morning while you and your referrals are both fresh and alert. Treat your prospecting time with the same respect you would give to any other important appointment. This is not the time to check your e-mails, play solitaire on the computer, make personal phone calls or chat with your associates.

Avoid the temptation to try and sell your product or service over the phone. Your objective for every phone call is to create interest, gather information and make an appointment. If your prospect asks you a question, get in the habit of going for an appointment rather than giving a quick response.

Don’t shoot from the hip use a script. It’s important to use a phone script when you contact your prospect so you don’t leave out any key information. It’s a good idea to role-play your script over the phone with your sales manager until he or she feels you sound confident and professional.

Tip Five: Qualify Your Prospect at Maximum Range

Unfortunately, not every prospect will be interested or qualified financially to purchase your products or services. Successful sales reps don’t waste time chasing after low-probability prospects and know when it’s time to cut their losses and move on.

Tip Six: Don’t Take Rejection Personally

Selling, like baseball, is a numbers game pure and simple. Rejection is to be anticipated as a natural aspect of the qualification process, so don’t take it personally. Learn from rejection by using it as a valuable feedback mechanism. Salespeople who take rejection personally lack perseverance and seldom make the sale.

For the majority of salespeople, prospecting for new business is without a doubt the most challenging and stressful aspect of the selling process. Selling is a contact sport and daily prospecting for new business is the key to every salesperson’s long-term financial success. By integrating these six powerful prospecting tips into your daily business routine, you’ll be able to keep your appointment calendar packed with qualified prospects!

With training modules and face-to-face sessions, Bob Fitzgerald's coaching program helps real estate agents get the choicest spots in the listings and enjoy the briskest sales. Follow this Twitter account for indispensable professional advice.

Friday, November 21, 2014

REPOST: The top 10 most expensive listings to hit Hot Property

 Many of America’s most luxurious property listings are found in Los Angeles, which also happens to be one of the country’s most expensive cities. The Los Angeles Times presents 10 of the most affluent homes in the state below:  

Whether driven by hubris or marketing intended to induce shock and awe, many of the nation's most expensive homes featured in Hot Property have had price tags that defy explanation. The jaw-dropping asking prices are often just that; most sell for far less than they were listed. But even the purchase price will take your breath away. Here are the top 10, ranked by the highest price listed or sold.

Image Source: latimes.com

1—Palazzo di Amore: $195-million asking price

The 25-acre estate in the Beverly Crest area was completed by real estate entrepreneur Jeff Greene and listed this month. Amenities include a 35,000-square-foot main residences, a 15,000-square-foot entertainment complex and two wine cellars. The vineyard estate produces 400 to 500 cases of varietal wines a year.

2—Beverly House: $165-million initial asking price

The two-house, five-acre Beverly Hills estate, the onetime residence of newspaper czar William Randolph Hearst and his girlfriend, actress Marion Davies, is now priced at $135 million, furnished, or at $114 million for the main residence – reduced from its original 2007 listing. The compound centers on a 50,000-square-foot mansion built in the 1920s and retains intricately carved ceilings and paneled walls, a garden-view bar and a two-story library with hand-carved woodwork, much from Hearst's castle at San Simeon.

3 —The Manor: $150-million asking price

Film and TV producer Aaron Spelling and his wife, Candy, built the Holmby Hills estate in 1988. The 56,500-square-foot mansion, with 14 bedrooms and 27 bathrooms, sits on a 4.7-acre site. The residence, put on the market in 2009, sold two years later for $85 million to Formula One heiress Petra Ecclestone, who remodeled and spent an estimated $15 million to $20 million before moving in.

4 —Owlwood: $150-million asking price

The Tuscan-style mansion in Holmby Hills was once the home of actor Tony Curtis and later '60s singing duo Sonny and Cher. The estate was expanded in 2002 by combining two other adjacent properties to increase the grounds to 10 acres. There is a tennis court, and the existing pool house and swimming pool once belonged to swimmer and actress Esther Williams. The compound has been marketed outside of the Multiple Listing Service for the last four years.

Image Source: latimes.com

5 —Fleur de Lys: $125-million asking price

The Westside mansion, often described as a French palace, sold in March for $88.3 million. The deal may have been as much as $102 million when including antiques and furnishings, breaking a Southern California record. Socialite Suzanne Saperstein first listed the 50,000-square-foot home in 2007 at a peak in the L.A. County real estate market.

6 —Casa Encantada: $94-million sale price

The Bel-Air property held the record for the highest-price home transaction ever in California for more than a decade. The 8-acre estate was sold in 2000 by Dole Food Co.'s billionaire owner, David Murdock, to financial executive Gary Winnick in a deal valued at $94 million. Winnick threw in a parcel of land on Bel-Air Road.

7 —Former Walt Disney estate: $90-million asking price

Investor and Houston Dynamos soccer team owner Gabriel Brener sold his Westside estate this year for $74 million. The 35,000-square-foot mansion, built in 2001, sits on 3.6 acres that was once the site of Walt Disney's home. Brener had bought the estate from the Lillian B. Disney Trust in the late 1990s for $8.45 million and put it up for sale two years ago.

8 —The Singleton residence: $85-million asking price

Once owned by Henry Singleton, co-founder of Teledyne Inc., the mansion was the last major work of architect Wallace Neff, who designed an estimated 500 to 600 homes in his lifetime. Set on more than 7 acres of gated grounds, the residence has 10 bedrooms, 12.5 bathrooms and 15,520 square feet of living space and was originally listed in 2008.

9 —Beverly Hills custom-built: $85-million asking price
The nearly 23,000-square-foot contemporary, set on about an acre in the Trousdale Estates area, came on the market this summer. A project of handbag magnate Bruce Makowsky, the sleek house features a $200,000 candy bar/room, an 18-seat theater, a 14-person spa with swimming jets and top-of-the-line furnishings.

Image Source: latimes.com

10 —Bradbury mansion: $78.8-million asking price

Commercial real estate investment manager Donald Abbey completed the 47,000-square-foot mansion and put it on the market two years ago. Now priced at $68.6 million, the estate features include a temperature-controlled trout pond and a subterranean firing range.


Bob Fitzgerald of Fitzgerald Coaching helps real estate professionals take more listings and earn more commissions in selling homes through proven scripts and dialogues. Learn how a prospecting service coach can help grow your business here.

Wednesday, October 15, 2014

Relationships and referrals: Essentials of real estate business

Referral is a buzz word in real estate business. Referrals generate majority of the closed sales for realtors with clients coming from family and friends within a close network. The main challenge is to continue asking for more referrals and getting new customers by closing a good sale.

http://www.rolepoint.com/blog/the-weekly-round-up-a-thing-or-two-about-referrals/ 
Image Source: rolepoint.com

Building a good referral source is the groundwork of any great networking scheme. And satisfied clients will more likely pass around leads to realtors and all that is needed to do is ask.

Below are some of the reasons why referrals and relationships are good for business:

http://www.payrolltogo.com/Referral.htm
Image Source: payrolltogo.com

Referrals cost less and saves time. Asking for referrals is the cost-effective way of attaining prospects instead of standard marketing which will require some time and aggressiveness before payoff. No additional time is wasted especially when it comes to sales process because the leads may generate quick sale results.

Distressed properties are easy to market when realtors are recommended by a friend or a family member. Foreclosures, short sales, and other delinquent real estate properties have been increasing and dealing with the sellability of the said properties will require some sort of familiarity on the part of the realtor relative to the background of the seller. An introduction or referral from a close relationship can make this happen.

http://www.startupmywebsite.com/the-power-of-referrals/ 
Image Source: startupmywebsite.com

And of course, referrals most of the time will highly likely become clients. The level of trust and confidence is important in closing a deal knowing that the people who can recommended the realtor to a friend or family can vouch or attest to the quality service and salesmanship the realtor.

Prospecting definitely works and generating new clients is one of the lessons that Bob Fitzgerald’s coaching firm teaches real estate agents. Visit this website to learn more about real estate prospecting.

Friday, September 19, 2014

REPOST: In some housing markets, all-cash deals still rule

Paying cash upfront remains popular in many housing markets, which puts many buyers who need alternative financing at a comparative disadvantage. Les Christie of CNN Money writes. 


Image Source: money.cnn.com
All-cash deals made up 38% of all home sales in the second quarter, according to RealtyTrac, down from 42% in the prior quarter. 
One reason is that big institutional buyers, those buying at least 10 homes a year, are finding fewer deals. 
They accounted for 4.7% of all homes sold, down from a peak of 6% in 2013.As the housing market recovered, these investors were buying up homes in deeply troubled markets, like Phoenix and Las Vegas. 
Those bulk buys helped to reverse the slide in home prices. 
But now, home prices are up more than 20% from their 2012 lows. 
This has created a "classic good news/bad news scenario" for the housing market, said Daren Blomquist, a spokesman for RealtyTrac. 
The good news is that first-time homebuyers have more of a shot. The bad news is that some of them may already be "priced out of the market," said Blomquist.Cash buyers are much more attractive to sellers because they know the investors are able to act quickly and that the sale will almost certainly go through. 
There are still plenty of markets where cash rules. 
In Las Vegas, a recent spike in defaults has sparked an increase in cash sales to more than 50% of all home sales. Detroit, Kansas City, Cleveland and Philadelphia all had at least 45% of sales in cash. 
Cities attractive to foreign investors are also seeing a lot of cash exchange hands. In the Miami metro area, with its huge demand from Latin Americans, a whopping 64% of sales were all cash. Other Florida cities like Orlando, Cape Coral, Sarasota and Tampa scored nearly as high. In New York, 48% of sales were cash. 
Bob Fitzgerald and his company, Fitzgerald Coaching, Inc., have listed thousands of appointments annually for real estate professionals throughout the United States. Visit this website for more on his company and its prospecting services.

Tuesday, August 12, 2014

List and sell: Time-saving techniques for finding and working the next deal

As a real estate agent, you devote much of your time doing production-supporting activities such as prospecting, following up, taking listings, and closing deals. Each of these activities involves a great deal of procedures, not to mention the administrative tasks necessary for efficient sales and customer service functions. The good news is that it’s possible to handle all the clockwork in the shortest possible time while keeping your focus on listing properties and making sales.

http://www.biggerpockets.com/renewsblog/2013/04/30/real-estate-agents-investors/ 
Image Source: biggerpockets.com

Here are a few ways to streamline real estate functions and help you reach your goal:

Delegate tasks. Divide tasks in blocks of time so they don’t occupy your whole day. Creating flyers, writing feedback, and meeting with appraisers, among others, are just tasks that support your production efforts. Organize them and consolidate your efforts on these to keep them from interrupting your day-to-day routine.

Use technology efficiently. Get the most out of social networking sites and achieve high audience engagement by posting lifestyle advice, news, and events that relate to your listings. Write your editorial and marketing calendar in advance so you can save time planning and posting resources that connect with your area. Use cutting-edge software to help simplify your daily operations and keep track of your performance.

http://agentmarketingtips.org/five-reasons-why-real-estate-agents-should-see-themselves-as-a-business-2/ 
Image Source: agentmarketingtips.org

Schedule short blocks of time daily for prospecting. Start small on your lead database, then build as you master the art of prospecting. Boost your confidence by getting help from prospecting firms, like Bob Fitzgerald ’s real estate coaching service, which concentrate on helping real estate professionals earn higher commissions, take more listings, and close deals by providing them with expert prospecting services.

 http://www.allstate.com/tools-and-resources/home-insurance/finding-the-right-real-estate-agent.aspx
Image Source: allstate.com 

Choose a farm area within the sphere of influence of your office. Focusing on an area that meets your farm criteria saves you time scouring for a property with a good position in the market. Increasing your referrals, listings, and sales entails a great deal of effort and time. By managing your tasks, you can invest the bulk of your time reaching your ultimate goal and aspiration for your real estate business.

Bob Fitzgerald heads Fitzgerald Coaching, Inc., a New York-based prospecting service that has been setting thousands of listing appointments annually for real estate professionals across the US. For nearly 20 years, the company has been helping top agents take more listings by providing them with resources proven to produce results for their business. View sample appointments, get to know the company’s experts, and learn more prospecting on this website.