I technically shouldn’t put periods after their names, but really, they’re deserved. These are game-over, end-of-story professionals that have re-written the game because they do something the majority does not do: provide relevant content. Yeah, in the case of Kawasaki, Alltop is an aggregation of other people’s ideas, but the ideas they put out there are click-through’s: there’s a lot of quantity, but a pretty fair amount of unique quality too. These four have built their reputation on quality over quantity. They’re not one hit wonders or spammers: they’re gifted and relevant.
I spent the most fruitless week of my real estate career in 2008 attempting to maximize my blogs and sites with all sorts of keyword, SEO backlinking and other terms I’ve now, thoughtfully it turns out, forgotten. It’s hard to do something complicated and monotonous if your passion behind the project is unwilling. At the end of the day, I’d rather be uniquely relevant than wildly popular.
Joel Burlsem writes in the 1000Watt Blog today: “Content creation is hard. Great blogging is tough. And the rewards remain fleeting. So that’s why I’m calling it, on the eve of Real Estate Connect 2010: The death of the real estate blog. July 9, 2010. It’s over.”
Let’s Hope.
According to someone in the know, Seth Godin has over 500,000 unique readers a day on his blog. Seth has nothing that optimizes his site. He is Seth. His relevance is big. His ability to create content is nearly unprecedented. He has 500,000 readers not because he is duping Google, but because of the merit of his ideas. Jay Thompson (aka @PHXREGuy) is the same thing in real estate. He can’t help but publish brilliance.
In the end, a real estate business worth managing will accomplish more with 100 to 200 loyal fans that can be organized around quality information, ideas and causes then one that must go after the disaffected and unloyal massess. Almost 70% of all buyers and sellers want to work with their agent again, and yet only 11% do. Blogs should tighten the community and tighten the bonds. In my book, SEO-focused blogging has nothing to say and creates a large number of disposable clients.
A friend told me yesterday how mobile search apps are not just the rage in Miami, but if you didn’t have that, your business had no street credibility. He theorized that Colorado Springs was just a cowtown since it relied on personal referral and known permission assets to transmit quality performance from consumer to consumer.
The real irony? This was the same guy who turned me on to Purple Cow, now more relevant than ever.
Dan Pink, Author of DRIVE
On another business book frontier: Daniel Pink is more than Al Gore’s former Speechwriter.
He’s more than a guy who writes Bestsellers.
He’s an ad hoc revolutionary, making sense of what science says business must do, and educating persuasively on the Right-Brained Future. Mobile Search Apps, Easy-to-Refer Businesses, and Outlandish-Performance Art all share something in common: they delight the right brain.
Real Estate Brokerage can delight the right brain. That is, if it chooses to embrace the inner artist.
Prophets have gathered proclaiming the demise of the real estate industry for the better part of two decades. On an example of the relevance of Windows 95, Bill Gates predicted that the real estate industry would no longer exist in an online economy by the end of the Decade. I have frequently pointed out the poorly-veiled self-interest at play in the Freakenomics posts, ones that equate REALTORS to either The KKK or a Pimp (funny, I think I prefer the pimp analogy, but that was the best follow-up they could come up with after going straight for the historiographic jugular back in 2006).
All of their sentiments are right if all the REALTOR does is:
Take someone’s money
Not have a documented, repeatable system
Remain in the box with their thinking and rely on pre-packaged solutions rather than customized outcomes
Makes a contribution to their own bloodlines exclusively, without setting foot in the realms of civilization, arts, culture, humanity, sport and play
The reality is, really good real estate brokerage looks a lot like OK-Go.
If you want “synergy”, if you want “inspiration”, you must head to the right-side of the gray matter. If you want sustainability, empathy and a language to communicate deep smarts, experience and instinct, go to the right brain.
If you want a real estate brokerage that is more than an empty slogan, ego, or a one-time-in-space transaction… the right brain is the right place.
Brokerage can look like this. From smashing televisions, to windmilling parasols, to a final explosion of paint guns. Those are good outcomes. True artistry realizes the power of crescendo: a smile should start in the corner of the mouth, by 2:12 have spread across all lips lowering the bottom jaw to a slightly slackened position. By 3:24 the eyebrows and eyes should be effervescent, the neck posture slightly contorted, the shoulders seizing in anticipation of the outcome.
If a broker can do that for people… that broker is worth talking about.
If your interested in this revolutionary, ad hoc dude Pink… here is his recent Ted Talk.
First, I’m a Facebook Fan of 1000WattConsulting. I believe they are visionaries, pragmatists, and dead-on in their forecast of the future. They don’t make stupid, useless projections with what sounds like perfect data. Instead, they engage in conversations and ideas.
Agents spend inordinate amounts of time warding off knuckleheads and brokers provide little in the way of true leadership and value back to agents. Consumers can’t distinguish one brokerage from another… because almost all of them hire too many lame agents.
This is simply no way to run a business.
My agents must be different. Better. Smarter. If I can’t get them, I don’t do it.
If I can’t get them, I don’t do it.
Modern brokerage can learn a lot from Pepsi. They cut their teeth on TV advertising. They just skipped the Super Bowl to invest in social media. The ROI is far greater in social media, whose premise is not making the founders of Facebook and Twitter gazillionaires, but instead on earning permission assets one person at a time.
My industry must change. I’ve known this for some time. But a couple brilliant posts today shook the cobwebs out of my brain.
If this reads a bit like a manifesto, it’s because it is.
As usual, Seth Godin is right. Today, he’s talking about Detroit. I think the same model ought to apply to the real estate profession.
America needs cars.
America needs this industry.
America doesn’t need stagnation.
America needs innovation.
Those are Seth’s words on cars.
But they get heretical as usual. Which is what you have to love about Seth.
“Not only should Congress encourage/facilitate the organized bankruptcy of the Big Three, but it should also make it easy for them to be replaced by 500 new car companies.Or perhaps a thousand.
That’s how many car companies there were 90 years ago.
That’s right, when all the innovation hit the car industry, there were thousands of car companies, with hundreds running at any one time. From Wikipedia:
Throughout this era, development of automotive technology was rapid, due in part to a huge number (hundreds) of small manufacturers all competing to gain the world’s attention. Key developments included electric ignition (by Robert Bosch, 1903), independent suspension, and four-wheel brakes (by the Arrol-Johnston Company of Scotland in 1909).[16]Leaf springs were widely used for suspension, though many other systems were still in use, with angle steel taking over from armored wood as the frame material of choice. Transmissions and throttle controls were widely adopted, allowing a variety of cruising speeds, though vehicles generally still had discrete speed settings rather than the infinitely variable system familiar in cars of later eras.
Between 1907 and 1912, the high-wheel motor buggy (resembling the horse buggy of before 1900) was in its heyday, with over seventy-five makers including Holsman (Chicago), IHC (Chicago), and Sears (which sold via catalog); the high-wheeler would be killed by the Model T.”
Maybe it’s a different timeline, but the same words could be used about REALTORS. They could be said about dozens of professions.
I am for my profession. And for the sake of my profession, I stand before you and say: “I accept the challenge. Blow up my industry.”
The most explosive innovation in the automotive industry was the first decade of the 20th century when almost 1000 manufacturers competed with one another. Out of that intense competition came the American giants we know today. They kind of remind me of my Arrested Development friend GOB.
But when you consider that something like the Toyota Prius, a “cutting-edge” automotive hybrid is a distillation of technology essentially created a century ago… it shows how ridiculously unimaginative this industry has become.
Ditto Real Estate’s Dinosaur Act. The broker-owner-industrial complex needs to come to grips with the fact that the Jurassic age of the Owner is over. The Cretaceous Age of the Agent is also over. It is the Consumer’s age, the post-modern world of real estate. The anticipation for the market to turn is really a masquerade hoping that the old rules of the accidental and not on-purpose REALTOR will return. No market in any industry ever sinks and rises as a familiar phoenix. I’m not counting on it in real estate.
Inman News
this morning has an editorial that makes some bold, heretical ideas
look promising. I think it still falls short. Five of the six ideas are
core and basic to the future of real estate and need exploration. Social Darwinism is at play in every American industry right now. Real Estate helped create this economic malaise. Get the Spotlights ready and shine them here:
1.) People: This past week the Colorado Dept. of Regulatory Agencies raised new real estate license fees from $150 to $500. There was fear and outrage in the real estate community. A sure sign DORA did the right thing. The Colorado Springs consumer is grossly under-served by an over-population of REALTORS, a city that will have less than 18,000 total residential real estate sides and a population of REALTORS that peaked at 3700 this calendar year (now at 3300 after renewals). How on earth can the consumer be properly advised by an industry that is so over-saturated with members that has on average a practitioner closing one transaction every 10 weeks? The head count needs to be reduced in half. For broker-owners who put a requirement on no-BS, highly skilled knowledge-workers who are innovating their profession, they will actually greatly increase their income and reduce their expenditures. 2.) Expensive Applications: Here is a TwitPic I took with my iPhone yesterday, a great meshing of this idea. On the left is the 2009 Directory for the Council of Residential Specialists (CRS) a highly regarded credential in the residential real estate world. The directory on the right, that is at least a full inch thicker is the directory of membership from 2008. See the difference? People are getting out. In this case, I would assume some smart people decided to retire. A CRS is more likely to be a true adviser. They know how to run their business like a business. They also are likely to have real estate investments and assets that pay them a monthly dividend. They ain’t dummies. They decided to walk away. Good for them. But the reality is that increasingly, attaching a professional moniker or legacy to your name means next to nothing to the consumer. When Coldwell Banker advertised throughout 2006 that they were celebrating their 100th year and were the oldest real estate company in America it did absolutely zero to build their trust with the consumer in a what-have-you-done-for-me-lately culture. By comparison, a TwitPic of a real-time home preview of a home in Peregrine is a real-live interface that creates real human contact and real human interaction. I resisted getting the iPhone until I knew I was really going to use all of it’s toys. I couldn’t get MobileMe to work with an Exchange environment. So I quit. I quit MobileMe. I used Exchange. My email began to work beautifully again. When I previewed neighborhoods in Rio Rancho, NM last week, I realized then that my text only Twitter tweets would be so much better with real photos. That is when I committed to the $300 technology upgrade because I knew I would use it with passion. I am so glad I wasn’t paying for something I wasn’t using until I knew how to actually use it. It became something where the system worked for me, not me working for the system. Kroll Factual Data released a report in 2006 that said “after digitization, the only ones left will be REALTORS. But only the ones with sufficient skill.” You don’t have to have fancy design galleries and stealth-marketing and fancy signs to sell real estate. ESPECIALLY IF YOU’RE PAYING FOR THEM BUT NOT USING THEM. But you have to have a tool bag of things you can deploy. And if you’re going to deploy them, USE THE SUCKERS. Here’s my favorite photo from an inspection on Wednesday… Yes, that’s a dish towel used as a filter in a 30 year old furnace humidifer. Here’s the asbestos that was missed in the fresh air return. As the consumer experience in everything is increasingly becoming customized, the real estate brokerage experience with agents must (fortunately or unfortunately) become increasingly a la carte. 3.) Websites: Google just went wiki giving the consumer a radical and ridiculous interface throwing SEO on it’s ear. The best web-based real estate companies at generating inbound business need 19,000 leads to convert to a closing. Personal referrals are 3:2. So what to quit? I thought maybe my blog. Until a person I know, like and trust told me how they loved my blog on Sunday, and that they regularly forward my posts to their peers. Maybe those same peers are now reading this and thinking of what they can nuke in their own profession? Real Estate websites are among the most static and consistently banal out there. They often operate like 4.) Advertising in print media or pay-per-click. They do nothing to engage relationship. My biggest web problem? Google my name. There was a 19th century American Printer named Benjamin Day who is all over Wikipedia and a consulting company in Boston at www.BenDay.com. All I want my website to be is the hot or cold first impression filter for a client referred to me. I barely show up on page one of Google right now. When they get there, they get static (I stand guilty as accused). That’s why I am slowly re-engineering my website to be a consumer experience. My twitter feeds on one side. My wife’s on the other (previews, inspections, thoughts… kid life, the Cheyenne Mtn. Zoo, playgroup on the other side). Testimonials with photographs of the people who made them. Clean. Elegant. Easy to use. Easy to find. The Black Vault of Search has been busted open. The new frontier is allowing the consumer to engage with an actual survived-the-crunch pro demonstrating appropriate skil, with whom they can begin to trust from their first site visit. Overhwleming, NAR and REALTrends surveys showing this consumer plea that they badly want to trust their REALTOR. Yet only 11% work with their REALTOR again. Advertising and web for real estate are presently going the same direction: pushing individual listings or letting the consumer drive a rudderless ship. Creating a framework for trust would be a far better expenditure. Sites and advertising that promote our profession as enablers of a process where the consumer has supreme control over the outcome: that’s the revolution that needs to happen now. 5. & 6.) Desk fees are an antiquated idea that put a conflict of interest between the consumer and the REALTOR. Paradoxically, working with high skill for a high wage does not make a Starbucks Gold Card membership the equivalent of office space. The consumer doesn’t need the gilding and marble of Wall Street to appreciate trust. But a professional greeting, a warm beverage, a clean and quiet environment to make important business decisions… consumers require this and deserve this. There is a huge migration to home offices because agent’s can’t afford their physical space and when they have up to a $2000 office bill just for space lease due each month. A home office may make them lean and mean, but does it make the consumer more at ease? Are they more apt to trust someone in an office or out of their basement/wi-fi-coffee joint? The old-fashioned split structure doesn’t make much sense either because it invariably relies on agents who are producing a transaction per month and give $0.30 of every dollar to the company. This breeds an ugly mutual resentment: the broker would prefer 2 to 4 more transactions per year from this individual to justify and cover the excessive expenses they still encounter brokering and administering this business and the practitioner is surly about “their income” given away on things they don’t use. Needed: a new split structure designed around 85 to 90% splits with the services provided a la carte. Run your business like a business, and a la carte starts to make a lot of sense.
That leads me to my additions: 7.) The a la carte brokerage: Space concerns should be radically mitigated, and those that want accountability and want to deliver an exceptionally high client experience will undoubtedly pay for the benefit of surrounding themselves with a tribe of like-minded peers (me). They will refuse, question and distance themselves from accidental members of the profession that are playing Powerball with webleads and floorcalls (in my dreams). There is almost no other profession that is as egalitarian in it’s approach to spreading the wealth among the producers and accidentals. It isn’t fair to the producers who build the image of the company and generate the inbound calls. It isn’t fair to the accidentals because it is always prodding them along with a carrot promising them that one big hit. Willy Loman and Ricky Roma can not inhabit the same space. 8.) The professional future: I sat in last night on a presentation from Edward Jones and American Funds at Biaggi’s in Northern Colorado Springs. The program was built around calming investor fears over the tumultuous and unprecedented carnage on Wall Street. I will say that I was not sold on the company as the future of my money. I didn’t hear what fund offerings they had that promised future growth soon. But that was the point. I was sold on their client care. They hosted a free dinner, with four courses. It was in a nice environment. The suit-from-out-of-town was both impressive and humble, and admitted his own financial crises. He was very human. He presented big picture carnage and big picture opportunity. He wanted to spend most of his time answering investor questions. As a casual equities investor but an insanely self-examining real estate agent, I see both of our industries, equities and real estate, at key crossroads. Do you think that the client experience was enough in the boom times in real estate that the consumer is ready to trust what we, the REALTORS, have to say today? We said it was a great time to buy in 2005, didn’t we? So how can this present bloodbath also be a good time? The reality is that now is a much better time to buy. We just spent our trust on unsustainable results three years ago. Ditto equities. Do you think the consumer trust would be higher right now if people actually felt like they could trust their advisors? No one saw this coming, sure. But really, name for me the growth in equities that really happened in the last 5 years that wasn’t some derivative of the subprime nightmare? America was corrupted by subprime thinking. It wasn’t exclusive to real estate. Detroit and the SUV. Congress and tax breaks to depreciate those SUV’s of over 5000 pounds in 2 years. Consumers and their Home Equity Lines used to buy those SUV’s, tapping out their equity right before the market turned (yours truly, again). Vision traded for short-term profit. In a savage way, it makes a lot of sense that the DOW today is where it was five years ago. We are no more inventive. We are no more industrious. We are just bigger consumers of stuff we don’t need. As a card-carrying REALTOR, that last statement really resonates with me. If there was a doubling or tripling of professional standards, a Code of Ethics refreshed and modernized that put the REALTOR in the role of the PROACTIVE, TRUSTED ADVISOR, an individual who didn’t work with any old consumer shot-gunned at him or her, but instead chose to add quality of life to those they engaged with on a daily basis… I think our industry’s words today would go great lengths to restoring trust. Since we lack that trust, and probably for good reason, unifiying professional standards designed to deliver a high-value, high-touch process with the consumer in charge of the outcome, must be universally adopted by those that wish to survive the downturn. The reality is that those that survive will thrive.
The only way they will survive is if they are in flow with their consumer.
The quadrennial national intelligence briefing is presently under construction diagnosing global life in the year 2025. America’s own national intelligence agency, in a radical departure from the last report in 2004, is characterizing America in 2025 as no longer the lone world superpower, and possibly not as the premier superpower. Every American industry needs to re-examine itself for efficiency right now. But far more critically, the citizenry of America need to re-examine themselves as to what makes them quintessentially American: prosperous, yes, but industrious first. Capitalist, yes, but innovative first. Kind of hair-brained, fly-to-the-moon nutty, yes, but willing to take risks to make the world a better place, first. The future of real estate requires change. Big change.
@JakobRodgers @csgazette cadet in ceremony texted us that they had to wait for Obama to clear. Helicopter security down I25 in flight path. 5 days ago
Finalizing May 2012 "The Stat Pack" and prepping for this afternoon's filming of #DataDump... All The RE Market News You can use in 90 secs. 2 weeks ago
@joyinthemorning Will Videoblog it this week for ya. 4 U: you bought very well. Market has turned. Anything under $200K basically going up 2 weeks ago