Posts Tagged ‘real estate entrepreneur’

Harvard Real Estate Zealot: Buy Low, Sell High!

Friday, May 16th, 2008

Real estate entrepreneur and $100,000,000 deal maker Ken Wade has ridden in the front car of the real estate roller coaster through all three market cycles in the past 30 years, and he’ll tell you that today’s housing market is perfectly normal. There’s no nationwide housing crash, he says. But a media obsession with a few markets is driving negative market psychology — and prices — into the ground.

Just the Facts
In reality, Ken says, what we’re seeing isn’t an economic catastrophe, but the natural cycle that moves the market. He recently crunched some intriguing numbers about the U.S. housing market. Between Q1 2002 and Q1 2006, widely considered to be the peak years of the housing boom, Ken reports the following data:

  • Only 25 markets, or 7 percent of the United States, experienced a true housing boom, defined by a four-year total home appreciation greater than 80 percent.
  • Only 75 markets, or 20 percent of the United States realized total appreciation between 38 percent and 78 percent.
  • Half of all local U.S. housing markets realized cumulative home price appreciation lower than 9 percent for that entire four-year period.
  • Approximately 25 percent of U.S. local markets never realized even 6 percent total appreciation during those four so-called “boom” years.

The Nature of the Beast
Ken’s data show that a relative few free-falling markets have garnered a great deal of media attention. The ensuing media circus has helped to redefine public perception of the entire U.S. housing market market with trigger words words like: “housing crisis” and “mortgage meltdown.

Ken is the Harvard-educated architect of the Housing Alerts’ Total Market Master program for research-based real estate investing. He has spent much of his career tracking local real estate trends and profiting from widespread price fluctuations. With his system, Ken translates the “buy low, sell high” adage into hard science and cold cash. We’ll talk about how he does it next week.

Seven Habits of Masterful Real Estate Sales Negotiators

Thursday, May 15th, 2008

How can relatively small improvements in your sales skills spark quantum leaps in your income? If anybody can tell you, it’s Dan Doran and Richard Roop. Today I found some notes I scribbled in my journal from a recent conversation I had with Dan and Richard about Sales Mastery for Real Estate Entrepreneurs, their audio training course we offer at SalesTeamLive. We’ll explore more about that here next week.

But since so many of us have selling on our minds these days, I wanted to take some time right now to highlight some insights I’ve gained from the dynamic duo on the mission-critical importance of negotiations in our business. According to Dan and Richard, negotiating is the world’s highest paying skill, and until now, it’s an issue that hasn’t gotten enough attention in our business

Seven Habits of Highly Successful SalesNegotiators:

  • Continuously Practice and Improve: Mastering sales negotiations is both a science and an art. It’s a science in that it necessitates taking specific, measured steps that can be learned; it is an art because it requires an understanding that success can only come with dedication, practice and incremental improvement. When real estate investors commit to making perennial enhancements to their sales skills, the most lofty personal and financial goals are suddenly within reach.
  • Master your Approach: Pursue deals with clarity in your purpose. Don’t look for deals with people who are motivated, find people who are qualified and use your sales skills to inspire motivation — even if they’re not encouraging over the phone. By simply shifting your perception and your approach, you can create exciting new opportunities in your business and advance the refinement of your negotiations skills. Approach every deal at your full potential. For meetings and presentations, do your homework and arrive early. Make sure you’re centered and not stressed out.
  • Always Be at your Best: A useful trick for anti-stress and instant mood elevation is to recollect your last great transaction or happy moment. Use this memory to infuse your negotiations with passion and confidence. Tap into the resources you’ve got to make an instant change. Affirmations build confidence and self esteem are an awesome way to get into the “sales zone.” Review them before meetings and presentations. Muhammad Ali’s famous self affirmation: “I Am the greatest” became synonymous with his success as a champion. Use your affirmations to create a clear vision of the goals you want to reach and the steps it’ll take to get there. If you follow these tips, your enthusiasm may be so contagious that even your prospective client will catch it.
  • Master the Presentation: Use a prepared presentation: this strategy is scientifically proven to boost your sales. Most investors don’t even realize they need one because they’re in a rut of thinking that real estate is just a numbers game. Don’t be jaded. Many of us often forget that we’re also selling a service. Keep your presentations simple, and avoid using technical terms and jargon with clients. Most of them will clam up if you’re using words that they don’t understand. Anticipate your clients’ objections and address them in advance by covering those issues in your presentation. Show clients the magic you can work for them. Embrace your purpose as a problem solver. Address people by name, agree with them whenever possible and follow a script.
  • Find the Hot Buttons: Other than the obvious financial problems that are likely to plague your prospective clients, determine what other factors may play a role in their distress. Chances are, the hot-button items are emotional rather than financial in nature. It is not enough to identify the hot buttons, you have to use them to meet your client’s needs. To get a handle on your clients’ hot buttons, you have to spend time with people — 60 to 90 minutes — and be sincere in your motivation to help solve their problems. By spending quality time with clients, you’re able to use the hot-button issues you’ve identified to gage their agitation level. Once you’ve done this, you can draw them into the pleasure zone with your proposal and hopefully, offer some solid solutions.
  • Master the Close: A good closer is a great presenter in this business. Many real estate investors don’t realize that the sale is actually created during the presentation, not during the close. A good way to engage with your clients is to apply yourself in conducting a great value-building presentation. Even if you’re not completely convinced that the client is into the deal, you must always mentally proceed with the sale. Here again, attitude is everything. To instantly improve your sales results, commit yourself to performing a great presentation. If you can do that, all that’ll be left in the close is the paperwork.
  • Master the Followup: Do what others won’t, or just don’t bother to do: follow up after the close. The more distressed the client is, the more important it is to follow through after the close is complete. This important step lets people that they’re important: It crowns the transaction. It’s also how you’ll get your greatest testimonials.
  • Boost your Self Image: Develop a great self image relative to selling. Richard and Dan say they battle this challenge constantly in their personal coaching endeavors. A positive self image is the most powerful sales tool in your kit. If you believe in yourself, you can do anything. Get negative sales experiences out of your head. In coaching, Dan and Richard ask folks to envision what their world would look like without their problems. The techniques and strategies we’ve discussed in this article, repeated over time, will boost your self image and provide you with phenomenal sales. Like Richard says, “In sales, you have to perfect your inner game before you can master your outer game.” Words for any real estate entrepreneur to live by.

A Revelation for Real Estate Investors: Ferriss and 4HWW Lifestyle

Wednesday, May 14th, 2008

Tim Ferriss, author of The Four-Hour Workweek: How to Escape 9–5, Live Anywhere, and Join the New Rich (4HWW), majored in East Asian studies at Princeton University. Soon after graduation, he found his self-imposed cubicle lifestyle wasn’t giving him room enough to breathe, much less twirl. In 2004, Ferriss was working 80 hours a week to build his company and found himself burning out. So he put three days of clothing into a backpack and bought a one-way ticket to London … and wound up in Argentina as a world-class Tango dance champion.

Ferriss’ manifesto, the 4HWW, captures the wisdom and quixotic joy the author found when he traded his cubicle for the excitement-packed lifestyle of his dreams. Published last year, the book quickly became an international best seller.

Escape Inhibitions and Discover your Life
Ferriss urges people to shed the traditional expectations that wedge them into cubicles and create luxury lifestyles in the present using the currency of the new rich: time and mobility. This process is an art and a science that Ferriss refers to as lifestyle design (LD), and in 4HWW, he provides a deceptively simple strategy for achieving it.

Design your Lifestyle
For real estate entrepreneurs, 4HWW nails the formula for maximizing effectiveness in your endeavors. Your business may be surviving, but is it thriving? Many of us escape the regular grind only to become totally submerged in busywork that keeps us from accomplishing the more important tasks that fuel our business growth.

To really excel in this business, no true innovation is needed. When you automate and outsource your grunt work and use systems that have been proven effective, you’re well into the metamorphosis from which you will emerge a true real estate entrepreneur.

Automate and Recreate
For most of us in the real estate game, marketing easily can become a central vacuum system that swallows time and energy and rarely pays off. How can you effectively run your business when you’re struggling with lists, copy writing, mailings and postage?

If this is not your strong point, it may be time to follow Ferriss’ advice: Emphasize your strengths by delegating your weaknesses. When you’re using your strengths to build your business rather than being forced to focus on your weaknesses in mindless tasks such as marketing, your business, your income and your self esteem can reach new heights.

Give your Strengths a Workout
When you’re using an effective marketing system, such as SalesTeamLive, you know it’s working because you’re receiving a steady flow of calls from motivated and qualified sellers and buyers every day. And you’ve actually got the time to make the deals you know will take your business to the next level.

In 4HWW, Ferris successfully reminds us that time is short and we only have one chance to live the lifestyle each of us desires. His lifestyle design provides us with the necessary framework to transform our businesses and to embrace opportunity without fear or regret. Bravo, Mr. Ferris.

Look for my full review of 4HWW, coming soon.