Special offer

The Value of Trust in Real Estate Transactions

By
Real Estate Agent with Keller Williams NJ Metro Group

On various socially-oriented portals such as this, Realtors vie for business by trying to be the first to answer questions posed by buyers and sellers. Others host Sunday open houses where they can chat in person with prospective customers and convey the knowledge and enthusiasm that may lead to business. Those are but two ways that agents and the public interact in a world full of choices.

As we all hunker down in this distressing economic climate and reach out for the familiar, the buyers and sellers among us are thinking more deeply about who they know and trust. We've all got the Bernie Madoff blues. Collectivelly, we're looking for people who won't deceive us, but will tell it like it is.

The lesson of the Madoff fiasco for those who lost their life savings is that what they were asking for -- money growing on trees -- was too good to be true. Many have even said so. But they did not think through the thought and were shocked when reality set in.

I read an interesting article recently in which Mark Lesswing, chief technology officer for The National Assn. of Realtors, predicts housing consumers will increasingly identify trust as a primary goal in their relationship with an agent -- reflecting what is happening in the world at large. "Households [already] keep lists of vendors they prefer to work with...compiled through direct experience or as referrals from friends," he says and also predicts that gettting on the consumer's "good list," will prove key to a meaningful relationship. Vendor Relationship Management  (VRM) is a two-way street well worth walking. 

As a Realtor, I'm entrusted with advising sellers about preparing and pricing a home. I -- and I'm also speaking for my team of great agents -- adhere to the belief that honesty and truth are the best tonic to what ails us right now, in real estate and elsewhere. For our Team, the primary goal of VRM is to have the right mix of information and empathy to fit every client need and to filter it through the here and now.

Whom to choose when you are selling? You, Mr. Seller, have a number in your head and you say you need to get it. But is it real? Should you list with the Realtor who promises what is just not promisable, given market changes and buyer caution -- and reward him because he "loves the house" or "understands the house" -- concepts mostly based on estimating the highest listing price? Or, do you open yourself up to market trends and substitute the "need to get" number in order to get the real one without resorting to the lamentable position of chasing the market?

 

 

Posted by

Roberta Baldwin, Principal

The Baldwin Dream Team

Keller Williams 

Montclair, NJ 07042

973-420-9043 (direct)

RobertaBaldwinTeam@gmail.com