Black BeltImagine your grandmother needed to be escorted through a dangerous part of town, and you had to select from available bodyguards. One is a White Belt, a part timer with very little experience, but he returned your call in less than 10 minutes.

Another is a Black Belt with 20 years experience and hundreds of successful missions. Who would you pick for this important assignment? You’d go with the experienced veteran with the proven track record of success, right?

What if your child needed a special surgery, and you wanted to interview surgeons? What sort of criteria would you look for? What sort of questions would you ask? You’d probably ask “how many of these procedures have you completed, how long have you been doing it and what is your success rate?”, right?

Make up your own scenarios – you need an attorney to defend you against a frivolous lawsuit, or an accountant to assist with an IRS audit, or a tree person to work on your 300+ year old trophy oaks. Would you hire newbies with no track record of success? Probably not.

Buying or selling a home is an extremely important financial event, with many variables and 100’s of different ways that things can go wrong, yet the real estate industry, for whatever reason, is not one in which the customer typically uses a strong selection process when looking for professional help. Why is that?

In a real estate seminar I attended recently it was stated to us Realtors, “if you’re not returning your phone message and emails in less than 10 minutes, you’re losing business. 70% of buyers and sellers go with the first agent to respond, so you need to make sure you’re that agent”.

Crap. I’m still “old school” and think that it’s ok to return a non-urgent call within one business day, though I’m usually much faster. But I don’t go for the 10 minute rule. I don’t live my life in permanent hyper-response mode. I’d go insane.

So what would be better selection criteria that would be easy for consumers to understand and relate to? What if Realtors had a ranking system, such as in martial arts, where one earns progressively higher belt color rankings as their experience and competence grows?

And what if we had to wear these belts to listing appointments. Might that change things a bit for agents and the customer as well?

Brand new Realtors, fresh out of real estate school and passing their test, would have to wear a White Belt, signifying to all that they’ve never closed a real estate transaction and they’re brand new. After one or two completed deals, they could be promoted to Yellow Belt, and so on. Of course Realtors like me and Sylvia, with 20 years experience and hundreds of successful transactions would be Black Belts, as would our peers who have paid the same dues and gained the same level of experience.

In the martial arts world, it takes about 6 years to achieve Black Belt status, depending on the discipline being studied. To become a Master Plumber in Texas takes about 7 years. I’m not sure about Electricians, or HVAC specialists, but there are many examples in life of individuals having to work long and hard before achieving a status that is recognized as being a “master” level.

Yet in real estate, if you can pass the test and return your phone calls and/or emails in less than 5 minutes, that will be the main selection criteria used by the majority of consumers who are looking for help. That’s it! Be the first one to call back and you might have your first listing. Is that stupid or what?

What’s really unfair about this is that when one of these White Belts Realtors screws up a deal big time, the entire industry gets a bad rap but nobody ever asks the person telling everyone about his lousy Realtor what sort of questions were asked before hiring that Realtor. They never scrutinize the hiring process that resulted in the hiring of the deficient Realtor.

We run into agents regularly who have no business being in the real estate business. They don’t know what they’re doing. Yet someone hired them anyway, using criteria and rationale that would never be used to hire equally important advisors or councilors in other industries. I guess real estate is just weird that way.

So, next time you’re interviewing Realtors, talk to more than one. Not just the one who you reached first. And ask them what belt they are. Make them tell you, if their real estate experience were equated with martial arts, what “belt” they’d be. Why pay the same fees to a White Belt Realtor that you would for a Black Belt Realtor?

Better yet, here are some sample questions:

1) How many homes have you sold in the past 12 months?

2) How long have you been selling homes?

3) What is your success rate? (Percentage of listings that actually sell)

I could write a longer list, but these three questions alone would provide enough insight to help most customers get started with a proper selection process.

 

Steve Crossland, REALTOR, MPM
Crossland Real Estate
http://www.CrosslandTeam.com
(512) 301-5811

 

6 Comments on What if Realtors were Ranked from White Belt to Black Belt?

SEP
23
218,344 Points 2 Featured Posts Outside Blog

Hi Steve~ Typically I would say go with the agent with more experience, but I have to admit there are some experienced agents that I would not use.  Personality plays an important role also.  I think there has to be a natural fit there too.  We may not like it that clients move onto the next agent if we are not responsive, but that is reality. 

10:33pm • #1
2 Featured Posts

Steve: If this were the case, how could new people ever get started? Seems like you're proposing pulling up the ladder now that you're at the top. How about some questions like these:

  • 1.) Have you ever been convicted of a felony?
  • 2.) Have you ever purchased a home?
  • 3.) Have you ever declared personal bankruptcy?
  • 4.) Have you ever been foreclosed upon?
  • 5.) Have you ever been sued in civil court?
10:42pm • #2
2 Featured Posts

I don't think you can qualify an agent just on how many years the agent has been a Realtor, or even how many sales an agent has had.  You could have thousands of sales and then decided not to work so hard while a newer agent might be willing to work 24/7 if necessary to get the job done.  I bet if you took a poll in your office as to how many sales a person has had in the past 9 months you would be surprised how the list prints out.  Plus with bank owned property and short sales some agents don't have the experience with these type of sales. 

10:59pm • #4
11 Featured Posts

Hi Vicky: I think you're right. Everyone is ADD now and there's no going back.

Matt: New agents would start as an apprentice with an experienced agent/Broker. Probably the way the Broker/Agent relationship was meant to be in the first place.

Suzanne: I don't disagree. Number of years and deals isn't an automatic indicator. And many new agents are top notch right out of the box. But "first to return the call" is a very poor selection criteria. 

Thanks for your comments.

Steve

11:11pm • #5
SEP
24
Outside Blog

I kind of like it.  Not the only criteria, as has been mentioned - but something to consider.  I may need a root canal, and I want to make sure the guy I go to has done more than one  ;-)  Of course, he may have done 300, but there may be 300 dissatisfied patients!  Same holds true for Realtors and mortgage brokers too.

1:15am • #6
11 Featured Posts

Rick: True. It wouldn't be a perfect system but does anyone doubt that the "first one to call back" method of selecting a Realtor is about the poorest selection process one could use? 

Steve

7:39am • #7

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Steve Crossland - Austin TX Real Estate

Austin, TX

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Crossland Real Estate

Address: 9600 Escarpment Blvd. , Ste 745-232, Austin, TX, 78749

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