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Do consumers think Real Estate is a Relationship business? - one consumer's perspective...

Reblogger Jon Zolsky, Daytona Beach, FL
Real Estate Broker/Owner with Daytona Condo Realty, 386-405-4408

I wrote a couple of blogs discussing BBA. The fact that there are many agents, who will not work without BBA did not surprise me. what surprised me is that those who venture working without always put it in the context of relationships.

And it is not. People come to us with their real estate needs, and not to become our friend for life, or foster the relationship.

For some reason many agents consider any business interaction a relationship building.

And when you say it is not a relationship, they do not hear.

I think serious discussion is needed and that's why I suggested Inna's post. Because we need to wake up to the new reality and stop faking excitement.

Inna wrote an excellent and clever post. We often read "thought provoking". This one is truly thought provoking

Original content by Inna Hardison

Fireworks broke out these last few weeks with Chris Smith (Inman News Evangelist) publishing his Real Estate is no longer a relationship business piece.  As expected, not only did it start a conversation, but resulted in a few rebuttal posts, (which are linked to at the end of this blog), and a few comments that were downright nasty.  I was paying attention to the conversation as it developed, from the sidelines, mostly, and here are my takeaways, as a consumer of any good or service, not just real estate.

What Chris was saying, in essence, was that he, as a consumer, doesn’t care to follow his real estate pro on FB or Twitter, or to be taken out to lunch or be invited to your wedding.  He wants you, the professional, to handle his transaction brilliantly.  I am over-simplifying here, of course, so I suggest you read the postand the comments, and the rebuttal posts as well – all worthy of a read.

What struck me as odd in some of the comments on the many threads where this conversation progressed was the offense some took to the very idea that someone might look at their business as a ‘transaction’, and not a relationship.  Which leads me to these thoughts.

I think too many practitioners are still motivated by fear of being forgotten by those they serve and are willing to jump through all kinds of hoops so that they can keep their name “top of mind” of their past clients, so that, of course, they get referrals.  I don’t so much have an issue with the desire to remain top of mind, or even the cheesy signatures of “I appreciate your referrals” as much as I resent the idea that the folks who market that way are confusing staying in touch for the sake of future business with “relationships”.

honest realtor's manifesto
honest realtor's manifesto

Without going into the rather dull definitions battle, to me, receiving a series of postcards from my service provider is not having a relationship with them any more than getting a coupon book from Target is.  Strangely, as a consumer, I’d pay more attention to the coupon book from Target (if there is something I need to purchase in the nearest future) than I would to those SOI/touch marketing campaigns.  I don’t care how pretty and non-salesy you color it, I still view those things as a marketing tool, not a relationship building tool.  Frankly, I don’t think there is such a thing as a relationship building tool, and that includes the social media.  Relationships, while should not be confused with friendships, still involve obligations and liabilities on both sides.  And people, by and large, are rather protective of whom they’d like to obligate themselves to.

I think that as a consumer, I’d want the same thing from my real estate agent as Chris – save me the headaches of dealing with paperwork, listen to my needs, make the process as painless (for me) as possible and be there when I need you.  In short – handle my transaction seamlessly, brilliantly.  I don’t flip houses, so statistically, you probably won’t sell me another home, but if you handle my transaction brilliantly and I don’t hear from you again unless I have a problem with the home – I will recommend you to my friends and family.  I will even dig for your name if I’d forgotten it, even if I have to resurrect my HUD statement to do that.  What I know for a fact is that I will never refer business to someone just because they keep sending me cards or gifts or because they are my FB friends or twitter followers.  I will NEVER risk my reputation with people I actually do have a relationship with because of convenience.

All that said, it doesn’t mean that I can’t or won’t become a friend or develop a deep(er) relationship with any of my service providers, be they attorneys, accountants or real estate practitioners.  But these will (and do) happen as any other friendships.  We click on a human level.  We connect and enjoy each other’s company long past any transaction.  None of it is dependent on the practitioner staying in touch.

There is supposedly room in each of us for 150 or so meaningful connections over the course of our lives.  I don’t know if that number is accurate or even meaningful.  Suffice it to say that if our capacity for connecting with other human beings is finite, we are probably all somewhat protective of this finite space and whom we choose to share it with.  Let’s be honest and stop confusing customer follow up via any means with building or maintaining meaningful connections or relationships.  Your customers aren’t going to confuse the two, and there is nothing that turns off a consumer more nowadays than a fake friendship attempt.

Wouldn’t it be easier to provide remarkable service to all our clients and have enough trust in the fact that if you do a remarkable job, they will remember you, and will recommend you to their friends and family based on that, instead of 33 irrelevant likes/postcards/sets of cookies?

For any of my friends reading this, please DON”T recommend me to anyone based on our friendship.  Recommend my company based on the work we do if you genuinely believe we’re the best people to handle the needs of those you care about.  Anything less would be an insult to how we do business.

And finally, by way of a disclaimer, my business is currently almost entirely by referrals and recommendations.

Here are all the posts on the theme, in order, all worth reading.

Chris’s original post:

It Is No Longer A Relationship Business – Here’s Why

Rebuttals:

From Rob Hahn

If Real Estate Is Not In The Relationship Business, What Business Is It In?

From Bill Lublin

Being Without Relationships is Being Without Business

Your thoughts?

Originally published on my blog at hamedia group.

Inna Hardison is owner of
 

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Celeste "SALLY" Cheeseman
Liberty Homes - Mililani, HI
(RA) AHWD CRS ePRO OAHU HAWAII REAL ESTATE

I say to each his own. If we connect on a personal level it's a lasting relationship. Over here it becomes a close knit community ....we are a small island and our aloha extends throughout everyone we touch on a business, personal or whatever level. We cross paths with a restaurant owner and they beceome part of our ohana.  I guess it's like local area market statistics....it varies from area to area...and who we are or are not.

Fake?  I am in no way fake...you get what you see...and if they don't want personal side during a business transaction then that's cool....I'll see them next time because I did an outstanding job. If you want to share birthdays and bbq's and bring me fish after the big haul....I'm there too.

Shucks....didn't mean to start a novel....but I hear ya'll. As I'm sure you do me :) :)

Sep 16, 2011 06:10 PM
Inna Hardison
ha media group - Orlando, FL
Wordpress for Real Estate & Design, Print HaMedia Group

Sally - because of who you are as a person, you could never ever be fake in anything you do.  So that's settled.  I hope you had a blast on your birthday:-)

Sep 16, 2011 06:20 PM
Marte Cliff
Marte Cliff Copywriting - Priest River, ID
Your real estate writer

This is a thought-provoking subject, so I have to add my 2 cents.

I think the problem is the definition of "relationship." There are so many different levels, and to apply the wrong one to the situation makes it seem ridiculous.

With real estate the relationship needs to be one of  mutual respect. And from the client's standpoint, it needs to be one of trust and confidence in the agent's knowledge and abilities. It's not a "go out to dinner" relationship, nor a "take you home to meet my family" relationship - but it IS a relationship.

As for staying in touch, I do believe it's important. Not 33 times per year, but certainly every 2 or 3 months. We humans have our brains cluttered with so many things that it's easy to forget the name of a person whose work you appreciated. Also, in the current business climate, it seems smart to let people know that yes, you still are in the business of helping people buy and sell real estate.

Sep 16, 2011 06:22 PM
Kathy Schowe
California Lifestyle Realty - La Quinta, CA
La Quinta, California 760-333-8886

Truly thought provoking-- and very well written.  Some clients I stay in touch with more than others, some are or have become good friends, others I really don't want to see again.  The good thing about this business is that we are the captains of our own ship!  Kathy

Sep 16, 2011 07:03 PM
Celeste "SALLY" Cheeseman
Liberty Homes - Mililani, HI
(RA) AHWD CRS ePRO OAHU HAWAII REAL ESTATE

Hey Inna....No blast going on .....waiting for first grandson to get out of my little girl's tummy....due date this past Wed....

 

Sep 16, 2011 07:12 PM
Praful Thakkar
LAER Realty Partners - Burlington, MA
Metro Boston Homes For Sale

A thought provoking re-blog, Jon.

I guess, a time for me to pick up the pen and write something on this - but Chris is a good friend of mine so....(after all, it's all about relationship!).

Only thing I can say is - I don't agree with the title of the post from Chris. Guess what - how he has built the relationships over past few years?

Sep 16, 2011 07:56 PM
Don MacLean
New England Real Estate Center Inc. - Easton, MA
Realtor-Homes for Sale- Easton, Mass 02356

John, sometimes it just happens.

It's those who push themselves on people, clients and other brokers when it becomes a nightmare.

Great read

Enjoy the day

Sep 17, 2011 02:02 AM
Mitchell J Hall
Manhattan, NY
Lic Associate RE Broker - Manhattan & Brooklyn

Jon, I just left a comment on Inna's post

I don't use BBA's but I don't share buyers with other agents. If I know they are also seeing properties and negotiating offers with another broker/agent, I rather let them go then let them or me down. It's not about the relationship it's about me not doing work, research, spending time and negotiating strategies for another agent.

Comment to Inna,

I tend to agree except there is a difference between a professional relationship and a personal relationship. I have business relationships and I have personal ones. My accountant is not my friend but we have a good professional relationship.

My marketing efforts are about soliciting business not touchy feely lets become friends. A common interest may break the ice but the bottom line is about delivering results.

In a recent consumer survey my brokerage conducted when asked: "Would you prefer to work with a real estate agent who is a friend" ?

61% said NO and 31% said Yes.

Frankly, I don't get the personal blogs about pets and pictures of dogs and cats and babies. To each their own, I know that works for some, not my style.

IMO there is no substitute for experience.

 

 

Sep 17, 2011 04:50 AM
Jon Zolsky, Daytona Beach, FL
Daytona Condo Realty, 386-405-4408 - Daytona Beach, FL
Buy Daytona condos for heavenly good prices

Celeste - why pursue lasting relationship as a goal? This is so not real estate, why try always to combine?

Sep 18, 2011 07:42 AM
Jon Zolsky, Daytona Beach, FL
Daytona Condo Realty, 386-405-4408 - Daytona Beach, FL
Buy Daytona condos for heavenly good prices

Marte - it may be a heretical idea, but like people like to go to different restaurants, and not the one where they like the food very much.

Is there really a difference with Real Estate. Yes, there may be a disappointment, so what? next time they will come to you or to someone else...

Even if they get a coupon from that first good restaurant

Sep 18, 2011 07:44 AM
Jon Zolsky, Daytona Beach, FL
Daytona Condo Realty, 386-405-4408 - Daytona Beach, FL
Buy Daytona condos for heavenly good prices

Kathy - very true. And while making sure that the diesel is working fine, we need to think about the course we take.

you can get lost in the best maintained ship if you lose your compass

Sep 18, 2011 07:46 AM
Jon Zolsky, Daytona Beach, FL
Daytona Condo Realty, 386-405-4408 - Daytona Beach, FL
Buy Daytona condos for heavenly good prices

Praful - I do ot know Chris, so it is difficult for me to say. I am not sure that followship/readership is the same as relationships, even business relationships

thank you for the comment. I always appreciate seeing you on my blog

Sep 18, 2011 07:48 AM
Jon Zolsky, Daytona Beach, FL
Daytona Condo Realty, 386-405-4408 - Daytona Beach, FL
Buy Daytona condos for heavenly good prices

Don - how could I disagree? No way, so i agree with you (lol)

Sep 18, 2011 07:49 AM
Jon Zolsky, Daytona Beach, FL
Daytona Condo Realty, 386-405-4408 - Daytona Beach, FL
Buy Daytona condos for heavenly good prices

Mitchell -when I work with a buyer and I know that they are also work with other agents, I deal not with the market, but with one particular property. I do ot work for other agents. I work for this transaction, knowing that they may choose another property and it will not be my deal.

Interesting statistics. Very telling...

Sep 18, 2011 07:52 AM