I twittered this article from RealtyTimes this morning, and thought I would take a quick look at one of our local Gloria Nilson GMAC Real Estate offices to see how the article's statistics held up at random. I chose an office that I thought had a pretty good mix of full time agents; one that I knew would represent our local area well.
The article not only holds true in my sample, it is nearly exact. The office I chose has approximately 50 agents. I was hoping to see about 25% (approximately 15 people) in the "20-35" age range, 50% (or about 25 people) in the "36-50" age range, and the other 25% in the "50+" range. This would have shown that things aren't as bad as the article portrays. I did not contact the agents and ask their ages, but I do know enough about most of them to be able to "guesstimate" their ages and fit them into one of these 3 categories.
What I found instead was the 50% was in the "50+" range, more like 10% in the "20-35" range, and 40% were in the "36-50" range. All end up within 1-2% of the results within the article.
The article cites some remedies for an "upcoming" shortage of talent in the industry, companies can offer "long-term career development", "availability and access to mentors" and "make it clear your company meets their core values-flexibility, balance, respect, and accessibility." Correct me if I am wrong, but most companies in our area are already using these methods to attract our current agents. If a Generation Y prospect is considering a career in real estate, every company in our area would be interested in meeting with them. Agents are independent contractors, so if a company doesn't meet their needs now, how have they been attracting agents in the other age groups?
Now is the time to think about what else your company can do to attract the talent you will need in the future, but it is also the time to figure out what you can do to recruit Generation Y'ers to the real estate industry now.
Interesting article. The key is will there be enough "talented" agents. We all saw what happened during the boom as we exploded with inexperienced Realtors.