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Two Magic Words

By
Managing Real Estate Broker with Howard Hanna Rand Realty License # 49FA1074963

There are two magic words every consumer should know when considering a real estate agent and I almost never hear them. The two words form a question rarely if ever asked; in 2008 only one client of mine (I have 40+ listings) made the inquiry. I was only to happy to answer, because it gave me the segue I was looking for in my listing presentation. Very powerful question, too. But I had to wait until Novermber of this year to hear it for the first time!

The two words are: "How Many," as in "How many homes have you sold in the past year?" or "how many homes in our area have you sold this quarter?" This is the full monty of credentials.

I can't imagine how much stress and heartache (to say nothing of money lost) that could have been averted if consumers had asked this question of the horde of inexperienced and new agents who flooded the market in the hot market of 2002-2005 who raised screwing things up to a high art. This damaged our profession's reputation and made things harder for everyone. It was quasi-understandable to list a home with Aunt Flo or Cousin Ralph in the hot market when a sale was almost a certainty, and troubleshooting and due diligence weren't on either the neophyte agent or seller's radar. Of course, they'd find out later that the shed or bathroom were out of compliance, or that the buyer wasn't qualified. An experienced agent catches these things before they present a problem.

What got me thinking of this is the rising number of agents who now tout themselves as "short sale specialists," which happens to be a transaction type I do in large volume. OK, short sale specialist, HOW MANY short sales have you successfully closed the past year? Does anyone ask? They must not, because I have witnessed first hand some specialists of one variety or another cutting their teeth on my dime. And what is galling is that they got the listing by obfuscating facts ("My office/company sells lots of homes!") or getting the consumer to buy what they say at face value ("I've been selling real estate for 35 years!") 

It goes beyond that, though. Prospective sellers should, but seldom ask "specialists" or "top producers" HOW MANY transactions they have closed in  their category. How their team or office does, or how long they've been around don't cut to the heart of the matter. Here are a few unfounded claims I have seen just in the past 24 hours:

  1. Short sale specialist ( never closed one, but attended an office seminar)
  2. (Location) specialist (no listings in <Location>)
  3. Investment/Multi-unit specialist (no listings, period)
  4. Condo/co op specialist (none listed)
  5. Award-winning producer (in 1998)
  6. Top producer (top of what?)
  7. Multi-million dollar producer (utterly misleading, could mean as little as one sale in my market)

I really see nothing unfair about asking a guy how many short sales, multi-family, or downtown Shlabotnikville homes he's sold if he claims to be such a heavy hitter. It separates the contenders from the pretenders, and it might be fun in a sadistic sort of way to see him squirm if he knows he has no juice. And there is no prerequisite for big numbers, either. There is nothing wrong with an agent without flashy numbers to say "I don't sell a house a week. I have a few clients I work with at any one time and I focus on their service. Here are three references who closed with me in the past 6 months." That is impressive to me, and I DO sell a house a week.

So if you are consumer, and you are evaluating an agent, ask "How many?" and demand a specific answer. It will most likely save you lots of trouble down the road.

Frances C. Rokicki
Fran Rokicki Realty, LLC - Bolton, CT
Broker-Mentor,CRS

Yes, and what credentials do you have?  How many years have you been in the business?  These are a few more to ask.

Dec 16, 2008 06:08 AM
J. Philip Faranda
Howard Hanna Rand Realty - Yorktown Heights, NY
Associate Broker / Office Manager

Frances, they should be asked, but they can be finessed to the buyer's detriment. The fact that someone has been selling for 20 years or has gotten their GRI sound good, but they can mask that the agent is part-time, inactive, or a poor producer.

Dec 16, 2008 06:12 AM
TIM MONCRIEF
Tim Monciref - Austin, TX
Over 2,000 homes sold…..

Until you get into the upper end, that ends up not being the reality....and sadly an agent can throw any tag line by is name as the "x" specialist and most people will not dig further.  I caught myself doing the same thing as an agent that has been in the biz 2 years started a short sale consulting company and invited agents to attend a webinar.  I almost did it...and then realized, hey, this gal just got into the business.  But she packaged her presentation well that would fool the well established. 

Presentation and relationships until you reach the multiple millions......

Dec 16, 2008 06:48 AM
Morgan Evans
Douglas Elliman Real Estate - Manhattan, NY
LICENSED REAL ESTATE SALESPERSON

Being young, there is no way I can sit down and say to a seller and say, "I've been selling real estate for 20 years." But what I can say is that I know and have experience in certain areas that will help them in their specific part of the market. 

Mar 25, 2010 01:22 AM