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Property Managers! How Do You Think Your Current (and Future) Clients Might Feel About Your 80/20 Plan?

Reblogger Wallace S. Gibson, CPM
Property Manager with Gibson Management Group, Ltd.

I'm fortunate to do 20% prospecting (farming) and 80% with current business because I HAVE business.  Property managers frequently just hope for the phone to ring OR an e-mail contact to ding their e-mail box.

Property managers need to prospect for GOOD rental properties to lease and manage.

Original content by Jennifer Allan-Hagedorn

There was a featured blog here in the Rain a few weeks ago advising agents to devote 80% of their time prospecting for new business and 20% dealing with current business (i.e. active buyers and sellers). This isn't the first time we've seen this advice and it won't be the last; in fact, most Big Name training programs proclaim that a real estate agent's primary job is to prospect; that agents should vigorously resist the temptation to abandon their daily prospecting when clients call with pesky, administrative, non-income-producing problems to solve. Salesperson

But I can't help but wonder... If a real estate agent's primary job is to prospect... and if the job our clients have hired us to perform for them can be done in a few hours a week... how on earth do we justify charging fees in the thousands and thousands of dollars?

Hold that thought while we return to the advice to devote far more time to prospecting than to serving...

Let's say that all this focused prospecting is paying off, and an agent is gathering an impressive book of real estate business - 5, 10, 20, 40 active buyers and sellers. Bravo! 

But, hmmmmm, just because the agent now has more clients to serve doesn't add hours to the day, so if he insists (as he's advised to do) on sticking to his 80/20 plan (because it's working so well!), his current clients are obviously going to be receiving smaller and smaller slices of his care and attention.

"But," the Power Prospector protests, "if I don't make prospecting a priority in my business and I do focus on my current clients, down the road I'll find myself with an empty pipeline and I can't have THAT! So, even if I'd like to do the job I promised to do I'd prefer to provide great service to my clients, I can't because I need to ensure that I always have new business coming in."

Well, um...

I'm guessing your current clients wouldn't think much of this argument, especially as they're feeling more and more neglected by the agent who promised them the world in service - and isn't delivering. I'm guessing they aren't singing his praises around the water cooler or at yoga class. I'm thinking that if they knew his business model was predicated on spending the vast majority of his time searching for, preparing for and pitching to his future clients instead of taking care of THEM, his current clients, they might have thought twice about hiring him in the first place.

Here's the thing. Taking proper care of your clients takes time. Your need for a full pipeline doesn't change the fact that you made promises and commitments to the buyers and sellers who believed you would take great care of them and their real estate needs. Believe me, they did NOT hire you because they were impressed by your prospecting prowess; they hired you because you assured them you'd take better care of them than any of the other agents they considered honoring with their business.

The bottom line is that if you can't handle more than X number of active buyers and sellers without sacrificing your service to them, then I guess you shouldn't be looking for more business when you already have as much as you can properly take care of.

Now let's go back to the first concept in this blog - if you're only devoting a few hours or even a few minutes a week to your clients, don't you think they might start to wonder what on earth they're paying you so much money for? And IF WHAT WE DO FOR OUR CLIENTS IS SO EASY THAT IT ONLY TAKES 20% OF OUR TIME OR WE CAN HAND IT OFF TO A $12/HOUR ASSISTANT, are our services really worth the fees we charge?

You can't have it both ways. You can't say, on one hand, that client care is simply a collection of administrative tasks that can be handled in your spare time or by an assistant, and THEN in the next breath declare that your client-care services are extremely valuable and should be well-compensated.

For the record, I don't believe that what we do is easy and I do believe we deserve to be well-compensated... as long as... we're doing the job we were HIRED to do and giving it our full attention.

I'll continue this soon, but please share your thoughts with me!

 

 

 

 

The Exceptional Agent

 

 

 

 

 

 

Posted by

Wallace S. Gibson is a Certified Property Manager with over 50 years of property management experience and expertise.  She maintains a specialized property management business in Central Virginia serving Albemarle, Greene, Fluvanna and Louisa counties  

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View our available Charlottesville, Albemarle and Lake Monticello rental homes online with photos and floor plans

"...to be a Virginian, either by Birth, Marriage, Adoption, or even on one's Mother's side, is an Introduction to any State in the Union, a Passport to any Foreign Country, and a Benediction from the Almighty God...." Anonymous

 

Comments(5)

Broker Nick
South Florida Real Estate & Development, Inc. - Coconut Creek, FL
Broker Nick Relocation Broker Service

I love the fact that you agree with prospecting. When I do not prospect my bottom line is less closed sales, less listings and that is the truth.

Nov 28, 2011 11:20 PM
Wallace S. Gibson, CPM
Gibson Management Group, Ltd. - Charlottesville, VA
LandlordWhisperer

Nick * I realized when I started my second property management firm that I wanted BETTER properties so prospecting for those properties by direct-mail farming was the key.

Nov 28, 2011 11:22 PM
Jennifer Allan-Hagedorn
Sell with Soul - Pensacola Beach, FL
Author of Sell with Soul

Thanks for the reblog, Wallace. The follow-up to this blog will discuss HOW to run a 20/80% business, so your comments and input are certainly welcome and appreciated!

Nov 28, 2011 11:36 PM
Debi McKamie
McKamie Real Estate Services, LLC - Meridian, TX
Realtor®/Property Manager

This is a good post.  We are  currently in the position where expansion is necessary.  We are encouraged daily to prospect for sales listings, and buyer representation.   We have a property management service with over 200 doors as well as two large HOA management contracts.  Having been in business only a short time, we have focused solely on building the property management side of the company.   Now as we embark on builidng the sales side of the company we are faced with the question "Won't our current client's suffer" as our time is stretched in so many directions.  Yes, hiring assistants is a possibility, however in today's economy you wonder if that is a sane business decision.

Enjoyed your post as it hit home with what is going on in my business.

Nov 28, 2011 11:40 PM
Charles Stallions
Charles Stallions Real Estate Services - Pensacola, FL
850-476-4494 - Pensacola, Pace or Gulf Breeze, Fl.

Look at the money Lawyers get paid and have no problems passing you off to a $12 an hour clerk, I would they don't feel cheated so why would ours. In fact most of the assistants (12. Clerks) are easier if not better to deal with. Then you would have to say the Stagers and Virtual Assistants are not worth anything either because the customer bought my time rather than theirs. UMM that is a thought

Nov 29, 2011 09:48 AM