An Open Letter To The General Public About Real Estate Agent Safety

Reblogger
Real Estate Broker/Owner with Winston Realty, Inc. BK63078915

Joe Kerouac, shared this post that can be utilized now and in the future. This collection of data can also benefit buyers or sellers as well as other Realtors or colleagues. It is detailed and right to the point. This will certainly give the reader an upper hand to help in this very competitive real estate market.  We at Winston Realty, Inc., agree with the points of this blog. Thanks for posting.

Original content by Joe Kerouac

the balancing act

An Absurd Suggestion

If you ask a real estate agent to show you a house, and you’ve never met that agent, I hope he or she suggests meeting over a plate of bacon. And I hope you’ll oblige.

Sounds absurd, but it’ll make sense in a minute…

During the week I wrote this, Beverly Carter, a fellow real estate agent, was kidnapped and killed after meeting a potential client whom she didn’t know. The aftershocks are still reverberating through the real estate industry -- we are sad, angry, and afraid.

It’s not the first time something like this happened. In fact, it happens more often than you think, and it can easily happen again.

Drawing A Line, Or Drawing A Gun?

Since the news broke, agents have been throwing around ideas about how to avoid this sort of tragedy in the future. Ideas like:

  • Carrying a gun. Or at least having mace or a taser on hand.

  • Installing a phone app that can alert friends, family or colleagues if you are in danger.

  • Drawing a line in the sand and demanding that every new potential client must first meet them at their office.

But the answers aren’t so black and white.

Every agent arming themselves is a bit impractical (for many reasons).

An alert from a phone app may be too little too late.

Drawing that line in the sand (to meet before the first showing) is also impractical in our fast-paced industry…

...but it’s the most practical answer we have. And it’s something you’ll probably notice more agents doing in the future.

Think about it.

If you were an agent, with random people calling for you to show them homes on the fly, wouldn’t you want the security of knowing who you’re dealing with?

Personal safety notwithstanding, an initial meeting just makes good business sense. You get a chance to determine whether they’re sincere, willing and able buyers… and they get a feel for you as well.

A Line Is Sometimes Hard To Draw

You might be wondering why this policy (of meeting at their office or at least in a public place prior to the first showing) hasn’t always been universally enforced by agents.

Here’s why: agents want to be accommodating. They value your business to a degree that causes them to overlook their own personal safety at times.

The real estate industry is competitive. If agents insist that you jump through what seems like a hoop “just to see a house”, they fear you’ll simply call another agent who won’t demand such hoop-jumping.

However, the tragic loss of one of our own is causing us to rethink our collective value system.

This is why drawing that line in the sand, impractical as it may be, will likely become the new standard with most agents. As well it should.

But who says you need to meet at an office?

That’s where bacon comes into play...

Breakin' Bacon

Originally, I started writing this article as a list. A list of solid, logical reasons why you should meet with an agent in their office before ever even looking at a house. Yawn.

Then I figured I could extol the virtues of meeting for a cup of coffee. Sounds more appealing. Not as boring as an office, nor as demanding, or seemingly pushy and self-serving. It would be something much easier for an agent to ask of you.

But meeting for coffee is cliche. And besides, not everybody’s a coffee drinker.

Enter bacon.

Everyone loves bacon (at least that’s what Facebook tells me), and breaking bread with someone—sharing food—is a gesture everyone appreciates. I don’t mean a whole meal. That’s over the top. But a plate of bacon is perfect.

Bacon is just plain appealing, inexpensive, and provides the right amount of time for everyone to get to know a bit about each other.

Breakin' bacon”. Is it an absurd notion? Yes. But it stops you in your tracks makes you scratch your head. More importantly, it serves as a good starting point for a healthy agent-client relationship.

The Price of Convenience

As an agent, I know it’s all about the house from the buyer’s viewpoint. Not so much about the desire to meet and go over important stuff with an agent. I get it. I was a consumer before I was an agent. House trumps agent.

However, all it takes is one careless, but totally understandable decision to show a house, and an agent may never return home to their loved ones.

Sounds extreme, but it happens. Too often.

But yet not often enough that true changes in habits and patterns take place.

And if “breakin' bacon” -- bizarre as it sounds -- can stick in the minds of agents, and become the easy thing to suggest to you...

Well, then sharing some bacon starts to seem less absurd.

What's Absurd Is...

What happened to Beverly Carter happened. What happened is absurd.

It’s also avoidable.

I’m only asking you to consider these words, thoughts, and feelings, and I thank you for taking the time to understand the agent perspective.

For now, it’s time to wrap this all up. It’s a late night at the office, and I just want to go home and kiss my wife and kids. Get some rest. And hope that these thoughts help someone in some way in the future.

I’m grateful I can return to my family.

Beverly can’t.

© Joe Kerouac 2014

 

Ripping the label off real estate agents.
Gently turning the industry upside down.

 

My blogs are thoughts, opinions, and ideas.  Not advice...legal, financial, business-wise, marital or otherwise.  So, don't construe it otherwise.

 

 

Posted by

P. Winston Heverly, GRI, ABR, SFR, CDPE, CIAS, PA

We service all of Palm Beach County and S. Florida

 

 513 N. Country Club Drive, Suite 200, Atlantis, FL 33462

Office: (561) 247-7376 - Fax: (561) 537-7223 - Cell: (561) 629-2660

Email: PWH@WinstonRealty.co - Web: WinstonRealty

 

Search: Atlantis, Boca Raton, Lake Worth, Palm Beach Gardens,

South Palm Beach, West Palm Beach           

 

                      

              

P Winston Heverly - Real Estate Agent

Comments (5)

TeamCHI - Complete Home Inspections, Inc.
Complete Home Inspections, Inc. - Brentwood, TN
Home Inspectons - Nashville, TN area - 615.661.029

Good morning Winston. There is that fine line between being safe and customer service. Know who you are working with.

Jun 17, 2015 07:10 PM
Lise Howe
Keller Williams Capital Properties - Washington, DC
Assoc. Broker in DC, MD, VA and attorney in DC

Great choice for a reblog Winston - Good information for all of us to remember.

Jun 17, 2015 08:27 PM
Bill Roberts
Brooks and Dunphy Real Estate - Oceanside, CA
"Baby Boomer" Retirement Planner

Winston, I don't know about bacon, but I do expect the client to come to the office FIRST if they are working with a female agent. This will cut down most of the opportunities for assault, and will give the police better information if there is an assault. OFFICE, NOT BACON.

Bill Roberts

Jun 18, 2015 12:13 AM
Joe Kerouac
Madison, NJ
Real estate agent and writer

Winston Heverly -- Thanks for the re-blog!!!

Funny, I've just been thinking about this piece over the past few weeks because of the rash of recent attacks I've seen agents discussing around the Country.

In one of the original drafts of this piece, I wrote about how quickly the vigilance due to the tragedy of Beverly would dissipate, and that this would be a never-ending issue due to so many industry factors. Lines would not be forever drawn...

How quickly that has come to pass.

So glad to see someone giving this piece a second life.

 

Jun 19, 2015 12:47 AM
Joe Kerouac
Madison, NJ
Real estate agent and writer

Bill Roberts - The use of bacon was hyperbolic metaphor.

Just meant to be memorable and drive a point home. And potentially to give agents a bizarre (hopefully humorous) bent to bringng a rather morose subject up with clients.

But yes, simply meeting at the office should be a simple request that any client would agree to. Sadly, many do not. Regardless of whether the agent is a woman or man.

 

Jun 19, 2015 01:01 AM

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