The Key To Success In Real Estate Or Anything

The Key To Success In Real Estate Or Anything

There is one skill that will make you all the money you want. It is an elusive skill that 95% of the world neglects every day - especially real estate agents. I can't tell you how many times I've visited an agent's office and the first thing I noticed was a lack of this one skill. What is it?

There is one skill that will make you all the money you want. It is an elusive skill that 95% of the world neglects every day-especially real estate agents.

I can't tell you how many times I've visited an agent's office and the first thing I noticed was a lack of this one skill. What is it?

Consistency.

Consistency is the one beast that when tamed, gives you everything you want out of life-not just in real estate. However, it seems that real estate agents have a notoriously hard time with it.

Most agents are very talented at what I call the "Stop-and-Start Syndrome". This is the disease of stopping projects and then starting new ones.

When the new project doesn't produce results fast enough, the agent stops and starts something else. It becomes a vicious cycle.

Consistency is the answer to putting structure on your business-and your income. I'm constantly being asked by agents, "Denise, is there a way to transform real estate from a feast-or-famine business to a steady income business?"

The answer is yes. But it starts with consistency.

Here are the four areas in which all agents need to take more consistent actions:

  1. Follow-Up

    If you ask the clients of any one hundred agents what kind of consistent follow-up they receive, I can safely predict that over 90% will say they receive nothing consistently. It may be a flyer here, a letter there, maybe an occasional phone call-but nothing regular.

    My definition of a consistent follow-up plan is that you are in regular contact with your clients over an extended period of time. That might be a monthly mailer about real estate. It might be a weekly email. It might be a phone call every three weeks.

    But it's something that's scheduled and checked off your to-do list. Without consistent follow-up in place (for potential, current, and past clients!), there is no way you will ever have a consistent income.

  2. Lead generation.

    Lead generation is the area in which real estate agents are the weakest in terms of consistency. Most agents start a lead generation campaign when they desperately need the money.

    This is the worst time to decide to start one. The agent is stressed out, not at the top of his or her game, and not in the best frame of mind to begin looking for new clients.

    This is why it's so critically important to start a lead generation campaign before you need one. By the time you need one, you'll already have one in place.

    Something else I often see when an agent starts to do well is that they slack off on their lead generation. Big mistake! Lead generation needs to continue in good times or bad.

  3. Taking time off.

    I still haven't gotten this point across to many of you, so I'll keep repeating it until I do. The more regular time off you fit into your schedule, the more money you make as a real estate agent.

    Yes, it sounds silly, but I guarantee you that the agents I know who make the most money also take the most vacations. They are more productive because they are well-rested, recharged, and always at the top of their game.

  4. Paperwork and organization.

    I visit many agents whose desks are covered in piles of papers. I tell them to get rid of the piles. Then, at our next meeting I notice that not only were the piles not taken away, they're higher.

    This is bad. All agents need to schedule-and when I say schedule, I mean DEVOTE-30 minutes a day to organizing papers and files. If you're one of the agents with the piles, then maybe you need to spend more time than that on this task.

    But you have to do it-because like it or not, paperwork is a necessary evil when you run a business. Very few agents I know sit down and organize their papers consistently. These agents tend to do the paperwork the very moment it's needed-instead of having it ready to go at a moment's notice.

    When I was an agent, I had systems in place so that if I needed a form it was always clearly labeled and ready to grab. When you implement similar systems in your business, you'll be amazed at how much new time you have for other tasks.

Consistency in any field equals success. Finding out what it takes to be successful-and then DOING those things consistently is the key to success in real estate.

Or anything, for that matter.

 Categories: Motivation