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Real Estate's Next Level Training Systems













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What IS Prospecting?
Many years ago, I found
myself without a date for Valentine’s Day. It was February 11th and I
was in my mid-20’s.
I had recently broken up with a long-time girlfriend and wasn’t sure what I
wanted in a relationship. So I went to the local florist and ordered a dozen
roses. I then asked the florist to send one rose to each of twelve different
young women I had selected. The florist said “You’re kidding, right?” I
wasn’t. That’s called prospecting. Select a target audience and let them know
you have something to offer them.
In the Real Estate Industry, as in most sales professions, prospecting is a
dirty word. Far too many Realtors enter the field of Real Estate believing they
can wait for the phone to ring and earn an above average income if they only
select a brokerage with great advertising. Most new agents, as they venture into
this endeavor, expect that the company will generate leads for them. While it is
true that most good real estate organizations generate some buyers and sellers
from the advertising done by the company, you will not make a great living at
any company waiting for the phone to ring. That is the kiss of death in the real
estate industry.
Prospecting, however, is not simply picking up the phone and calling possible
buyers and sellers. To be effective, prospecting must be a consistent planned
process. Your goal is to create a steady flow of business into your pipeline
that will result in an above average income.
Your business will build like a wave over the long term of your career if you
deliver exceptional service. Starting small, it can grow to tsunami proportions
as more and more of your past clients, business associates, friends and
relatives refer you business. It’s a process to create those referrals, and you
have to survive long enough in the industry, making a living, until you have a
database of people who like and trust you that will continually feed and expand
your business and client base.
There are two fundamental truths about prospecting.
The first truth is that you must prospect consistently to be successful. Set
aside time each and every week to perform the task. If you don’t block out time,
other stuff will get in the way. “Well, Loren, I couldn’t prospect
today because I really needed to go shopping for groceries, and I
had an out-of-town client, and I had this awful hangnail.” My experience
with training hundreds of Realtors over the years has taught me that prospecting
is the hardest part of any real estate career. The number one reason that
Realtors fail in this industry is that they fail to schedule the time to find
prospects. This is particularly important early in a Realtor’s career. In the
long run, Realtors who deliver exceptional service receive many referrals from
their clients, which limits the amount of prospecting successful Realtors need
to do. However, when building a real estate business for yourself, you need to
look at the various options available to seek out qualified property sellers and
buyers.
The second truth is that prospecting is a process, not an event. Some
real estate trainers teach Realtors to randomly pick up the phone and call
people until they get an appointment. A much smarter approach is to carefully
select a target market that you feel is not being serviced, or where you may
find a competitive advantage, and lay out a game plan to target that
audience. The game plan will include a method, or several methods, of contacting
the target audience, a reason for your contact or something of value for the
group you’re prospecting, and a systematic way to follow up with that group.
The Prospecting System:
There are four steps to a successful prospecting system.
1. Select Your Target Market - Determine who you want
to be the recipient of your message, advertising, or direct prospecting.
2. Select Your Method of Contact - There are literally hundreds
of methods of contacting prospective buyers and sellers in your
marketplace. Methods may include phone calls, door knocking, emailing, mailing,
and some special deliveries. Some of them are quite fun, like delivering flags
or pumpkins.
3. Give Your Prospect Something of Value - The primary goal of
prospecting is to identify a potential client. You want to entice a client to
raise their hand and acknowledge that they may be in the market to buy or sell
some time in the near future.
4. Follow Up Consistently - Once you’ve identified prospective
future clients, you’ll need to begin building a relationship with them.
Again, prospecting is a process, not an event. You can hope for
business, pray for business or go get
business. It's your choice!
Real Estate Prospecting: The Ultimate Resource Guide
This book is the ultimate game plan for prospecting. It carefully outlines
methods to select likely groups of prospects, how to contact those target
groups, what to offer them, and how best to follow up.
As a Realtor needing listings and sales, you can Hope for Them, Wait for
Them, or Go Get Them. This innovative book lays out a game plan to identify
people who want or need to move, to find a way to meet with them, and then
to consistently follow up. As the author states, "Prospecting is a process,
not an event". Filled with scripts, dialogues, sample letters, sample
postcards and complete prospecting attack plans, this book is certain to
help any real estate career blossom. |

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