
Using a Real Estate Buyer Presentation That Gets You Hired
Most agents work to perfect their real estate listing presentation to sellers, but what about the buyer’s presentation? In a hot market, you need both!
Most agents work to perfect their real estate listing presentation to sellers, but what about the buyer’s presentation? In a hot market, you need both!
Almost everyone you meet has a home of some kind—and that makes them a potential client. Prospecting is simply having more conversations, consistently.
Skipping a buyer’s agent doesn’t save money — it sacrifices protection, negotiation power, and expert guidance when you need it most.
Our success comes from helping clients, and we win over new clients by prospecting. There is a difference between prospecting for yourself and prospecting to help homeowners!
“The most important asset you can own in your business is the attention of your customer. If you don’t own it, someone else does.” – Adam Contos, former CEO of RE/MAX Holdings, Inc.
We’ve all heard the saying about what “assuming” does, but there are some occasions when assuming the worst can help you prepare for the best.
Guide agents in batching content, setting up autoresponders, and leveraging SMILE Stops™ so they stay top of mind—even while out of the office.
Success isn’t random—it’s a result. This issue reveals how consistency and commitment are the real secrets behind every breakthrough.
Discover how real estate leaders can harness the science of smiling to foster happiness, boost team morale, and create a culture that attracts success from the inside out.
Every human has a baseline standard of happy, but how do we move that baseline up to be even more happy? (Hint: It involves smiling!)
Help your agents thrive through uncertainty – prepare, pivot, and plan for recession-era success with smart strategies and strong leadership.
Throughout the years, most of us, at least once, reach the point where we realize that what we’re doing isn’t working. It makes sense that with constantly evolving markets, sometimes things need to change prompting the question: Is it better to patch the problem or start fresh?