Where You Should Focus During Uncertain Times

by | Aug 26, 2022

During a recent interview with Brad Inman, mega-team leader and tech entrepreneur Ben Kinney shared how he’s preparing for the choppy economic waters that may lie ahead.

He used the analogy of a bear being on a hill outside of your camp to describe the challenges facing the real estate market.

No one can tell if the bear will come into the camp and cause problems or keep walking along the hill. But you must prepare for the possibility the bear will come your way.

To prepare for potential difficulties, he suggests that brokerages and teams focus on the three most important jobs of running a real estate brokerage or team:

1.  Attract talent in sales and operational roles.   You need to get focused and spend the majority of your time doing this.  Dedicate resources and time to this task.

2.  Once you attract the talent, get them into production.   It doesn’t matter if you have hundreds of thousands of real estate agents if they’re not productive.  You need to hire the right people and get them into production as quickly as possible.

3.  Plug the hole in your bucket.   Do everything you can to keep the mid-range agents (18 – 36 transactions /year) from leaving your company.   Let the bottom tier leave, and the top agents are your second priority.  The middle group are the most vulnerable and will hurt your business the most if they leave.

Recruiting and retention are the top priorities of high performing real estate organizations in all market conditions, but especially during times of uncertainty.

If the bear walks into your camp, what will he find you doing?

The Simple Psychology of Real Estate Recruiting [2nd Edition]

Unlock the secrets of effective real estate recruiting. Revised to include actionable frameworks for sharper execution and to help you turn psychological theory into a repeatable recruiting system.

Creating Pacts to Avoid Distraction

Creating Pacts to Avoid Distraction

Notice the two parts to Nir’s formula: a pre-commitment and an external force to keep you accountable to that commitment. For recruiting setting goals and time-blocks in your schedule is not enough. Most people need some kind of external accountability, as well.

Look for Individuals Who Want to be Measured

Look for Individuals Who Want to be Measured

It’s not that people with a growth mindset don’t experience failure—they just see failure as an opportunity to learn new things, to be challenged, and to experience curiosity. This is an important topic to cover during interviews and follow-up conversations with your prospects. If you find someone who likes being measured, you’ve likely found someone who will push through the inherent failures of growing a real estate business and experience long-term success.