Reserved (old pro) » News: August 2009

News: August 2009 Archives

Create Entry
« News: June 2009 | Blog Home | Archives
By joining our Times Community you can create and post your own entries, express your views or ask questions of others or the ACRE® Council.

...whether they are dealing with Health Care or Real Estate Services.


I was chatting with a friend of mine last week when he admitted that he had been without health insurance since he got out of college. Given that he's a real estate agent, that's not so surprising: as an independent contractor he's on his own regarding health insurance and many in our industry have simply taken their chances, especially when they are young and healthy like my friend Jack.

But as part of the approximately 15% of Americans who are uninsured, Jack has a window on a phenomenon that few of the rest of us ever see: what health services actually cost. You see, Jack was playing softball one Saturday a couple of weeks ago and sprained his ankle. As luck would have it, a member of the team was a physician and offered to take a look at the ankle at his office. After his ankle was wrapped up, Jack offered to pay him. 

But here's the interesting phenomenon: the doctor-teammate didn't have a clue as to what to charge him because he had no clue as to what his services were worth! As any doctor today will tell you: their charges are handled by insurance. And the truth is that if the good doctor had not been playing softball with him, Jack's lack of insurance would have dictated that he wouldn't be going to a doctor's office at all - rather he would have to go to the ER if he wanted his ankle looked at and the cost of his care at the ER would have been absorbed by the insured.

Meanwhile, most of us who have health insurance never ask a doctor what they charge because we don't pay for the lion's share of our care - insurance does, so we have been quietly oblivious until the last few years.

So, what does this have to do with real estate?

As I write this, the US government is embroiled in wrangling over how to overhaul our health care system. It seems to me that the system is not so much broken as it is hopelessly dated because as times changed, it never adapted. Our health care system was designed in years past, when you would hold a job for a lifetime. In that world, it made perfect sense to have your health care as a benefit of that job. But how many of us today stay in one job for our entire lives? And what about the growing legions of independent contractors and self employed entrepreneurs who have no access to a "company" plan? Health care tied to one's employment makes about as much sense in today's world as using a typewriter to write a letter.

Likewise, in the real estate industry, we continue to practice in a way that is not so much broken but hopelessly outdated. The traditional sales model was conceived in years past when we, as real estate practitioners had a very different role. If you think about it, real estate as a sales profession, paid by commission, made total sense when the agent's only job was to "move the merchandise". But in the 1990's our national and state associations expanded our role - it was no longer enough to simply sell the product, we now were asked to act as fiduciaries: working in the best interest of our client and putting their needs above all others, including, and most especially our own. In fact, our responsibilities as a fiduciary became a part of the NAR's (National Association of Realtors®) code of ethics that we are obliged to adhere to.

Yet, when our role was expanded and fundamentally changed, when we were asked to provide objective counsel that was in the client's best interest, no attention was given to how this new role fit with a compensation system that is geared toward salespeople who are free to work in their own best interest. Consequently, real estate professionals today are put in an impossible bind that no amount of "ethics training" can address: we are being asked to provide objective counsel that is in the best interest of our client when how much we are paid, (or whether we are paid at all) is wholly dependent on the client's decisions which we are advising them on!

Create Entry
« News: June 2009 | Blog Home | Archives
By joining our Times Community you can create and post your own entries, express your views or ask questions of others or the ACRE® Council.

Recent Entries

  • Lack of Transparency Befuddles Today's Consumer...
    Mollie Wasserman wrote:
    ...whether they are dealing with Health Care or Real Estate Services.I was chatting with a friend of mine last week ...
  • When a Model no Longer Works...it's Time to Adapt
    Mollie Wasserman wrote:
    As I write this, the US government is embroiled in wrangling over how to overhaul our health care system. It ...
  • 3 comments on this entry:
    • Paula Bean said:
      I have sold real estate since 1979 and never once have I thought we should charge for our services by ...
    • Judi Bryan said:
      Much as our industry has tried to "elevate our role" in the consumer's mind by presenting the many "lists of ...
    • Sherry Lynn Bell said:
      Mollie, this is a great article and so true. I agree with you about the payable only commission doesn't fit ...

About this Archive

This page is an archive of entries in the News category from August 2009.

News: June 2009 is the previous archive.

Find recent content on the main index or look in the archives to find all content.

For Consumers

Welcome to the Blog about the future of real estate as described in Ripping the Roof Off Real Estate.

Empowering consumers with the knowledge that there is a different way to purchase real estate services that simply makes more sense.

Order your copy of

Go to Ripping The Roof Off Real Estate site How a multi-
billion-dollar
industry came
to have an
identity crisis


Available now at Amazon or
Barnes&Noble

The ACRE® Designation

ACRE Logo
Accredited Consultant
in Real Estate


Is your agent an ACRE®?
Read what our clients are saying

For Real Estate Professionals

Begin the journey to transform your business

Are you ready to become the next ACRE®? Enroll now.

Need more information? Watch the following YouTube video and then come back and explore The Times.

Why become an ACRE®?

Click here to watch the YouTube vdeo

For real estate professionals:
 » Introduction to Consulting
 » The ACRE® Course & Coaching

Get the Newsletter
Email 
       Newsletter icon
RE Professionals: Subscribe to our free consulting newsletter - the ACRE® ALERT

(what is SafeSubscribe?)
See a sample in a new window.

Get Notified

By email notice (Your email never disclosed, ever! Opt out anytime)

All new articles and comments published in:
Reserved (old pro)