Reserved (old Consumer blog) » Paradigm shift » What Politics can Teach our Industry about Confronting Change

What Politics can Teach our Industry about Confronting Change

Author: Mollie Wasserman
Date: February 7, 2008 3:40 PM
Permalink:
You can be the first to comment.
My friends, I regret to tell you that your old jobs are not coming back

The Republican primary in the state of Michigan was held this past January and the way that the two leading candidates approached this primary provides a fascinating primer on how real estate will fare in the next few years, depending on our reaction to the systemic changes that confront us.

Like much of the real estate industry, Michigan is in the doldrums, to put it mildly. In fact, many economists have describes Michigan as having been caught in a "one state recession" for quite some time now. Leading up to the primary, the two leading candidates took very different approaches in campaigning for votes.

Candidate #1 campaigned as the savior of the traditional auto industry while being critical of new fuel efficiency standards signed into law: "If you vote for me, when I get to Washington I'll make sure that the auto industry is not broken by these new standards but rather is provided the funding to get their jobs back".

Candidate #2 took a much different tack, confronting the systemic changes facing the auto industry head-on by telling voters the truth: "My friends, I regret to tell you that your old jobs are not coming back. The global economy is here to stay. But if we prepare, we can bring new and much better jobs to Michigan and to the rest of America. But know this: we will not thrive continuing the same-old, same-old. To compete successfully in the new order, we must prepare workers to seize the new opportunities."

It's interesting that we are now watching most of the "pundits" in the real estate industry, like Candidate #1, preach the same old traditional line: "It's time to get back to basics" you hear from the same writers and seminar speakers that have been around forever, preaching the same gospel for decades: "Don't worry about the current downturn. Real estate works in cycles. While things are slow just sharpen your traditional sales skills and when things come back, you'll be ready."

Sorry folks. Like Candidate #2 I believe in telling it like it is. So here goes: while it is certainly true that real estate works in cycles, the ills that face our industry will not be cured when the current down cycle turns up again. That's because there has been a fundamental systemic change: it's called technology. Prior to the Internet, real estate agents were in demand primarily as information providers. The traditional model worked for many years when agents were the sole gatekeepers of property data: if a seller wanted their home on the MLS or a buyer wanted to see what was available, they needed to go through an agent to do so. And since the agent was the only way to get to this data, the traditional sales model, which limited its offerings to a one-size-fits-all (not!) package, payable only by commission was accepted by the consumer as the only avenue to get the services they needed.

However, with the proliferation of property search, valuation, and listing sites, and almost universal access to the MLS that we have now, the traditional model has broken down. The industry is fighting an uphill battle for control of property information, and for its very livelihood. But, in the age of the Internet, this is a battle that will certainly be lost. In fact, it's been lost already only the vast majority of the industry refuses to see it. An upturn in the real estate cycle will not change the fact that the consumer no longer wants to pay big bucks for access they can get on their own.

But, it's not all doom and gloom - far from it! Remember Candidate #2 also said that if we prepare, we can have much better jobs by seizing new opportunities. And in the Internet age, those opportunities in real estate lie in a new model called consulting.

You see, unlike a real estate salesperson who may call themselves a "consultant" but is really a salesperson in practice, a trained consultant is in high demand because their role is not that of a gatekeeper of the MLS, but rather someone who's job is to take the property information so widely available, and make sense of it all. Rather than trying to compete with technology in performing functionary-type activities that the consumer can do themselves if they choose, a real estate consultant gets paid for the know-how that can only come from years of experience.

Consulting is the future because as a consultant, it doesn't matter who has access to data; the value lies not in the data itself, but in the interpretation of that data. As a trained consultant, the agent is no longer paid to provide information but to interpret it. And that's something that the Internet can never do.

So, my friends, I regret to tell you that your old jobs are not coming back. The Internet-savvy consumer is here to stay. But if you prepare, you can thrive because in the world of real estate consulting, you can get paid for your expertise, not for your access. And instead of working for free in hopes of bagging a commission for an outcome that you can't control, you can get paid for your time and your work. ALL of your work - not just the deals that close!

Filed in »

About this Entry

This page contains a single entry by Mollie Wasserman published on February 7, 2008 3:40 PM.

Tough Times = Newest Quick Fix was the previous entry in this blog.

Are You Looking for Value When Comparing Real Estate Services? is the next entry in this blog.

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

Recent Entries

  • Why & when would a consumer prefer hiring an Accredited Consultant in Real Estate?
    Mary Pope-Handy wrote:
    By Paula BeanAn ACRE can offer you both the traditional system of real estate services by commission as well a ...
  • 2 comments on this entry:
    • Merv said:
      You not only have the choice of a real estate professional or an ACRE® but when you hire an ACRE ...
    • Mollie Wasserman said:
      I couldn't have said it better Paula. Folks, Paula doesn't just call herself a consultant, she's been doing it for ...

  • Home Valuations, Paid by Fee (not commission)
    Mary Pope-Handy wrote:
    Sometimes you need to get some real estate help, you know it is going to take some time and effort ...
  • 1 comment on this entry:
    • Paula Bean said:
      Awesome post MPH! I particularly like the part about foreclosure. In Florida we are flooded with peole trying to do ...

  • Change #3: The ACRE® Course...Taught LIVE!
    Mollie Wasserman wrote:
    At the end of this month, we'll be embarking on a laboratory experiment: teaching the entire ACRE® course...to a live ...
  • 1 comment on this entry:
    • Randy Carson said:
      All the best on your upcoming LIVE training! ...

  • Change #2: New Course
    Mollie Wasserman wrote:
    A couple of months ago, I posted on the members-only Coaching Exchange that it was our intention to upgrade the ...
  • 1 comment on this entry:
    • Randy Carson said:
      Looking forward to seeing the new course and content ...

  • Change #1: New Consulting Times Site
    Mollie Wasserman wrote:
    We are busy putting together a new, expanded, and more user friendly Consulting Times. Here are just two of the ...
  • Huge ACRE® Changes a'Comin
    Mollie Wasserman wrote:
    Well, the lazy summer is over and if you're like me and observe the Jewish holidays, autumn signals a new ...
  • Quid Pro Quo? Oh, No!
    Mollie Wasserman wrote:
    ACRE® Jennifer Allen, author of "Sell with Soul" and (just out) "If You're Not Having Fun Selling Real Estate, You're ...
  • 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 ...

  • The World Wide Rave...And I AM Raving!
    Mollie Wasserman wrote:
    I'm not in the book review business but I have to tell you that I just got through reading World ...
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 Consumer blog)