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A long time ago I read an article written by a realtor describing his favorite sales techniques. One of them was to separate the man & woman, because men are pragmatic and women are emotional. The advise was to use "feeling" words with the woman and dummy down the talk so she could understand it.
Meanwhile, the article suggested power words and sexual references with the guys. You know, like about how claiming the house by having sex in every room is a rite... It would have been funny, but I think it was serious.
"1. Emotion, not features, sell houses
The best way to tap into emotional buying is to use video. To engage potential buyers in your video, Rossi suggests using the “look, hook and then cook†model."
I think he meant "crook" there at the end. :)
Like a lot of real estate agents, I get Inman News articles delivered to my inbox each day. More often than not, I dismiss them because of their industry-cheerleading feel. Inman knows who their audience is and are happy to pander to it.
But Realtors don’t deserve pandering, they deserve a swift kick in the head.
Since taking on HousingStorm.com, I am a more conscious of any articles about real estate technology. That’s perhaps why I even bothered reading this article.
Boy was I disappointed that I did.
From Inman News Video: the real estate game-changer
The article gets worse from there. But there was one bright spot: the skewering comments that came at the end. Here is part of the first one…
And this is where the rubber meets the road. You have a real estate “professional†trying to convince a seller that their crappy youtube video will result in them getting a higher price and, therefore, justifying their commission. Then, you have an actual professional calling the whole idea nonsense.
This is the central problem with the real estate profession today: we rely on spin and snake-oil instead of expertise.
One can only hope that with the expansion of google, discount brokerages, and MLS transparency, the public will no longer fall for our bullshit.
We should be paid for our advice and expertise in helping a client navigate through their transaction. Good agents are worth their pay and then some.
One can only hope that, as the industry evolves, the few actual real estate experts will rise to the top and the rest will go back to selling shoes.
#housing