Archive for the ‘Uncategorized’ Category

Are They Buying a Product, a Service, or Something Else?

Thursday, May 13th, 2010

Today’s customer who walks into your model home is looking for more than a home.  They are looking for more than square feet, amenities, neighborhoods or the perfect home-site.  They are looking for an advisor they trust.  They are potentially putting their future and the future of their family in your hands.  They want to believe that you have their best interests at heart.  They are buying YOU!

You can increase your effectiveness (SALES) by trying to understand both what your customers want and what your customers need.  You may be the one to help them understand that they may not be able to have “everything”, but what you are able to offer them is pretty darn good…you may be able to help them make the perfect match!

Sometimes you have to uncover someone’s pain to discover what could be their ultimate pleasure. People are more afraid of making a mistake than they are of buying! Understand and differentiate for them their wants and needs and you can help reduce their fears.  Be knowledgeable and confident in the products and services you are selling and you will help the customer make their connection. The customer is buying an advisor they trust…you are part of the package. If you are not conveying knowledge and confidence, you are going to have a hard time in today’s market.

Here are some tips that will help you sell your products, services and yourself in any sales climate.

1) Look to the future. Initiate discussions with your customers that focus on how they see themselves in the future, and help them focus on their future needs. Sometimes we think too much about the present when the future is just as, if not more important.

2) Strengthen your relationships with customers who aren’t buying (buyers can be liarsJ).  Don’t be thrown off by making an “A” buyer a “C” buyer by what they say. Don’t just show up in the follow-up process with the “Good Ones.” Keep in mind that the best one may get away if you ignore them. Don’t send the signal that you only want to see them when they are spending money!

3) Focus on your long-term vision versus short-term; Take the time to review your goals weekly/monthly so you are thinking long-term. Put your efforts into how you will get where you want to go rather than justifying why you are where you are today.

4) Take responsibility for your actions. Admit your mistakes and learn from them; it relieves a lot of unnecessary negative energy and sets everyone free to move on.  But…Pat yourself on the back and celebrate your successes.  Learn from them also and catalogue what worked!

5) Check your Personal Customer Service Standard. Are you proud of it? If so, keep it up! If it needs a little TLC, hop to it.  (Hint: there is always room for change or improvement!)

6) Pan for Gold!  Don’t forget the goldmine in your backyard!  Get great tips from your customers to help you in this mission to sell yourself, not just your products and services. No one is in a better position to help you identify your value then your best customers. They may have even found ways to help you add value to what you offer. Start with an analysis; pick your top seven customers and ask them why they bought? What are their long term benefits and payoffs they are now enjoying? Don’t be satisfied with “feel good” statements. Ask them to define the contribution that you and your company made to their life. Look for values that make you stand out and put you in a “Special Category”.

You may just find out after all this reflecting, you have a lot more to offer than you believed! These very value-added qualities may appeal to your customers who are looking beyond traditional solutions.

The answer to the question is: they are buying a product or service, but they are also buying YOU!

Spring is in the Air!

Wednesday, April 14th, 2010

Here is a quick read…. I just love it when we are told by the media to get out a buy a home!

http://articles.moneycentral.msn.com/Investing/CompanyFocus/why-the-housing-market-is-about-to-turn.aspx

Happy Selling!

Kerry :)

To network or not to network…

Tuesday, April 6th, 2010

To network or not to network…

 

that is the question. To gain new business relationships and contacts, that is the answer!

We all know that networking has become an integral aspect of growing our business.  But are we networking consistently and effectively? Sure, we talk our “industry lingo” when we are around each other, and quite well I might add. Ask yourself these questions:

  • Are you going out of your way to attend true networking events and activities?
  • Do you arrange these activities into your schedule and have a plan for what you will accomplish at them?
  • Do you attend with the intention of learning how you can help others?

 

To understand networking, we first need to realize the vast amount of places and situations that networking opportunities exist. Networking is not just an “After Hours Event” that you attend, bring a stack of business cards, and go about the room glad handing and asking “how’s business?”.   

Think rather about where all these opportunities of meeting “potentially powerful people” may be, and go there! By powerful, I mean having the ability to empower, and help someone else, who in turn may return the favor in the future. There it is!  Networking is meeting and helping people, so that both of your futures are brighter and more prosperous. That is the unadorned truth; one of the best ways to build relationships is be genuine and see how you can help others get what they need before thinking of how they can help you. 

Now that we have established networking as the building and growth of new and strong relationships, where might we find them?

Like looking for your local favorite restaurant, or finding your best fishing hole, you go where the people are biting, where the people you want to attract are; Educational Classes, Seminars, Lunch and Learns, Chamber of Commerce, Car Wash, Doctor’s Office or Member Mixers!! Become a volunteer and/or hold a volunteer position. The list is endless. Sometimes it’s just helping someone with a recommendation for a good accountant or a reliable service station.  You’ve heard of “what goes around comes around”.  Both the people you refer and the person or company you recommend are now part of your network.  If you have the desire to connect and grow, the event or opportunity is out there waiting for you! 

There’s an old adage; “It’s not what you know, but who you know” While the statement is true, it also over simplifies. It is also about who knows you. Simply knowing an important person does not necessarily mean they will know and remember you! The other person must perceive you as having worth first, and then they will perceive you as someone worth knowing. 

Tips to guide you through Networking;

1)    Do less better. You don’t have to attend something weekly. Start small. You don’t have to work the whole room. Find someone you connect with at each and every event; have them introduce you to someone else. Your list will grow faster than you can keep up with.  If you have a follow-up assignment for a particular contact, do it right away, but also send a personal note to every contact you make.

2)    Prepare an introduction; your little mini “Super Bowl” commercial about who you are and what you do.  Keep it simple but memorable so they will want to share your story with others.

3)    Speak with confidence; believe in yourself. Others will want to be with you and be associated with you.  To be a powerful resource to others, become known as an expert in your own field.

4)    Ask questions of others that will provide more than yes or no answers.  Show genuine interest in their stories, and start the process of building a relationship based on trust.  Remember that people will always choose to do business with someone they know or someone who was recommended to them, over a total stranger!

5)    Tell people what you want. “I am looking for….” Can you help me with…”

6)    Practice helping others, it will make you feel good, and you will go home happier for having networked.

Effective networking is inexpensive and in many cases it is free! 

Put yourself out there; be active, be present and be attentive.

Your new Company Champions and Partners in Business are waiting to meet you! Will it happen this week?

Tax Credit Time is Running Out!

Tuesday, March 2nd, 2010

What are you waiting for?!?!  Check out this video to learn 5 easy steps about the tax credit!

The 5 Things Everyone Should Know about the Home Buyer Tax Credit

Thanks Bowen Family Homes  and Kelly Fink for posting this video!  http://www.bowenfamilyhomes.com/home

What a clever idea…

Until Next Time…

Kerry :)

What a GREAT way to start your day!

Thursday, February 25th, 2010

I found this video on YouTube!  I thought it was so good that I would share it with all of you…. ENJOY!

Smile and Move

Kerry :)

Gold Medal Performances!?!?

Saturday, February 20th, 2010

Are any of you currently watching the Olympic Gold Medal Performances? You really should catch a couple. They tell the story of, Dreams, Passion, Hard work and Excellence all put into action from a plan! To make it to the Podium and stand on the top and receive a Gold Medal!

You know we are all kind of in the race to reach for the Gold! We are always in pursuit of a Golden Opportunity to find a customer and receive that awesome award of a Sale! This is our “Gold Medal”

Gold Medal Tips;

 1) Dream BIG

2) Create an action plan (networking , prospecting and marketing)

3) Practice your sales skills (have you walked your model lately and sold it to yourself?)

4) When you fall down, get back up! (there is always a finish line to everything!)

5) When you triumph, rejoice in your efforts! ( reward yourself, celebrate, get up on that podium for your Gold!

Regards until I see you again,

Kerry

A fresh report signals that the market for new homes in the Twin Cities is thawing

Wednesday, February 10th, 2010

A fresh report signals that the market for new homes in the Twin Cities is thawing.
 
A day after a report showed monthly residential building permits increased 49 percent in January over year-ago figures, a new report shows further signs of life in new home construction.

Ryan Jones, director of the Twin Cities Market for Metrostudy, a housing research and consulting firm, says the market already hit bottom. New housing starts improved every quarter throughout the year, said Jones, who released a quarterly study of the Twin Cities market Tuesday.

“Think about last year with the 70,000 job losses and the recession really in full stride and things really up in the air,” he said. “We didn’t know what was going on and we still built 3,300 homes.” Given the stock market’s bull run in 2009 and signs the recession is over, Jones says 4,000 new homes could be built this year. That is, if the job market improves.

People without paychecks and families worried about job loss don’t build homes. “The housing market can’t fully begin to recover until the job market starts to improve,” Jones said.

While many reports tend to focus on the larger existing homes market, new construction has more of a ripple effect in the economy. New home sales spur spending on materials such as lumber and new windows and give construction and factory workers jobs.

The extension and expansion of housing tax credits helped to spur some buyers. Nearly 1,000 of last year’s 3,300 housing starts took place in the fourth quarter — a 25 percent increase compared to fourth-quarter 2008 and the first year-over-year rise in almost five years. Jones figures on a slight dip in new-home starts once the tax credits expire in April but expects steady gains through most of the year.

The size of the new home inventory also continues to decline. At the end of the fourth quarter, there were 3,051 new houses in the Twin Cities market, a 30 percent decrease from 2008 and a 56 percent drop from 2007. Of those new homes, 1,548 were under construction, 1,115 were finished vacant properties and 388 were model homes. There is currently a 7.9-month supply. Six to seven months’ supply in the market is considered equilibrium, Jones said.

Being flexible is helping some builders increase sales. In 2009, 24 percent more homes were sold in Stonemill Farms, a Woodbury community being developed by Newland Communities, than in 2008. Jamie Tharp, marketing director for Newland, said introducing new homes costing less than $300,000 helped in this budget-conscious environment.

Once buyers snatch up homes that are ready to go, builders can get to work filling some of the 32,135 vacant lots ready for construction in the Twin Cities. That’s a 10 year supply.

This article is from the Star and Tribue published on Feb. 2, 2010
By KARA McGUIRE, Star Tribune

http://www.startribune.com/homes/83406252.html?elr=KArksUUUoDEy3LGDiO7aiU

Go For the Gold!

Sunday, February 7th, 2010

February 12th begins another exciting Winter Olympics competition, three weeks when we all have the opportunity to watch as well-trained athletes compete against other equally well-trained individual athletes or teams, to see who will emerge the winners and take home the top three medals.  These individuals and teams represent the highest achievements in their sport and represent their respective families, teams, cities and countries. Each year they set new personal achievement and athletic performance records and standards as they “go for the gold”.

In your pursuit of excellence as a new home sales professional, do you have “Olympic Standards” set for yourself? Are you in training to be the best you can be in your profession?  Are you going for the Gold?

Let’s look for a minute at the letters in the word “Gold”.  Here are some other words that come to mind:

G   Goal-oriented, Growth, Game on!

  Opportunities, Objectives, Optimize

   Loyal, Leader, Limitless

D    Dynamic, Determination, Destiny

Choose your own words that will help you to set your sights high enough to be considered the best in your profession; you need to be in constant pursuit of EXCELLENCE through both mental and physical preparation. These Olympic contenders did not just wake up with their talents! They all achieved them by setting a goal, making a plan, and following a rigorous practice schedule – not just practice, but dedicated and designed practice! If you are not achieving the results you would like to see, don’t just keep practicing the same things; re-examine and modify your plan; change your competitive approach.

Look at the 5 Olympic rings and consider the meaning behind them. The five rings originally represented the union of the 5 continents coming together at one time for one purpose; the Olympic competition and the winners that emerged.  It is that joining of rings or unity, that you should put into your business practices to have Olympic Standards.

Once you have your goal and practice plan in place, strive to become unified, working with people, joining together to create an atmosphere of “The Best of the Best”.  Allow your individual talents and strengths to be partnered with others to become a Team that grows strong like a country competing for a spot on that medal stand!

Every athlete started small, with a BIG Dream! They worked hard, were coachable and sought out training. It is in what we do off the field that is as important as what we do on the field. It is what you do off season as well as in season that makes the difference of who you will become and how far you will go!

Here’s to the Pursuit of Olympic Standards of Excellence in 2010… Go for the Gold!

Congratulations are in Order!

Saturday, February 6th, 2010

WOW… what a year for Builder of the Year, Remodeler of the Year, and Associate of the Year!

Congratulations to all of you for your hard work… you are derserving of this honor!

The Builders Association of the Twin Cities (BATC) awarded its most prestigious honor to three of its members at their membership meeting held on February 4th.

The three winning companies were Swanson Homes (Builder of the Year); Destiny Homes, Inc. (Remodeler of the Year); and Ulteig Engineers (Associate of the Year). These honors recognizes the companies that demonstrate the highest level of professionalism in their businesses.

2010 Winners and runner-ups are as follows:

Builder of the Year Winner:
Swanson Homes 

Three companies were named Builder of the Year runners-up:
Creek Hill Custom Homes, Inc., Maple Grove
KEY LAND HOMES, Prior Lake
McCallum Construction, Inc., Blaine

Remodeler of the Year Winner:
Destiny Homes, Inc.

Three companies were named Remodeler of the Year runners up:
Bob Michels Construction, Inc., North Oaks
Norgaard Homes, Inc., Blaine
Quartersawn, Edina

Associate of the Year Winner:
Ulteig Engineers

Three companies were named Associate of the Year runners-up:
Scherer Bros. Lumber Co., Brooklyn Park
Larkin Hoffman Daly & Lindgren Ltd., Minneapolis
Builders Club, Minneapolis

I have had the great honor of working with both Swanson Homes and KEY LAND Homes.  It has been my pleasure to be a part of their “family” and look forward to what the future holds for all of us.

Congratulations again!

Who’s In Your Pipeline?

Thursday, January 28th, 2010

pipe•line  (pīp• līn)n. 1. A conduit of pipe used for the conveyance of water, gas or petroleum products. 2. A channel by which information is privately transmitted 3. A line of supply.

Are you filling your pipeline with contacts, giving it the needed time and attention to keep it flowing smoothly? 

Are you using your pipeline effectively to turn your contacts into satisfied home buyers and sales growth for you and your company?

As part of my business, I am frequently called on to “Shop our Sales Team”.  This is a sales training tool I really enjoy because I get the opportunity to meet and visit with great New Home Sales People while helping them find ways to be more effective at the job they love to do!  I am however, (more often than I would like to say), sadly disappointed with the follow-up that occurs from this planned encounter. Think of how many pipelines  I could be in, if folks took the time to listen to me, offer to help me, get the appropriate contact  information from me in order to put me in their pipeline…, and then actually do something with  it this lead. Quality leads are the life line of every successful company and Sales Person.

Home Sales are a result of multiple contacts that are made in many ways and in many different fashions! These very special contacts happen through filling our pipeline and flowing customers through in an orderly system that works for you, feels good to them, and is done in a consistent manner.  Getting the needed information from people to fill our pipeline does not let us off the hook of applying the sales process from start to finish. We also need to be aware of the people who are ready, willing and able to purchase today, and not focus completely on the “how may I contact you in the future!”  Likewise, we need to make sure our follow-up will also include a regular pipeline cleanout that will remove contacts that only serve to “clog” the system and keep us from focusing on the current and future prospects that are truly in the market.  A pipeline that is allowed to become stagnant and clogged will prevent the sales process from flowing smoothly.                                                                                

People decide who to share their information with and who to buy from, before they decide where to buy. This very important and necessary information is used to build a stronger and better relationship so that we will know our customers more intimately and realize how they would prefer to receive our message and help, whether it is today, tomorrow, next month or even next year.   That is the point of Building Pipelines for a Better Tomorrow.

It is important to understand why this relationship with our customer and insight into their situations and needs by way of a follow-up pipeline, places us in the position of both PROCESS and PURCHASE. And isn’t following up as much of a process as the original execution of the total Sales Process in the Model Home? It just happens that too often it is the missing link that leaves us in the position of the one being eliminated rather than “the one” being selected!

 Let’s Build a Pipeline

1)  It’s pretty simple; Start a conversation, either on site, offline or online, and proceed with great, not empty questions that will provide you with quality information. Having your questions prepared will help you listen to their answers This is the exact information you need to know to enter them into your pipeline. Remember and remark on specifics about them that you can use in future communications; this will make you memorable to them!

2)   Insert these people and their conversations with their needs, wants and what’s going
      on in their lives, into your pipeline, which is the conduit for the conveyance
      of your “new and future information”. Stick to your schedule of regular follow-up, to
      keep the communication flowing on a regular basis. Do not let the pipeline get
      clogged or stagnant to due to lack of attention.

3)  Be a continual student of learning new information from these people. Make it a goal
      with every conversation to find out something new that will afford you the luxury of
      staying in even close contact with them! Allow yourself to converse with them about
      more than just the possibility of a sale, but rather about them personally. It’s ok to
      keep it personal; that is the basis of a solid working relationship, because guys, it is
      personal
, for you and them!

4) Follow-up and be persistent but relevant. Don’t be impatient: These are big decisions
      and they take time. What you are doing and how you are using this time is in the
      strength of your abilities and systems. Make sure you’re doing the very best to stay in  
      touch regularly, and provide the correct amount and quality of information that is
      needed.

5) Rate your Customers, as to how often to contact them. Know where they are in their
      buying cycle. This becomes obvious through your diligence, not desperation, in
      follow-up! “A” Buyers ABSOLUTELY will purchase a home in the very near
      future. “B” Buyers BELIEVE they will purchase a home very soon, but do not
      have all of their questions answered. “C” Buyers are CURIOUS, enough to consider this event and need both more time and more help.

Forming, filling and following-up with your Pipeline is the very root of what we do, not only to be in business, but more importantly to STAY in BUSINESS! Working a pipeline displays your professionalism and differentiates you from your competition. Don’t just turn to your pipeline when business is down.  If you use your pipeline as a reserve activity rather than a “best practice” you are missing the point and the people. If you plan on being chosen as “The One”, then build and fill your pipeline now and maintain it regularly…keep it moving!