Tag Archive for 'lead generation'

Are You Surrounded by the Best?

Greg HarrelsonIf I had to pick one defining moment in the history of Keller Williams Realty, it would have to be a conversation that I had with a consultant back in 1994, when I was trying to map out a strategy for expanding our company outside of Texas. He said, “You know, I’ve looked at your goals; I’ve looked at your organization, and it’s going to take about 14 or 15 people for you to hit your goals.”

At the time, I thought it was going to take about 60,000 people, and when I told him that, he drew an organizational chart that showed me how I could make it happen with the right 14 people who would hire and empower their own teams of people and so on. He was right, and he’s still a consultant for us.

This was more than a pivotal lesson in hiring. It was the conversation that sparked our company’s whole philosophy of succeeding through others, as well as our understanding that the people we surround ourselves with, make all the difference in our success or failure. Without exception, I find that the most successful people in real estate and in life are those who are very intentional about seeking out and surrounding themselves with the very best.

I often think back to that turning point in our company’s history during conversations with mega achievers, so it’s no surprise that it came up when I had the pleasure of visiting with Greg Harrelson, founder of The Century 21 Harrelson Group in Myrtle Beach, S.C.

In 2010, The Harrelson Group’s 18-person team closed more than 700 deals. Even though Greg says he now functions as more of a coach for his team than as a real estate agent, he personally closed more than 100 of those deals. At the age of 40, he’s clearly doing a lot of things right and has been very focused on surrounding himself with the right people. His passion at this point in his career is simply to fuel the success of those in his inner circle.

Here are some of the highlights of our conversation:

On standing on the shoulders of giants

At the age of 27, after four years of working for his Dad’s real estate team, which was doing about 120 deals a year, Greg says “The ego was kicking in and I started seeing that there was a lot of upside in me becoming the No. 1 decision-maker on the team. My Dad agreed and the next thing you know, we are doing 160 deals a year, 180 deals a year, 240 deals a year, 300 deals a year, 330 deals, all the way up to 484, which is the number of deals we closed in 2004, the year my Dad retired.  And that was my mission – a secure retirement for him and my Mom. I recognized that he brought me into this business and he guided me and trusted me and supported me when I was going in all of these different directions. He was my No. 1 team man and we did it together to 484 deals. My next goal was to build a team with the highest per-person production in our market.”

On leverage

“Tony DiCello was my coach when he was with The Mike Ferry Organization and one day we divided my day into income-generating activities and income-servicing activities. Once I looked that list I declared that I would never do income servicing activities again, and that concept now carries through my entire team. Income generators do nothing but generate and income services do nothing but service. Our current teams consists of eight listing agents, six buyers agents, a closing coordinator who takes over once the contract is signed, a listing coordinator who is currently handling 550 active listings, a broker/manager, and an executive assistant.  ”

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Crush it with Craigslist!

There are two types of real estate agents. Those who love Craigslist. And those who aren’t sure it’ll work for them. What separates the two, says Keith Riddle, associate with the Spokane, Wash. market center is that those who don’t love it probably aren’t doing it correctly or don’t want to play by the rules.

The Craigslist strategy hasn’t changed much since last year (see The Rise of Craigslist and How You Can Use it to Generate Leads) yet Riddle made sure to cover all the best strategies for successful lead generation and lead conversion through the online classified site.  (1) Capture the audience’s attention with out-of-the-box headlines, (2) make your posts simple with a few lines of text and one image, (3) always embed links back to the specific property and other opportunities to search on your Website and (4) Play by the rules and make sure you don’t get flagged.

What really stood out was Riddle’s rules on “Not Getting Flagged” Here are 4 ways to make sure you’re ads get posted, found, clicked and converted:

1. Don’t post the same post in the same day.

2. Don’t post the same ad over and over. Riddle made it very clear that Craigslist doesn’t like the same exact ad posted over and over again for the same listing. There is a loop hole: Craigslist won’t flag your ad if you post the same listing using the same photos in a different format and with different text.

3. Don’t over-post from one email address or one IP address.

4. Don’t use plurals like “homes” or “properties.”

5 Steps to Making Google Part of Your Lead Gen Team

The most common question I’m asked is “Can you fix my website-it’s not working!”  Immediately, we run to a computer, pull up their website and voila, there it is…working as expected.

So, what isn’t working?  It’s not generating leads – that’s the problem!  So, I stop and ask, who are you trying to reach with your website?  This is inevitably the time I get the blank stare and hear “well, leads.” If you want to “fix” your Website and reach your clients in 2010 and beyond, here are my five tips to make your Website work for you:

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The Trick and the Treat of Building Your Business

Last week, as I was getting ready for Halloween and looking forward to the neighborhood trick-or-treaters coming to our door, it occurred to me that we could all learn a lot from our children this time of year.

Can you imagine what Halloween would be like if, instead of enthusiastically racing from door to door, the neighborhood princesses, power rangers, angels and ghosts stood on the curb and gave in to self doubt or concerns that people in the next house might not want to be bothered with another knock on the door? What if they decided they weren’t really up to trick-or-treating on Oct. 31? Or that trick or treating was just too much effort and that it would be a lot better use of their time to stay home and wait for neighbors to bring candy to them?

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