"How can I increase my production?" is the most commonly asked question in the real estate business. In virtually every case, the person asking the question is looking to an "expert" to tell them how to fix the problem with their business. Before exploring this question in depth, it's important to draw the distinction between training, accountability monitoring, and coaching. Training is about acquiring new techniques and strategies. Typically when an agent attends a seminar or series of classes, it is up to the agent to integrate what they have experienced into their business. If you're like most agents, you've heard lots of strategies, great scripts, and marketing ideas, yet you're still doing the same thing you were 12 months ago. In most cases, the reason training makes little difference is there is usually no follow-up strategy for integrating what is learned into your business. Many agents pay for "accountability monitoring" or so-called "making your numbers coaching." This is a step up from training, but here the agent is still looking outside to their "accountability" call to keep them on track. Most agents usually walk away from this approach simply due to human nature-they don't like being told what to do and hate having to admit they fell short in achieving their goals. The bottom line in increasing your production is lead generation. Unless you're a brand new agent, you already know what you need to do to generate leads. You don't need another tool, gimmick, or technique. Thus the question isn't "what to do," it's "how to get yourself to do it." A formally trained coach (one with International Coach Federation Certification) approaches this question from the point of view of achieving integration. Integration of new business practices or the expansion of currently successful practices, can only occur when the agent has internal motivation to make necessary changes. Prospecting, marketing, or doing any other business development activity is just like dieting: it is sustainable for a short period of time, but unless the internal motivation is in place, no long-term change will occur. Consequently, from a coaching perspective, how can you produce sustainable change in your business leading to increased production in 2009? The approach below focuses on finding what works for you-not what worked for some training guru or some other agent. Begin by looking back over the last two years of your business and answer the following questions. To summarize: Your coaching for this week is to take one step to expand your business based upon your strengths and to rid yourself of one activity that is not working. Posted by Bernice Ross, Would you like 350 pages of the best tips, top producer strategies, and proven listing, web marketing, and buyer techniques that will let you dominate your competition? If so, order my my new book(R) Real Estate Dough(R)--Your Recipe for Real Estate Success at www.RealEstateDough.com
Virtually every agent who attends training or considers hiring a coach, has one primary goal in mind: "How can I increase my production?" This post may make you uncomfortable, but it can also unlock what's blocking your success in 2009.
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Posted by: online realtor training | July 28, 2010 at 05:28 AM