Here’s my favorite Christmas card this year:
I helped Stephen and Suzanne Kranick buy that house in the weeks before Thanksgiving. I think it’s cool that they love it so much that they made it the star of their holiday card.
I put two houses into escrow today. I’ve done that before, but Cathleen and I are both packing transactions into January at a nice pace. I’m still holding out hopes for one more all-cash deal in December, but the calendar is turning on me day-by-day.
But here’s the thing: The pace we’re on right now puts us at $20,000 gross commission income a month for 2010. I’m sure that sounds like a lot of money to anyone who is not in the real estate business, but it ain’t. But our marketing costs are where they’ve always been — very low — so we’re right on the cusp of proving the claim I’ve been making here for coming on four years: It is possible to do this job without spending fifty cents on the dollar for client acquisition and without feeding a vast cadre of useless eaters.
It’s plausible to me that we could be at $40,000 a month by the third quarter, and from there it’s not a huge jump to seven figures, GCI, per annum.
But: Meanwhile: We are cheap bastards. We never hesitate to spend whatever it takes on mission critical tools, and that will always be the case. But we have been very tight on every discretionary expenditure for a long, long time. And as much as business has sucked over the past four years, it is being tight that has gotten us through the worst of it. A lot of Realtors didn’t make it, as we all know.
So: Cathy just had her birthday, and from me she got a 2 gigabyte memory upgrade for her iMac. So romantic…
But, even so, we can foresee that we are going to have a little money for luxuries in the coming year, and the question plaguing me has been how to manage that kind of spending without going crazy on the upside, as it were.
Here’s a strategy I came up with today: Any discretionary spending in 2010 has to come from the twenty-first thousand dollars for that month. In other words, we have to rack up $20,000 in GCI for the month before we scrape off the first dollar for expendable expenditures. That might seem to be more than peculiarly penurious, but I’m a long way from being convinced that we’re all the way done with poverty. If we have money to throw around next year, I want to throw it into rental properties — starting with one each for the abuelitas.
And back down here on earth: I wrote and transmitted a contract while I was composing this post. I have always believed that hard work pays off, but, even when it doesn’t, I have always believed in hard work. Here’s to a great 2010 for hard-working dogs everywhere!
John Kalinowski says:
My suggestion – don’t do anything different and put it all in the bank. Build a big cushion of cash for a year and just keep doing what you’re doing. Don’t put it in rental properties, or stocks, or bonds, or gold, or even tulip bulbs. Just save a huge pile of cash for a year, and you’ll be ahead of 99% of the population.
December 18, 2009 — 4:23 am
Cheryl Johnson says:
What John said. Cash first in these times, then when there is a nice cushy stash of cash, then the rental properties.
December 18, 2009 — 7:59 am
Jeff Brown says:
Man, I’m just happy to see the trend you guys are ridin’. Faith in your gut instincts has proven fruitful.
December 18, 2009 — 9:42 am
Greg Swann says:
Thanks, y’all.
John Kalinowski: My variations on your expired package pulled a lot of interesting appointments. You’re about 6% of 2009 and around 20% of our pipeline. There’s a cold Corona waiting for you when your plane sets down in Phoenix.
December 18, 2009 — 10:34 am
Tom Bryant says:
“I have always believed that hard work pays off, but, even when it doesn’t, I have always believed in hard work”
You’ve nailed the secret to success, in my humble opinion. Wishing you a kickass 2010.
December 18, 2009 — 10:05 pm
Greg Swann says:
> Wishing you a kickass 2010.
Same to you!
December 19, 2009 — 9:04 am
John Kalinowski says:
Make it two Coronas and five root beers. Hoping some time in the next 2-3 years to do a big cross-country trip with my wife and the kids. Would you mind sending me a copy of your revised packet? Enjoy the holidays!
December 19, 2009 — 5:43 am
Greg Swann says:
> Make it two Coronas and five root beers.
Sold. Looking forward to it.
Here’s to a Merry Christmas and a healthy and prosperous new year!
December 19, 2009 — 9:31 am