The word unprofessional has no meaning. It’s designed to be vaguely insulting, and to be an ad hominem attack on someone that inconveniences a busy Realtor in the course of his or her day. Nobody wants to be unprofessional. Folks sling it around on twitter on a daily basis. Follow the #RTB hashtag for details. It’s an insult below the surface: any agent that doesn’t immediately cater to the irrelevant demands of a competitor risks being called unprofessional. When I was a mortgage broker, I was first called “unprofessional” when I didn’t want to listen to the pitch of a dumpy salesperson that walked unbidden into my office. I see it coming: another coercive assault on innovation, on hustle, on passion. Anything that rocks the boat is to be called unprofessional.
Unprofessional.
What, then, is a professional? Congenial, and cowed. They wear the yokes of the big brokers proudly, making nice at the big agent meetings and the Barcamps and the other exercises in irrelevance that show that they are people people. These professionals sell but few houses, but dog gone it, they do it in a way that their other professionals don’t object to. They attend their board meetings and they advocate rulings that help one another…and in the name of more standards (for others), they add paperwork and tedium to the job of representing buyers, sellers and borrowers.
And if you glance askance at any idea, you run the risk of being called unethical in addition to unprofessional.
The real aim, of course is to have a cushy job that requires little. To not adapt and help. To innovate so very slowly, and of course to prevent anyone else from entering into their space. Of course, they all stick together. People are professionals because they say they are, not because they care about their clients, innovation or anything else. What is a real estate professional? Probably someone that sells 3 homes in a calendar year and returns calls 40% of the time. That’s probably a higher standard than 80% of the NAR reaches.
Our #RTB movement (which other word often precedes “movement”) is attempting to “professionalize” the industry. Thank God. This professionalism is coercive, first at the social level, and soon, at the government level. Those that are in it now don’t have a clue that they are being used as pawns. The beneficiary of their work will soon be the State, as the burden of compliance and entry makes it all largely irrelevant. First, we make the rules such that favor established people, then we get pissed when the scorpion stings us.
I had a fascinating conversation with an #RTB crybaby a few moments ago. He apparently overstepped his permission to call. A real estate agent, possibly at the end of a long day, called him a “F#@%ing spammer….via voice mail. I asked him why he cared.
To recap, and because I was apparently unclear, I added this:
- Clint Miller had (or believed he had) permission to call an agent.
- Agent wasn’t responsive/interested.
- Clint kept calling anyway (which is fine)
- Agent wanted Clint to stop calling, and used colorful language.
- Clint’s feelings were hurt, and lacking the mental capacity to be introspective in that moment, he used a flimsy pretense to get offended.
- He took the time out of his day to call the agent’s BROKER.
- The agent’s broker was pissed.
- Clint was so proud of himself that he bragged about this, and didn’t back down because of, you know #RTB.
People have rejected many of my pitches. My answer? Make my pitches better. Duh. Then they like it better. I’ve been (sorta rightly) called a spammer. Guess what I did? I added more value and focus on helping other people. They stopped calling me a spammer, and started thanking me for the efforts I made. Hello? Rejection is feedback, and feedback makes you better.
It would be moronic to say: “Hey, you were tired of my pitch and moved to call me a spammer. I’m telling.” Instead: is she right? Or is she full of it? Tattling is exactly what our Clint thought was best. (FWIW, Clint you hustle and are salvageable. I’ve been dead wrong a lot, and I’ve had the benefit of friends and strangers helping light the way for me. I’m hoping to do that for you. I know you’ll eventually come around, and I hope that it’s sooner rather than later….for your sake.)
Our Clint personifies RTB at its core: if someone doesn’t behave how you want, get coercive. Let your base instincts out, and paint them with the “unprofessional” brush. It’s not live and let live. It’s live our way, right now, or we’ll trash you. (Hint: I’m not attacking Clint, only his behavior). This is proof. The sad thing is that our Clint is proud of this behavior–and not aghast. How can he do differently? He’s got a goofy gaggle of groaning nincompoops telling him ‘atta boy.’ Improvement is hard. Accountability, harder.
Fire up the wayback machine to 2nd grade, it’s time to tattle again. It was a grave insult to be a tattle-tale when I was a child. They were the lowest of the low. Scum. Now? #RTB is giving us tattle tale training as if preventing “unprofessionalism” is something to aspire to. First, we report to our RTB cohort, then when they are fully absorbed by the State we will be well trained to help police our fellow citizens and prevent crimethink. Can’t wait.
For more fun facts about professional cowardice and #RTB Click here.
jeff Brown says:
I’m so beat, I needed to laugh, thanks.
The last time somebody locally called me unprofessional to my face, during a meeting — was the last time. You can’t print my response here, nor can you possibly imagine the face she made upon hearing it, nor the shock she registered as the group broke up in laughter.
Those who succumb to the silly ‘unprofessional’ crapola are, for the most part, scaredy-cats. The folks generating the charge are almost always bullies, simply gettin’ what they want in any way they can.
RTB? Raise your own frickin’ bar tough guy. 🙂
Good stuff, Chris — and thanks again for the chuckle.
May 4, 2010 — 6:15 pm
Teri Lussier says:
>#RTB is giving us tattle tale training as if preventing “unprofessionalism” is something to aspire to. First, we report to our RTB cohort, then when they are fully absorbed by the State we will be well trained to help police our fellow citizens and prevent crimethink. Can’t wait.
I was noticing this earlier today as well. The #RTB hashtag has lost what little credibility it ever had and has become a soapbox for blowhards and whiners and tattle tales, so I did a little bar raising myself by unfollowing one of the poobahs of this so-called movement. Enough already.
May 4, 2010 — 6:55 pm
John Sullivan says:
Great post Chris
very interesting Thanks
May 4, 2010 — 7:38 pm
Brian Brady says:
I read that Twitter stream and Clint seems like a good enough guy who vented frustration. Still, your advice to him was perfect; just say next. I have no idea how a seasoned salesperson couldn’t see your initial tweet for what it was; a healthy reminder to focus on that which we CAN control.
I find it astounding that agents are following a “movement”, founded by a franchisor, who wants to limit competition through legislation. People in our industries will fall from anything.
May 4, 2010 — 7:50 pm
Genuine Chris Johnson says:
@Jeff – happy to amuse.
@Teri- I don’t know what credibility it once had!
@Brian: No tears in poker. You are in sales. Some people won’t buy. Some people will not be nice about asking you to stop calling. Even so: your message can improve. A half dozen–or more–agents DM’d me to say that clint was insulting to them after they turned him down. He seems like a well intentioned dude that happens to be dead wrong here.
May 4, 2010 — 7:56 pm
Brook says:
Ha ha…it always makes me laugh when I hear ‘unprofessional’ being used in the work place and your article summed it up perfectly. Great post! Thanks.
May 4, 2010 — 11:59 pm
Russell Shaw says:
Genius.
May 5, 2010 — 10:45 am
Mark Jacobs says:
Great post….
May 5, 2010 — 12:00 pm
Brian Brady says:
“Congenial, and cowed.”
Funny (but true)
May 5, 2010 — 2:13 pm
Genuine Chris Johnson says:
Brian-
Rapidly we’re being trained to give id to do anything in this world. Buying a latte at SBux? shovel out ID if you use a credit card.
And if you dare raise your voice to the absurdity that is shackling us? You get the “anger management” treatment.
Dumb. Dumb. Dumb.
May 5, 2010 — 3:26 pm
Brian Brady says:
“Dumb. Dumb. Dumb.”
If you haven’t done anything wrong, what do… (just playin’)
May 5, 2010 — 4:02 pm
Cheryl Johnson says:
So let me see if I follow the story.
Clint is a Vendor. He has a Referral/Lead Generation company. He evidently saw the agent as a prospect for his business, and sent a number of emails or placed a number of phone calls to the agent. The agent told him she was not interested, and used some adult language in telling him to leave her alone.
Clint called the agent’s broker to report the agent’s use of offensive language. Clint then reports on Twitter that the agent’s “broker was pissed”.
I don’t know what sort of spineless wimp of a broker that agent is working under.
I do know that if Clint called me I would tell him that “I agree 100% with my agent, I do not appreciate my time being wasted, more importantly I do not appreciate my agents time being wasted. Please do not ever contact anyone in this office again.”
And if it takes some adult language to get the point across to Clint, well, I am not without skill in that area.
May 6, 2010 — 4:36 am
Greg Swann says:
> So let me see if I follow the story.
Oh, thank you, Cheryl! I had no idea what was going on.
May 6, 2010 — 7:34 am
Genuine Chris Johnson says:
CLint didn’t specify if the agent’s broker was pissed at him or at the agent. Or, if the agent’s broker simply decided to be pissy to get clint off the phone.
May 6, 2010 — 8:28 am
Genuine Chris Johnson says:
Better now, Greg? I made a list for skimmers. RTB is coercive and thuggish.
May 6, 2010 — 9:16 am
Greg Swann says:
The clarification does help. Could it be that your criticism is wrong, though? I’m not paying close attention, but it seems like the #RTB movement is all about kissing vendorslut ass. Gotta keep the loonies on the path.
May 6, 2010 — 10:51 am
Genuine Chris Johnson says:
The #RTB does kowtow to vendors, but the main gist seems to beto gather a bunch of people that support innocuous positions and then leverage them to influence legislation.
May 6, 2010 — 12:30 pm
Don Reedy says:
Trouble is, guys and gals, that we let the #RTB hashtag get misappropriated.
Let’s imagine (since it’s Friday and we are allowed to let go) that WE started this whole thing.
We’d name it #RTB, which would stand for “Revere the Bloodhound.” No vendorslut ass kissing. Not for the weak or innocuous. Tattletale, snitch or snivel, and get your butt handed to you on a NAR engraved silver platter.
Imagine……….
May 7, 2010 — 6:46 am
Doug Quance says:
Sometimes… no really does mean NO.
May 7, 2010 — 7:49 am