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HousingPanic ALMOST Got It Right: How To Overcome Commodization By Employing The Dollarization Discipline

Housing Panic (housingpanic.blogspot.com) ALMOST got this one right.

I frequent Activerain.com; I cut my blogging teeth there and have made many friends and business connections through Activerain.com. Though I criticize the site frequently, I criticize it because I love the sense of community there and want it to thrive.

New Bloodhound, Barry Cunningham, hosted Broker Bryant (see Bloodhound interview here) on RealEstateRadioUSA, Tuesday. The topic was defending the fees you charge your customers. The interview is pretty interesting and the Barrys couldn’t quite get Broker Bryant to articulate it the way they might have liked. I’m lucky; I know the Barrys and listen to RealEstateRadioUSA. I think they were looking for a practitioner to properly define the services he offers and “dollarize” the offering- Bryant didn’t do that.

Broker Bryant defended his position, on his Active Rain web log, and tried to flip the question around to the Barrys. I think Bryant walked in unprepared for the interview. He usually does an excellent job defining his value, in public, and has hundreds of happy clients who comment on his ActiveRain web log. I don’t think the Barrys wanted Bryant to line-item his “costs” as much as they wanted him to line-item the value the costs incurred bring to the consumer. The Barrys are quite meticulous about defining your value to a consumer; I remember that on each and every customer call, now.

Here’s where the Housing Panic boys ALMOST got it right. They exposed a featured post, on Active Rain, about how fees are split. REALTOR Kim Carpenter did a great job with graphics explaining how she greases lots of people to get a house sold. That’s EXACTLY what a consumer DOESN’T WANT TO HEAR. I don’t care who YOU have to pay to sell my house, I care how much I pay to get my house sold. Here’s Kim’s conclusion:

So, there it is! Please don’t ask me to cut my commission. It has been cut! FOUR times, it has been cut! I promise I will give you everything I’ve got in order to sell your home! I want it to sell as much as you do! That is how I make a living – I don’t get paid a dime until I effectively market and sell your home!!!

The Housing Panic crew tried to make this a commoditization issue. They likened her explanation to an economics problem by giving us a rudimentary lesson in elasticity of demand. The problem is that Housing Panic is right. If you don’t quantify your value to the consumer and explain that they are SAVING money, over the long term, by employing you for your expertise…you are JUST A COMMODITY.

Jeffrey Fox, author of the “Little Book” series, defines the dollarization discipline here:

The Dollarization Discipline shows organizations and marketers how to effectively communicate the economic value created by their products and services. Too often, when companies compete using conventional sales and marketing approaches, they force customers to make financial decisions (how much to spend), based on non-financial arguments (product features and benefits). On this playing field, the company that can show true financial advantage in real dollars and cents wins every time. This book offers a step-by-step strategy for doing just that.
Every day, good companies suffer because they create value for customers but aren’t able to keep their fair share. This is because most marketers can’t fully explain the value customers get from their products, and the argument falls to the lowest common denominator-price. The solution is an approach to sales and marketing that goes beyond articulating features and benefits, but calculates the monetary value a customer receives from a product or service. This enables the seller to price the product as a true reflection of its value-and also let’s the seller prove it to the customer!

I talk about it, on Active Rain, here and here. The posts are “members only” so you must join ActiveRain.com to see them. It’s free and you can join right here.

There’s lot’s of room for practitioners, real estate brokerage and mortgage brokerage, in the high end of the fee schedule. The problem? The two words “That’s customary” just ain’t gonna cut it with the consumers any more.