Or rather, most mornings I greet the day with the eerie feeling that in one nanosecond I just may become one. If you can follow my stream of consciousness, I will explain.
In 1989, Steve and I left our condo at the beach and bought our first “grown-up” house in the ‘burbs. Those were the good old days in San Diego, and our purchase required that we camp out at the new home sales office to assure we would beat the thundering herd to the holy grail of mass-produced, cookie-cutter stucco living. Actually, we had a guy named Bradley camp out for us. (Honestly, I don’t remember his name, but he could have been a Bradley). Bradley (if that is his real name) was apparently younger, dumber, and hungrier than we; he spent 48 hours in Steve’s little backpacking tent on the sidewalk of Frank Daniels Way to hold our place in line. After two days of delivering Breakfast Croissants?, Happy Meals?, and Whopper Combos? to our employee (Bradley was a big eater), we were able to waltz into the sales office on Phase Opening Day (behind the Stevens-Family-from-the-Winnebago) to secure our Dream Home. Of course,
we have since sold it.
Our 1989 Dream Home had stylish bleached oak cabinetry reminiscent of the, well, late eighties and, most importantly, white tiled counter tops. I’m sure granite had been invented, but it was not a builder option. Fast forward to today when a buyer in the builder “design center” is subjected to information overload. The buyer can customize just about everything but the foundation. At some point, and I am not sure precisely when this occurred, certain “upgrades” became viewed by home buyers as a divine right, as critical to the home as, say, the insulation. This is particularly true of granite counter tops. Today, a home with them is not considered enhanced. Conversely, the home without them is considered deficient.
Which brings me to real estate (finally). Last week, Toby Boyce wrote an excellent article (and a Carnival favorite) which identified information overload as one of the big paralysis-causing buyer plagues. I am the victim of information overload every single day, and I submit that it is no different for other agents. Much like a buyer’s success may rely on sifting through the glut of helpful
websites providing essential information, today’s agent’s success may very well depend on their ability to navigate the technology waters, which are rapid and furious.
Years ago as a young agent, I attended a seminar on the latest must-have technology for real estate agents: The personal website. We learned that to succeed in the evolving industry, we would need to have our own on-line presence. At the time, this consisted of securing a domain (www.insert_your_name_here.com) and establishing a relationship with a canned website provider (giving them your checkbook). As time went on, the geek-inclined installed Microsoft FrontPage and built a better mousetrap, or moved to the better website provider (with one being born every minute) and threw them a bigger checkbook. These were just baby steps. Soon we were told to get PDA’s, then wireless internet; our faxes were replaced with All-In-One’s, our email attachments became pdf’s, our digital cameras became permanent residents of our real estate-mobiles, our transaction management went on-line, and on and on. All of this seemingly occurred during the swat of gnat, and yet we were just getting started.
Now, I’ll step back to the way it was. My father-in-law was one of the old school agents. We will call him the Formica of the industry. He entered the business well before the technological explosion occurred. When the MLS system was computerized, he could never truly adapt. He continued to pay someone to enter his listings on-line, and I don’t believe he was ever comfortable without his MLS “book”. Faxing a document was a challenge of Goliath proportions, let alone using a digital camera (which he never did).
Now, we Blog. We do it for a creative outlet, we do it for business, and we do it because we don’t want to miss the tech boat. We do it because of the need to stay competitive. Information technology has made us more empowered, more effective, and more informed; it has streamlined our business and simultaneously made it infinitely more time-consuming and demanding. Our feed readers have become a daily staple, and our Blogs as familiar as our children. Some of us speak “html” better than English. Java script? I’m embarrassed to say that I care. Sure, this new world makes us more informed and more effective in our industry, but I for one get the occasional anxiety attack when away from my computer for more than a couple of hours. Every second, a new search engine, mapping, statistical or to-better-serve-you opportunity is born, and sometimes I feel that a casual trip to Starbucks or conversation with my children will put me at a competitive disadvantage. There are never enough hours in the day. I am certain people in other professions feel the same way from time to time.
As an agent who is quite serious about and married to my profession, I take pride in my innovation and my respect for and application of technology. My livelihood and continued success depend on it. Yet, it is oh-so overwhelming at times. And, as a footnote of sorts, blogging is in its relative infancy in the real estate industry, but gaining tremendous steam. If you don’t have a blog, you should. If you do, be aware that all of your serious competitors will also be joining you within the next year or two. Which brings us back to the overload issue. What will be next? Today, it’s granite counter tops. Tomorrow, or an hour from now, there will be some new innovation. I, for one, don’t want to be yesterday’s newspaper.
Nigel Clarke says:
Boy can I see myself in your great piece on Restate and technology. Coming from a tech background and the corporate world I too find that not accessing the laptop frequently makes me very twitchy.
The ability to check the positioning of my site, incoming email, the competitoin and what needs to be done in my CRM at frequent intervals keeps me very busy all day. I use wireless access in the coffee shop to work over lunch, I use my GPS to navigate around and am frustrated when new subdivisions aren’t shown and I must use by eyes to verify the location.
i’m always looking to see if a contract is arriving via fax-to-email software. It’s just insane
One of my New Year resolutions is to adjust my work schedule to take time off each and every week to avoid techno-burnout.
December 6, 2006 — 6:31 am
Kris Berg says:
Nigel, Let me know how that time off thing goes! I may want to try it.
December 6, 2006 — 6:54 am
Toby says:
Kris,
Thanks for the kind link in this article, I have also added a follow-up piece specifically on information overload, “When is TMI … Well TMI?”
I totally agree that while it can cause paralysis in our customers, it can – and eventually will – cause death to agents. If you omit it from your world, you will become extinct – or irrelevent, and I don’t know which is worse. But if you do too much of it, you’ll burn out those little receptors in your brain and spend your days looking like Nick Nolte after a good night with Danny DeVito.
My wife and I have a ritual that every anniversary, we get away for a long weekend. During this time, we spend it doing the normal “fun” stuff. But a key component of the trip is — who are we? and Who do we want to be in one year? We set goals, we talk about how we are feeling. We just did this the past weekend, and on purpose the only “digital” piece that went with me was the D70 — well the cell phone, went, but the office phone was not forwarded to it.
The result was “bliss” 72 hours of relaxing and enjoying each others company. And on Monday – well Monday wasn’t good – but on Tuesday, I hit the trail hard and have a listing appointment tonight and several new “lukewarm” – but aren’t they all right now? – leads to put in the fire.
I guess this long comment is mostly to remind us that we have to stop and look at who we are every once in a while. Or we’ll get lost in the moment and end up sitting beside Nick in the drunk-tank, or worse on Rosie’s lap.
December 7, 2006 — 8:09 am