…but the BattleBack book…
I’m delighted by the discussions I incited today, both public and private. I can’t remember a time in my life when I’ve worked alongside so many people who inspire my undiluted admiration.
(Someday I should write a post about admiration. I see it as being the most important mental state in the future production of human values.)
But I didn’t intend to incite any conversations, and I internally debated turning off the comments in my foreclosure post. Certainly, I did not want to do anything to induce concern or pity or, god help me, charity. The first quarter paid for itself, and the second quarter is rockin’. I’m doing two and three appointments a day, plus lots of work in the office and on the phone. Refilling a pipeline takes time, and every transaction is a delicate dance right now. But lately I’ve been thinking about my first days in real estate, when I had my day divided in 90-minute segments to maximize my belly-to-belly time during the business day.
Here’s the thing: Despite the financial hole we’ve dug ourselves into, I’ve been feeling massively competent as a Realtor for the first time in my career. That might sound funny, since I’m such an arrogant prick all the time. But in our own battling back to a real estate market with a reliable supply of achievable transactions, I quietly feel myself the master — or the someday master — of all these tools I’ve been juggling these past few years.
I make the analogy of learning to drive, or learning to drive stick-shift, but lately I feel myself in that state of splendor, that flow, that I’ve always known in my work — for my whole life. I don’t mean that I felt less than adept before, because I’ve always been a very thoughtful Realtor — a Realtor very full of thought. But now it all seems kinesthetic, perfectly integrated into my bones. Not doing real estate. Being real estate.
It’s just there for me now, and I’m free enough in my mind that I can watch myself work, live inside the process in the same way that I used to live inside the algorithm of a piece of software, the same way I’ve lived within the digital/mechanical world of high-tech hardware for nearly my whole life.
Wanna know my trick? My trick is that I don’t play tricks. For everything we came away with at Unchained, my own personal best takeaway was a pretty obvious idea: There is no sales message more compelling than a sincerely-expressed commitment to doing the best possible work — and then delivering the best possible work. This is what I am to begin with — this is what nearly all of us are. But making commitments is hard, where making vague promises is much too easy.
The fun part for me, pure gravy, is that I deeply admire my clients. I don’t work with bad people, but I never have any bad people to chase away. To the contrary, my world at work is very much like my world here in BloodhoundBlog: Very smart, very accomplished, very generous people let me work alongside them. This is how I know that our financial problems, as dour as they might seem from the outside, are temporary.
I saw this slow market coming, and that’s why we started playing with Web 2.0 ideas, because we thought we would have time to learn new things. I didn’t expect this market trough to last this long, nor to run this deep. But we’ve been battling back against this market since before we knew precisely what we were doing.
I had the joy of sitting down today with two supremely educated buyers, and it was like going home. Sy Symns said, “An educated consumer is our best customer.” This is where our world is so much out in front of the traditional world of sales and marketing — the world of juice and jazz and jive. We know that showing our clients how to want the best, to know they they deserve the best, and to insist upon getting the best — this is our game to win. The dinosaur marketers may have the volume for now, but the future is ours…
And maybe this is the BloodhoundBlog book after all. We lead thoughtful lives here, don’t we? I think I might be the catalyst of that — really just the spark of the conflagration. But when we’re assembled here, warming our minds around this blazing bonfire of ideas, I think we all feel called upon to think a little deeper, to find the unexpected essence of things that might otherwise seem to be too obvious.
What if we shift our minds in that direction? What can we write about the Bloodhound way of thinking that informs our marketing? Or are we writing a book for consumers? Or maybe simply a book about a revolution in real estate that none of us are able to claim to understand fully, for now?
Patton said, “Success is how high you bounce when you hit bottom.” There’s a unifying metaphor in all these ideas, and when we unearth it, we’ll know what the BloodhoundBlog book is.
In the mean time, I’m up at 5, with two three-hour CE classes starting at 8, then two separate showing appointments in the afternoon — all on Mother’s Day. Activity ain’t income, but if you do enough of the right stuff often enough, the income will come pouring in.
So: Thank you all for your kind thoughts and your brave admissions. I’m battling back one day at a time. How about you?
kevin pellatiro says:
rooting for you – and us. thanks greg.
May 10, 2009 — 5:46 am
Beth Incorvati says:
an inspiring follow up to yesterday’s post…bravo!
May 10, 2009 — 6:19 am
Don Reedy says:
I know you’re off getting “educated”, so I’ll leave this tidbit for you later today after you’ve been filled with the work of real estate.
Ultimately, you and Brian know best what really gets the wind blowing through your sails. You two took some dust and blew it around, and now you’ve made something, something really important, out of nothing. So in the end, whatever drives both of you with the most passion is the path along which any book endeavor should lie.
As for me, I can say that after a number of years of following Bloodhound, and reveling in the “warming our minds around this blazing bonfire of ideas”, that what lifts and separates (sorry, couldn’t help the bra analogy so early in the morning) the Bloodhound ideas from others is the tasks you undertake, test, fail and ultimately succeed at that absolutely beats my chest into a frenzy. It is the DOING of these things that separates, at almost all levels.
Why do we talk with some distain of big box brokerages? It’s simple. They do not do, but rather take. They do not create, but rather steal. They do not anticipate change, but guild the lillies of the past to hide their own insufficiencies.
So, concluding, battling back is what we do, but not what needs to be taught or evangelized. Bloodhound is what most do NOT do, and what MUST be evangelized. In the creating of a new generation of brokers and agents that are Bloodhounds, we will immediately begin to serve the best interests of every consumer. This, Greg, is what I believe you are destined to do, to create, and to be.
May 10, 2009 — 6:51 am
Erica Ramus says:
I just discovered Bloodhound, thanks to a friend. I was stunned to read your foreclosure tale. Your honesty and putting it all right out there is amazing.
I had a business failure about 10 years ago and went through difficult times, so I can relate. 2 years after that business went under, I had started a new business and was named Business Woman of the Year by my local Chamber of Commerce.
From every failure or mistake, you learn. The bigger the mistake, the bigger the lesson. We “pay the dumb tax” and move on.
This too shall pass…
And I am thrilled to have found a group of independent minds not willing to put it all out there.
May 10, 2009 — 7:12 am
Greg Swann says:
Beth, Erica, Kevin: Bless you. Thank you.
Don: > In the creating of a new generation of brokers and agents that are Bloodhounds, we will immediately begin to serve the best interests of every consumer. This, Greg, is what I believe you are destined to do, to create, and to be.
At the risk of being accused of grandiosity, I feel this way, too. Not so much me, but all of us, each in our own way. Teri celebrates all my memes, but the one that matters most to me is the one that we never intended as a meme: The idea of being a Bloodhound, a real estate professional committed to delivering better value to the consumer. And that might be the essential idea we need to communicate.
May 10, 2009 — 7:54 pm
Al Lorenz says:
Because of the bloodhounds, I’ve been feeling that I now know how to become massively competent as a Realtor.
Greg, the BattleBack book should be about the revolution in real estate happening right here. I think you understand it. Even I understand that it is a revolution. Don’t let the fact that nobody knows exactly what the end result will look like take away from the understanding that you are helping create a better way to do business in real estate.
Also, please share with us what we can do to make the next events extremely profitable. I value what you are doing and I’m happy to do my part to make sure you are rewarded appropriately.
May 11, 2009 — 2:57 pm
teresa boardman says:
Would the book be in English of Latin?
May 11, 2009 — 4:50 pm