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Article Achieving Relationship Excellence As a real estate
Agent, your success depends on the quality and durability of the
relationships you build with your clients, and the one and only way to
build solid, enduring relationships is to deliver excellent, unrivaled
service. To be an outstanding Agent you need to lavish your clients with
service that exceeds their expectations – from the get-go and throughout
a long business relationship. Learn each person’s service expectations. Before you enter a new
prospect presentation, make it a rule to learn everything you can about
what your prospects are looking for in an Agent and how they define
their excellent service. Customize and personalize your service delivery. In your initial
presentation and in subsequent contacts – whether you’re working to make
the sale, service the client, build an after-the-sale relationship, or
request a referral – refer to your initial research and highlight the
service aspects that each client finds important. Weave in the words you
heard them use to define great service. Highlight the communication
points they described as essential service attributes. Let them know
that you understand their needs and are focused on exceeding their
expectations. Never get complacent. Don’t assume that, if your service falls a bit
short, your best clients will simply turn a blind eye. And, by all
means, don’t think that if your clients want more or better service they
will say something to you. They won’t, because they don’t want the
confrontation. They’d rather just go away quietly and never come back. I’ve met Agents who are successful in spite of their “my way or the
highway” approach to service delivery. Rather than focusing on
customized service and long-term relationships, these agents prefer to
serve a stream of here-today-gone-tomorrow clients that they acquire
through relentless prospecting and high-volume lead development. These
agents have a take-it-or-leave-it attitude about service. They practice
what I call a fast-food hamburger joint philosophy: “We sell hamburgers
and fries, and if you don’t like hamburgers and fries, pick another
restaurant.” The difference, of course, is that the number of people who
want hamburgers and fries is huge, and, if the fare is good, most
customers automatically come back for more. The same is hardly true when
it comes to homebuyers and sellers. |
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