REALTOR® Magazine Online: The real estate professional's business support tool.
HOME | ABOUT US | CONTACT US
YOUR INTERACTIVE MAGAZINE
REALTOR.ORG/realtormag
.
Topic Areas Daily News / Blogs / Statistics
Prospecting / Customer Handouts
Court Cases / Ethics Q&A
Buyer's Guides / New Tools
Architecture / Home Trends
Sales Meetings / Profiles
 
 
 

Listing Prep
   

Powerful Prelisting
   Advanced tip
   Advanced tip

For the Broker: The Listing Presentation
   Advanced tip

Listing Facts in an Instant

Top Listing Presentations

Making Your Best Pitch

Step by Step Through the Listing Presentation
   Advanced tip

Perfecting Pricing

Countering Objections
   Advanced tip

Special Presentations for Special Groups (FSBOs, Relos)

Quiz: Listing

Bright Ideas: Listing

More Resources: Listing

Code of Ethics: Listing


 STEP-BY-STEP THROUGH THE LISTING PRESENTATION

Building Rapport: How and Why

The key to a good listing presentation is reading your audience and tailoring your pitch to their needs and interests. “Build rapport, and then shut up and listen,” says real estate speaker David Knox of David Knox Productions in Minneapolis.

Mirror their demeanor. Be casual and call prospects by their first names if they do so first. Try to adapt your personality to their style.
Paraphrase what the prospect says and repeat it back. This technique reinforces the idea that you understand their concerns and helps avoid early misunderstandings.

Give your full attention to the speaker. Don’t be formulating your next remark.

Don’t rush in to talk. Be sure the speaker is finished so you will not interrupt.

Be aware of any cultural differences. Watch for cues about the use of humor, eye contact, touching, and the roles of different individuals in the group.

Don’t rush into a business conversation unless the prospect does. Make small talk, sit down, pay a compliment, and get the prospect to relax.

Invite prospects to tell you their concerns. “Two-thirds of moves are generated by very emotional issues—divorce, for instance—so getting personal is important. The key is to let them get personal,” says Knox. “Ask open-ended questions and they’ll take you into their issues.”

Ask permission before you proceed with the presentation.

TIP: Watch as well as listen. Experts say that 55 percent of communication is through facial expressions and body language, 38 percent is through the tone and inflection of the voice, and only 7 percent is through actual words.

Listing presentations, next page >
  
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 


Launch a printer-friendly version of this page

E-mail this page to a friend

Give us feedback





© Copyright, 2009, by the NATIONAL ASSOCIATION OF REALTORS®



11/23/2009 04:27 AM