
Are You Ready for More?
Why You Should Get Involved in Your Community
BY MATT MCDERMOTT
It’s understandable if you feel too overloaded to consider volunteering. The first few years in real estate can be hectic and command much of your attention. But you should consider the potential benefits of volunteering. Getting involved in your community can be very rewarding by giving you opportunities to network with other real estate professionals, build relationships in your local business community, make contact with potential clients, and find an avenue to express yourself outside of work.
Read about REALTOR® Magazine’s Good Neighbor Awards to learn more about some very inspirational work being done by your fellow practitioners around the country and how you can get involved.
How to Get Started
Your first step is to discover an area of service that you find fulfilling. It may not be what you originally expected. Some people start working with the elderly only to switch to assisting poor families or the homeless, while others work with children or the disabled.
Many volunteer organizations hold one-off events such as fundraisers, field trips, or building renovation projects that only require a one-day commitment. These are good opportunities to see if you are well matched to both the organization that’s involved and the people it serves.
Once you determine how you want to get involved in your community—perhaps by tutoring a new immigrant in English, being a mentor, or delivering meals to local elderly citizens—make sure you don’t overestimate the time you have to offer.
“Start small,” says Gil Gillenwater, a 2000 Good Neighbor Awards winner. “Don't take on too much at once or you'll burn out.”
During these first years in your career, don’t worry about the amount of time you volunteer. People will be impressed more by your consistency rather than the volume of your aspirations. Real estate is local, so the totality of your actions in the community will contribute to your reputation as a reliable businessperson and citizen.
The Benefits of Volunteering
You will learn a variety of skills while volunteering that will benefit you on the job as well.
By volunteering, you’re contributing to the livability of your community. In the end, your clients, like you, will have made the choice of whether or not to live there based on its desirability as a place to call home. Claudia Deprez, a 2003 Good Neighbor Awards winner, did just that by being a driving force behind a neighborhood improvement association. By reducing street crime, rehabbing buildings, and engaging in other physical improvements, the residents have not only improved their quality of life, they increased area property values by 69 percent in 2002 alone.
“I used to think of my business as a practice,” Deprez says. “Now I think of it as a mission, and I feel I’m very close to being able to say, ‘Mission accomplished.’”