By Beth McGuire
Study Shows the Continued Struggle to Stay Competitive and Relevant in the Changing Economy
As they grow less confident in the economy, top real estate executives at firms of all sizes find themselves united by a key concern for 2017: Agent recruitment and retention.
In the latest Imprev Thought Leader survey, 85 percent of participants agree that recruiting more agents is their most critical business challenge. The challenge continues when it comes to reaching younger agents; over 52 percent ranked “attracting younger agents” among their top concerns.
A broker/owner of a major franchise office in Minnesota gives depth to his recruiting worries: “Recruiting is and always has been our biggest challenge. While we continue to grow, it’s never at the pace we want it to be. While recruiting younger, less-experienced agents has improved for us this year, we’ve noticed increased difficulty in recruiting the top talent.”
Many boutique firms are also worried about the competition for talent. In Southern California, a leader of a smaller brokerage laments that her top recruiting challenge is “being able to offer agents alternative motivation to stay or join our firm. We are a family-run boutique business and cannot compete with the money of the heavily-backed firms.”
Agent productivity is also top of mind for the top real estate executives and broker/owners surveyed. Forty-four percent of participants rank “getting agents to use broker-provided technology” as their next critical business concern—beating out lead generation (34 percent) and lead follow-up (36 percent). A broker/owner in California struggles to get “user adoption of tools that will help agents communicate with their clients,” while a Dallas-area broker/owner says, “We feel confident in our technology we have in place; we need to continue to teach and train for this technology.”
When it comes to technology, leaders face a myriad of challenges. More than half of survey respondents rank “getting our systems to work together” as their most critical technology challenge for 2017. It’s a struggle to have “technology that is cohesive,” says a broker/owner at a top Southwestern Florida brokerage. Better technology integration isn’t their only worry. Leaders said having “systems for more effectively competing against the RE portals for generating leads” (44 percent) and “increasing mobile capabilities for agents” (36 percent) are their next pressing concerns. A Houston, Texas broker running a major franchise office shares his goal of seeing “seamless integration of the transaction, from agent to corporate to closing, and simplified use of mobile devices to enter all data across the company,” while the leader of smaller Florida brokerage notes her battle is to “stay on top of technology to compete with bigger brokers.”
“Real estate leaders clearly believe that the technology they provide to their agents is widely underused,” says Renwick Congdon, chief executive officer of Imprev. “So how does the industry begin to improve agent adoption? By reducing complexity. Systems need to seamlessly fit into the agent’s business and process. Integrated and connected platforms—rather than ‘apps’ and standalone solutions—are imperative to successfully compete with the portals.”
Beautifully summing up the struggle to stay …read more
From:: Finance and Economy