Learn The Truth About Real Estate Industry

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1. Real Estate Professionals Get Rich Quickly

Most think this is a get-rich-quick profession, and they are disappointed when they discover that is not the case. Being a real estate agent means you are putting the needs of your clients ahead of your own needs, and this means your income needs as well. And sometimes this is challenging if you enter the profession undercapitalized.

2. The Industry Is Only Brick And Mortar

People often think about real estate as only a brick-and-mortar business. But the industry today presents enormous opportunities in services, technology, and hospitality in the built environment for incoming professionals, all of which are evolving at a rapid rate to meet the changing preferences of people today.

3. Paying Rent Is Like Throwing Money Away

Owning your home is a financial liability, it takes money out of your pocket every month. Rent is not “throwing money away.” When you fly, renting your seat for $500 is not “throwing money away. ” Renting often makes more sense. Before buying, adding up closing costs, maintenance, opportunity cost, immobility, hardware store trip time, and more. Run the numbers that sales agents don’t want you to run.

4. Getting Clients And Steady Income Is Easy

Having a steady stream of clients will be the most difficult part of the job. An agent’s real job is actually not just selling homes, but marketing themselves and answering the question,

“Why should someone choose YOU out of all other agents in town?

” Only when you have a clear answer to that question and you are able to communicate it in your marketing will having a steady income be easy. – Jennifer Myers, Agent Grad School and Dwell Residential Brokerage

5. New Agents Don’t Have The Know-How

Being a new agent, people say you don’t have experience and know-how. Being new doesn’t mean that. In fact, it might mean that you give better customer service, you are more of a go-getter, and you educate yourself faster and learn faster because you are driven and have a purpose. The truth is that when you are new, you try much harder just to prove yourself, to others, and to yourself.

6. The Market Will Go Up Forever

Real estate is cyclical. And it’s also seasonal. When the market’s good, it’s really good. When it’s bad, it’s really bad. And it’s slow in Q1 and Q3, and hot in Q2 and Q4. Always. Things happen slowly in real estate, like turning a battleship, and it can feel awesome when it’s actually terrible and feel terrible when it’s actually doing great.

7. Reality TV Shows It Like It Is

Reality TV shows about prolific agents, mega listings, limp, and celebrities are not the norm in reality. While these shows have raised the profile of the real estate industry, they also project a false narrative. Agents with stars in their eyes should understand that success comes from old-fashioned hard work, maintaining crazy hours, and dealing with some very demanding clients.

8. Being A Landlord Is A Full-Time Job

A common myth is that investing in real estate is all-consuming. This used to be true, but it isn’t anymore. Landlord tasks that used to be time-intensive — collecting rent, handling maintenance, finding and screening tenants — can be handled with software. Owning and managing a property can be done in your spare time, allowing you to also hold a full- or part-time job.

9. There Is Only One Way To Get Started

Most believe that the only way to get started is to join a traditional real estate brokerage and work for commissions as an independent contractor. There are companies out there that do things differently, all while enabling agents to put the client first. – Joshua Hunt, TRELORA

10. Flipping Houses Is How You Build Wealth

Makes for good TV, but renting houses is how you build wealth. Flipping holds more risk and less return, in most cases than holding assets for the long term. As a landlord, your tenant goes to work to pay your mortgage. Ever heard someone say, “Sold that house 20 years ago. Wish I never had”? You don’t hear the opposite near as much, do you? – Mark Bloom, NetWorth Realty

11. A Non-Traditional Schedule Means You Work Less

New agents have a common misconception that being a real estate agent is all about looking the part, and often mistake flexibility with being part-time. While being a real estate agent is not a nine-to-five job, you need to work extra and non-traditional hours to build your business. To be successful, you’ve got to put in the time and the work, and have the unwavering drive and full accountability.

12. Investing In Real Estate Is A Passive Income

People think of investing in buy-and-hold real estate as passive income. If you want to be successful, it’s important you prepare for deadlines and, at times, long hours. Between the cycle of rent collections and local inspections, you need to be well organized or you risk losing a lot of money. While the term “passive rental” might indicate you don’t report 9 a.m.-4 p.m., you will need to be prepared.

13. Location Is All That Matters

It is not always true that “if you build it, they will come” or that it is only about “location, location, location.

These concepts hold true only when they play a role in the larger scheme of investment parameters (supply and demand, quality, tenancy, location, etc.). Whatever your type of investment, always remember timing and market are as important as location.

14. You Can Become An Expert Overnight

There is a large misconception about how much time it takes to learn everything you need to know in the world of real estate.

As licensed professions go, it is one of the least time-intensive. However, the classes you take are only the beginning. Whether you are a real estate agent or a property manager, licensing requirements are a small fraction of what you will need to know to be successful.

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