A one hour business style course that I just taught this morning in Norman Oklahoma. I have uploaded this before but there are some updates. This is how to look at Oklahoma real estate as a business and have more valuable time for success.
1. Real Estate Hacks
Real Estate Hacks for a great business plan… and a great life!
Businessperson to Entrepreneur, How to put your vision into a
business plan, not think like a REALTOR®, and obtain the
greatest gift, more time.
2. What is a Hack?
1. An appropriate application of ingenuity
2. A clever technique
3. Something that solves a meaningful problem
4. Something not common or well known
This is how the brainiacs at MIT define it:
3. “It’s precisely those who are busiest who most need to give
themselves a break.” Pico Iyer
“One of the most tragic things I know about human nature
is that all of us tend to put off living. We Are all dreaming of
some magical rose garden over the horizon instead of
enjoying the roses that are blooming outside our windows
today.” Dale Carnegie
4. The World’s Simplest Business Plan from Mrs.
Keckler’s 4th grade class.
The key to writing a theme is to write the first sentence, then the last
sentence, then in the first paragraph put what the theme is about.
The key to having a successful career is to know how and why you
started in business, then what is you ultimate destination, and in the
first paragraph of your career, what are you all about.
8. Cultural and Vision statements
Do you work in a positive culture?
Can you describe in a paragraph or two what your cultural
statement is?
As a part of your cultural statement do you have a vision for
yourself and one that can also be shared and collaborated on?
Do you have core values to back it up?
9. How to you set up core values and why
Gratitude: We are always grateful for those who put their trust in
us and we work with grateful people.
Reliance: There is a difference between relying on someone
versus depending on someone.
*Hint: honest and professionalism should not be included.
G.R.E.A.T.
10. Empathy: You need to walk a mile in their shoes to understand
their words and actions.
Attitude: With a Positive Visualization, if you can see it working in
your mind, it can work, and often does work.
Trust: It starts with being trustworthy, but this is of great
importance in both parties.
11. 4 Tests for Business decisions
1. Ockham’s Razor: This says that when confronted with multiple
choices the simplest one is the best. The way we interpret that is in
friction points like when you apply a bicycle brake and it won’t release
and rubs against a tire and slows you down. So for instance a paper
solution adds an extra step so that is a friction point. A broker who is
bureaucratic can do that, etc. It is important to eliminate anything that
impedes momentum, once lost it is hard to get it back. This works
also in marketing so apply this rule to everything.
12. 2. Schumpeter’s Gale. Schumpeter was an economist with the Austrian
School. He believed, as did Marx that an advantage of capitalism is that
it emphasizes innovation and creates it. The downside is when
innovation occurs something else is destroyed so when digital cameras
become consumer priced, film disappeared, hence destroyed. When the
iPhone is introduced Nokia goes from a $1 trillion valuation to $7 billion.
Look at Elon Musk selling over 300,000 Teslas without a distribution or
sales network. Business needs to evaluate what the cost of innovation
would be and is that business salvageable when innovation affects it.
For instance, if the courts rule that all REALTORS® are employees and
not private contractors how can you deal with it.
13. 3. Is the price too high? Sometimes success can be too
costly, or a action could affect not just financially but also
mentally and physically. If you are focused on volume for it’s
own sake are you spending your way out of profit for
recognition? Is 80 hours a week in work good for your mind or
body? Every decision should beg this question. The point is to
not only have a great career; it is also to have a great life.
14. 4. Are you the driver or are you driven? This goes into
dependent relationships and could be combined with No. 3. If it
compromises your values to do business then you probably are
in a dependent relationship. It also keeps me from spending
money on Zillow for leads because I give them money and they
determine what I receive in return. In reliant relationships, all
partners work together and have choice. So as a broker don’t
let teams or individuals make demands that they will leave
unless you give in, let them go. Being the driver doesn’t mean
that someone else is being driven, in fact the best relationships
mean that all parties are driving together.
15. The 90/7/1 Check up plan
A one-year business plan is an expectation and too far out for assurance.
The next 90 days is controllable and allows for changes in market conditions.
Reviewing every week with your partner, another REALTOR®, or a mastermind
group has accountability.
A daily review in the morning of what you want to accomplish is the attempt at
time management.
Entering expenses and income daily is one of the best time hacks.
17. 1. Decide on the task to be done.
2. Set the pomodoro timer (traditionally to 25 minutes).
3. Work on the task until the timer rings. If a distraction pops into
your head, write it down, but immediately get back on task.
There are six stages in the technique:
18. 4. After the timer rings, put a checkmark on a piece of paper.
5. After a checkmark, take a short break for 3-5 minutes.
6. Done! (i.e. after four pomodoros) take a longer break (15-30
minutes), reset your checkmark count to zero, then go to step 1 if
you have more tasks to block.
19. Budgeting and Cash Flow Analysis
Once you have your expectations set then first, decide on what it
will cost.
Once you know what it will cost, then figure out a monthly cash flow
analysis. Remember that besides marketing, what months have
recurring expenses, like dues, etc.
20. Once you do your cash flow analysis, establish a reserve fund that
accounts for 90 days of expenses for a worst-case scenario.
Don’t forget to add in personal expenses; after all you’ve got to eat.
Set a goal for the reserve fund to go beyond worst case for 90 days.
Then you have money for opportunity.
With an overage in reserves, think about buying real estate.
21. Outsourcing
What is outsourcing? It is people all over the world who can do it
faster, better, and cheaper than you. Remember time is money.
What do you outsource? Any repeatable task that keeps you from
your prime directive: working with listings, buyers, negotiating, and
long term planning.
22. Where do you find worldwide freelancers? Upwork, MTURK, and
Fiverr to name a few.
What will it cost? Typically $3 to $30 an hour depending on the
task, and often you don’t pay until satisfied.
What’s the benefit? First, the money value of time, and second you
get acquainted with people you can work with again and again.
23. What do you outsource?
1. Any repeatable task that you need done quickly and inexpensively.
Don't be a control freak.
2. Anything you procrastinate about that is important. Saying you will get
to it is admitting defeat.
3. Anything that takes you away from your core competence. Ask yourself
if this is $15 a hour labor or $350 an hour core responsibilities.
4. Anything that Artificial Intelligence can do better than you.
24. Personal Hacks for more time
Dollar Shave Club: My first introduction to personal outsourcing. 5 blades per month for $3
delivered. My wife uses them too.
Amazon: Prime, subscribe and save, and pantry have saved my many hours in the care to
Walgreens or Wal-Mart. It has saved me money too.
Food: Green Chef and Blue Apron have saved me from having to plan three to five meals a week
with fresh organic food with the right amount of ingredients.
Artificial Intelligence: Siri, my car computer, Amazon Echo are just a few ways that learning
computers can help us. I am also exploring Sales Force that has added AI to your CRM functions.
Optional: Dry cleaning pick up and delivery, concierge food grocery service, lawn care, maid
service.
25. Final thoughts
1. It is all small stuff, don’t make it big and get overwhelmed.
2. Don’t forget it is more about your net than your gross
3. Know the difference between acknowledgement and approval
4. No is your best weapon
5. The future is now
26. 6. Write it down and follow it up
7. Problems are made to be solved and if they can’t, let it go
8. Have and remember your exit strategy
9. Think conceptually not transactionally
10.Leverage two things, reputation first, financial position second
Final thoughts
27. Getting In Touch
Please contact me at Joe@JoePryor.com or call/text to 405-590-2135 for
any further information.
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