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Your Buyer's List Growing Your
Number One Asset
By Omar Johnson
The author has permitted the reprinting and redistribution of this
article.
As a quick turn real estate investor the wealth of your business is not
primarily in properties owned but in contacts and relationships,
particularly with your most important clients, your buyers. Thus your
number one asset is your buyers list, and it should be tended to like a
tree that sprouts money for leaves.
There are fundamentally two types of buyers in the real estate market,
known as wholesale buyers and retail buyers. Wholesale buyers are
professional buyers, or investors, who buy properties repeatedly as
part of an ongoing business or profit seeking venture. A solid core of
wholesale buyers is fundamental to a wholesaling business.
They will buy single family residences that need repairs or that have
tenants in them, as well as multifamily and commercial properties. It
takes a relatively small number of wholesale buyers to sustain a
business compared to retail buyers, who are people buying homes to live
in and expecting to pay at or near full retail value.
This is because retail buyers are more selective about the house they
choose and because they tend to no longer be prospects after they have
made a purchase. A large base of retail buyers is vital to any business
that depends on retailing.
Half of cultivating your buyers list is growing it by adding new
buyers. These will be attracted to you through your marketing by means
of signs, ads, and the internet. You can put up signs advertising
houses for sale in your farm area, and make use of newspaper and online
classifieds to get them calling. In the case of wholesale buyers you
can also take the initiative to call them if you can identify a list of
investors or landlords in your area of interest.
The other half of cultivating your buyers list is strengthening the
ties you have with your buyers by staying in touch with them. It's not
just the number of contacts you have that is important but also the
relationships and reputation that you have with them. You should be
staying in touch on a regular basis by mail, phone, or email,
preferably in the form of presenting new potential deals or potential
homes to purchase. As you get to know your buyers and they get to know
you, you will build the confidence and familiarity that leads to sales.
Obviously the more buyers you have on your list the better, and
likewise the more information you have on each buyer the better as
well. Naturally the best way to store and maintain all of this
information is with some sort of computer database or spreadsheet
software.
Information to be gotten from all buyers should definitely include
contact information, including fax and email, information about the
type of property they are seeking, and information about their
financing. If you have a website through which buyers can register then
it can capture all of this information. It doesn't all have to be
captured up front, though, but can also be gathered over time by means
of regular email and telephone follow ups.
A strong buyers list isn't created overnight, but with time and
persistence it will build the momentum to carry your business forward
to uncanny profits.
Omar Johnson is a successful real estate investor and author of the
home study course Renegade Stealth Marketing For The Savvy Real Estate
Entrepreneur For more info visit
httpwww.renegadestealthmarketing.com
If
you would like to take advantage of the market and learn how to invest
in real estate and you are local to the Dallas Fort Worth area, I know
a really great teacher and mentor here in Arlington Texas. Please take
a look at his web site: DennisJHenson.com,
Dennis has a great Mentoring and training program, I know because I am
one of his former students. I learned a lot from his one on one
teaching technique. - Michael Harman 817-457-7572
mchfun.business@gmail.com
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