The 900-lb Gorilla Cometh

There are really very few voices in the RE.net I respect more than Russell Shaw‘s. I mean, this is a guy who not only talks the talk, he actually walks the walk. His insights and ideas are great in and of themselves, but they are that much more credible in my eyes because he’s a tremendously successful practitioner of the craft as well.

So when Russell speaks on something I’ve written, and criticizes it, that criticism is something I take seriously. He writes:

In some of the posts on various blogs and also on Inman there has been discussion of IDX vs. VOW and how perhaps a national MLS is needed and that some fantastic company using really wonderful technology is going to attract loads and loads of business, pay the agents less and sort of take over. I contend that if such a thing were possible it would have already happened. Zip or Redfin would be making a ton of money (instead of endlessly feeding their companies with investor capital that is not likely to ever come back to them). I don’t think it makes any difference to any big company if only IDX or only VOW is used. About the only people who it will ever make a significant difference to are those agents (not “companies”) who primarily work buyers. They use other people’s listings (via IDX or VOW) as bait to attract buyers who aren’t working with any agent yet.

Desk-fee agents are not only not going away, they ARE the future of our industry. Don’t believe it? Look at the actual trends for the past decade. Our industry is shifting from a totally broker-centric model to 100% companies. Right now, in most parts of the country it is the big national 100% companies who dominate (in terms of numbers of agents). Take a closer look at where 100% started (Phoenix) and you see a very different picture: most of the agents are with 100% companies and the “traditional” companies have changed their splits to the point that they may as well be 100% companies. But it is the less well-known 100% companies that have the largest number of agents. Hint: they charge less. A lot less. My prediction is that these companies and teams of agents (with a rainmaker, mentor) are the future of our business. We will have fewer agents and I believe that is a good thing. A very good thing.

My only defense to this powerful line of criticism is that “past performance is no guarantee of future results.” Let’s get into depth a bit.

IDX, VOW, and Bait

I think Russell is surely correct when he says that buyer agents use other people’s listings, whether over IDX or VOW, to attract buyers. But I submit that if you go a level deeper into this “bait” concept, the difference between IDX and VOW are significant, and that the incentives as currently structured point the way towards a very different future.

It is worth noting that very knowledgeable people think I’m nuts. 🙂 I say, time will tell.

But this whole discussion is being driven at base by the continued shift of consumers to the Internet. That trend is not likely to reverse, as the demographics of the consumer continually changes.

And while Russell is right that buyer agents use other people’s listings as bait, I believe that the trend even for sellers is to look at effective online marketing programs by the listing agent. I mean, could you even walk into a listing presentation today without an integrated online marketing strategy?

So whether you’re talking about bait to attract buyers, or bait to get sellers to list with you, you’re still talking about the Internet and effective online marketing.

Now, throw into this volatile, changing environment these facts:

  1. IDX, while tremendously successful, is a pain to implement due to variety of local rules.
  2. VOW, while tremendously open, has that “signup” provision that is a major barrier to consumer engagement.
  3. Only public facing MLS websites (and possibly Realtor.com) are free of either restriction, under the NAR-DOJ settlement.

What is the likely outcome?

To me, it appears that the future looks something like this:

  • Public-facing MLS websites become the primary consumer destination sites, with perhaps Realtor.com (depending on how the NAR-DOJ settlement is interpreted vis-a-vis Realtor.com) being the primary national real estate portal (possibly to each MLS site).
  • Brokers (and agents) have enormous marketing advantages if they can convince consumers to signup with them in some way.
  • Ergo, brokers (and agents) who have extremely robust, powerful, and consumer-useful CRM systems married to an effective, consumer-friendly, and content-rich online marketing strategies win the battle for consumers. And winning that battle leads to wining the listings battle, as those brokers (and agents) are able to tell the seller, “We have a database of 95,000 homebuyers, married to our awesome website, and an integrated marketing approach.”

Perhaps it won’t happen this way, but I think the logic is valid.

End of Desk Fee Brokerage?

For what it’s worth, I didn’t come up with the title for my Inman interview. I’m not sure if desk-fee brokerage is going the way of the dodo bird. What I do wonder about, however, is what stops a Third Party Platform (such as Trulia or Homegain or whoever is left standing) from getting brokerage licenses, and leveraging their overall lower cost of operations (from economies of scale) and rolling out a national, desk-fee model, but featuring lower fees for all services that desk fee agents currently receive from their brokerages.

Sperry Van Ness has tried to do this in commercial real estate to some success, and that’s a business that isn’t all that friendly to a desk-fee model. Why it wouldn’t work in residential is something I’m waiting to find out.

Furthermore, as I mentioned above, what happened in the past is not a great indication of what is likely to happen in the future. At some point, especially in what appears to be a historic down market, the extremely thin profit margins of these various brokerages are going to catch up to them. Do they maintain the 100% desk fee model that is yielding less than investment into Treasuries? Or do they at some point decide it’s not worth all the hassle and the risk?

The Connection to Brand

What’s even more interesting is that Russell points out the unfortunate truth: real estate brands have lost so much equity, so much brand identity, that most of them don’t stand for anything:

Take what is currently, factually, the really biggest real estate company in the world, Realogy: other than Sotheby’s what brand do they have that matters? Try none for an answer. What meaningful difference does the general public or even the agent public see between Century 21, ERA, Better Homes & Gardens, or Coldwell Banker (just to name a few)? Which one of those is a “good brand”? (yes, yes, I know, Coldwell Banker is supposed to be their “premier brand”)

Is Coldwell Banker a better brokerage firm to the public than Century 21? Do people across the nation think to themselves, “It would be so great if we could buy our next home from a Coldwell Banker agent”? Ever? Does anyone, anywhere, ever think that? How about, ERA? Does anyone say,”I only want to do business with an ERA agent”? If not, what are those “brands” worth? Not much. Why? They don’t stand for anything. To matter, a brand must mean something in the mind of the public and few national real estate firms have ever done that and then managed to hold on to their position.

So, to start off, general agreement on all points. The big brands in real estate have lost most, if not all, of their brand equity.

Brand awareness is not the same thing as brand equity. So for Century 21 to claim that they are #1 in brand awareness, as they recently did, is actually somewhat meaningless unless the brand itself is connected to a real identity.

However, brand awareness is important. It takes years, decades, and really serious money to build up brand awareness in the minds of consumers. To even get people to recognize a particular logo and see it as being familiar takes real effort. And it does provide tangible benefits. In the case of C21, it meant that at least in a survey, consumers responded that they were most likely to choose C21 to buy or sell a house.

Furthermore, if you have a familiar brand, it takes far less effort to turn it around and give it a real identity. It isn’t easy, but it is doable.

What Russell does not take into account, however, in the brand story is how the brand equity was lost. Perhaps the full story will require far more study and research than my little blogpost here, but I submit that the main way that brand equity was lost by Big Brands was through loss of control over the agents.

Best Buy can put out all the TV ads in the world showing smiling, friendly salespeople talking about some sweet holiday story. I set foot into a local Best Buy, deal with one Best Buy salesperson, and all of that branding effort is wiped out if the salesperson is rude, surly, and a moron. It’s happened to me often enough that I no longer shop at Best Buy unless I absolutely must.

Same thing applies to retail. Bloomingdales was once seen as the creme de la creme of American retail — a true luxury with incredible customer service. Yeah… have you set foot in a Bloomingdale’s recently? Do you feel catered to? Special? Luxurious?

All the branding in the world cannot overcome a bad customer touchpoint, and the people who wear the brand is quite possibly the single most important customer touchpoint.

Take a look at the care with which service-driven industries, such as luxury hotels, select, train, and monitor their frontline staff from the check-in clerk, to the over-the-phone reservation people. If I feel that I’ve been treated less than perfectly at a Westin, I’m pretty sure I can get that employee fired. But at a Best Western? I seriously doubt it.

So in the world of real estate, which big brand really enforces brand discipline down through the ranks to the agent level?

For that matter, how many large brokerages — especially the 100% desk fee models — truly enforce brand message and brand discipline?

If the official brand statement is that “our agents are truly knowledgeable experts”, how many brokers fire agents who aren’t?  How many even test agents to see just how expert they are?

And the 100% desk fee models contributed directly to, and was simultaneously symptomatic of, that loss of control.  With a 100% desk fee model, the broker doesn’t care so much about the consumer, or his brand, except insofar as it would help him bring in agents who pay him fees.  The real customer is the agent, not the consumer.

Sort of tough to “control the agent” and “enforce brand discipline” when that’s the case.

The Gorilla Cometh

So when I predict the future coming of the Big Brokerage, it is based on certain fundamental assumptions and observations.

Brokers will not stay in a 3% profit business forever; either the profit has to go up, or they will get out.

We are currently at the tail-end of an agent-centric industry model pioneered by Remax.  The current shift is away from an agent-centric model towards a web-centric model, because the key to the whole industry is Who Holds the Consumer Relationship?

If Third Party Providers win that battle through superior technology, superior marketing, and superior web-based applications, then they will enable the “desk-fee’ing” of the entire real estate brokerage industry.  At that point, the brokerages might as well go out of business, because the agents don’t need you; they need the Third Party Providers far more.  This is the CoStar/Loopnet future of real estate.

What argues against this outcome is the simple fact that most Third Party Providers are losing money in a rough investment environment, and may not survive to see this beautiful future (for them).

If Brokers win that battle through real investment into technologies that enable a web-centric model, then they can and will absolutely reduce the cost of labor.  They have to in order to make back their investment on the one hand, and to raise the profitability of the business on the other.

What argues against this outcome is that most Big Brokerages do not yet seem to understand this, and in the current market, are likely to be very gunshy about investing in anything.

My current stance is that it is easier for the guys with the money — Big Brokerage — to make the investment, gain control over their agents, gain control over their brands, drive brand discipline through the ranks, and emerge far stronger than they ever have been, empowered by technology, than it is for the guys with the technology to find ways to make money.  Hence, I believe the 900-lb gorilla cometh.

But… I could be wrong.  And it could be the 900-lb bear that cometh instead.

(The agent, by the way, is simply not a player in this battle.  They don’t have the money, and don’t have the infrastructure.  They will use whatever tools are provided by whomever, and decide who the winner will be, but they themselves are not in this fight.)

-rsh

Share & Print

Facebook
Twitter
LinkedIn
Email
Print
Rob Hahn

Rob Hahn

Managing Partner of 7DS Associates, and the grand poobah of this here blog. Once called "a revolutionary in a really nice suit", people often wonder what I do for a living because I have the temerity to not talk about my clients and my work for clients. Suffice to say that I do strategy work for some of the largest organizations and companies in real estate, as well as some of the smallest startups and agent teams, but usually only on projects that interest me with big implications for reforming this wonderful, crazy, lovable yet frustrating real estate industry of ours.

Get NotoriousROB in your Inbox

23 thoughts on “The 900-lb Gorilla Cometh”

  1. Hi Robert…The one thing Desk Fee independent office do not have for their Realtors is National Advertising and Referrals. Referrals are a big part of Re/Max. In our City we have 25% overall share of the local market, in fact in some areas as high as 40%. Are we the largest real estate office..No. Other offices have as many as 25% more Realtors, are they 100% offices Yes(monthly Fee). Here these offices attract a lot of part timers and lower production Realtors. At Re/Max everyone is Full Time, which gives us a great market edge. Will our Market Change, Yes if the trent to slower Sales continues(10% of listing at the moment).

    Cheers, thanks for your Post.

  2. Hi Robert…The one thing Desk Fee independent office do not have for their Realtors is National Advertising and Referrals. Referrals are a big part of Re/Max. In our City we have 25% overall share of the local market, in fact in some areas as high as 40%. Are we the largest real estate office..No. Other offices have as many as 25% more Realtors, are they 100% offices Yes(monthly Fee). Here these offices attract a lot of part timers and lower production Realtors. At Re/Max everyone is Full Time, which gives us a great market edge. Will our Market Change, Yes if the trent to slower Sales continues(10% of listing at the moment).

    Cheers, thanks for your Post.

  3. great post Rob and a lot to digest. A minor point that I’ve never bought into is this idea of using a listing as bait as a bad thing. Listing agents rely on the procuring agents as a channel and promote the use of their listing as bait (otherwise they’d have exclusive listings without broker cooperation).

    I always bring the commercial perspective because my residential experience is limited. Given the complexity of a commercial deal (lease or sale), the lack of meaningful comps, the wealth of proprietary local market data that a commercial broker possesses, and the often complex (as well as offsite) ownership structures, the commercial broker’ role and fees are secure. Sites like Loopnet and http://www.rofo.com will generate leads but will not disrupt a relatively small and necessary group of brokerage firms. In commercial the assignment goes way beyond marketing.

    As far as types of brokerage brands, 2 will always exist in commercial: local and national. The national brand will matter to national players and corporate clients. And the strong local brands will always compete side by side for local deals. And given the proprietary data and relationships necessary for commercial brokers to compete the successful newer brands will always trace their heritage to an incumbent.

    May have gotten a little off topic but hopefully you’ll find this a little relevant.
    AB

  4. great post Rob and a lot to digest. A minor point that I’ve never bought into is this idea of using a listing as bait as a bad thing. Listing agents rely on the procuring agents as a channel and promote the use of their listing as bait (otherwise they’d have exclusive listings without broker cooperation).

    I always bring the commercial perspective because my residential experience is limited. Given the complexity of a commercial deal (lease or sale), the lack of meaningful comps, the wealth of proprietary local market data that a commercial broker possesses, and the often complex (as well as offsite) ownership structures, the commercial broker’ role and fees are secure. Sites like Loopnet and http://www.rofo.com will generate leads but will not disrupt a relatively small and necessary group of brokerage firms. In commercial the assignment goes way beyond marketing.

    As far as types of brokerage brands, 2 will always exist in commercial: local and national. The national brand will matter to national players and corporate clients. And the strong local brands will always compete side by side for local deals. And given the proprietary data and relationships necessary for commercial brokers to compete the successful newer brands will always trace their heritage to an incumbent.

    May have gotten a little off topic but hopefully you’ll find this a little relevant.
    AB

  5. Rob- Excellent as always. This is particularly intriguing to me, as I just left a RE/MAX office to start my own place. Here’s what I posted on Russell’s blog:

    Russell, in the Cleveland area, the RE/MAX offices seem to be going the opposite direction. It was a great concept when the market was booming, but in hard times the agents are making a lot less money, and many of them aren’t paying their monthly office bill (or “desk fee”). Some of these offices have their splits so high (95-99%), that they depend on the monthly fee and transaction fees to survive. Not to mention that their business plans depended on the agents pouring tons of deals into their in-house lending and title partners. Agents have their own relationships, and just don’t seem to use the broker’s partners, and the brokers have no power in pushing the agents to use them since they brought them in under the concept of doing business “your way”.

    Most of them are also sitting on expensive office leases, as they originally thought they were going to make a fortune renting desks and small offices to the agents. The fact is, most of those big offices are sitting empty, as the agents started cutting back and working from home. That revenue stream also dried up.

    All these things seem to be the “perfect storm” for RE/MAX that is putting many of them on the brink of going under, even though most of the agents are clueless. It’s a scary situation, and I wonder if other offices across the country are in the same boat, or is this just a Cleveland-area predicament.

    Jonathan said that RE/MAX “doesn’t pursue agents straight out of real estate school”. That’s the company line, and most of the agents drink the Kool-Aid, but I’ve seen just the opposite in the last three years (the other Kool-Aid line is that all RE/MAX agents are full-time, which is not even close to true anymore). The corporate “planners” have saturated areas with too many RE/MAX franchises, to the point where they started competing with each other to see who could get the most bodies. It doesn’t seem like they have any real criteria for who they will take any more, and started signing up anyone who would join. They also seem to revel in stealing each other’s agents, which makes no sense to me, and just cheapens the brand.

    The “100%” concept has even started disappearing, with most of the offices going to 70/30 type plans, with a smaller monthly cash payment, in order to bring in more agents who couldn’t afford the larger monthly fixed payment that allowed them to be on the 95% plan that is offered by most offices. The 100% pretty much no longer exists, as most of the RE/MAX offices went to a 95% plan that supposedly sends 1% to corporate and 4% to the broker, as they simply weren’t surviving on the 100% concept.

    This is what I’ve found with RE/MAX: Once you subtract the RE/MAX monthly, annual and transaction fees, and the 1-4% taken off the top, then deduct the amounts you spend out of your pocket for advertising, signs, etc., that is normally paid by the lower split companies, you really end up at what amounts to about a 50-60% split. The 100% concept is all smoke-and-mirrors. No matter how you slice the pie, there’s a cost to doing business that has to be paid one way or another.

    I’m not sure where all this is leading, but unless the market starts booming again in the next 1-2 years, I personally see commission splits going the other way. High-split offices simply can’t survive on the low volume, when they need high volume to generate transaction fees and title & lender business to offset the higher split. Agents also can’t afford to pay the monthly “desk fee” (a real misnomer, since they really don’t get a desk, that costs extra) required with a high split. I think it will lead to agents willing to accept a lower split in order to get rid of monthly payments, particularly if their broker actually offers them something of value for the split they’re paying.

    Another little-noticed fact that came with the RE/MAX phenomenon was the downward pressure it put on commissions. Agents joined under the lure that they were now free to charge whatever commission rate they wanted, if they felt is was necessary to compete. Most of them came from offices that would not allow them to cut their commission from the typical 6-7% levels, especially without a call to their manager for permission. Suddenly they were free at RE/MAX to do whatever they wanted, and it was the RE/MAX agents who really started cutting commission in large numbers, even down to the 3-4% levels in ’05-’07. The funny part is, no one talked about it, and it seemed to be the “dirty little secret”, as everyone walked around pretending they were full-price agents. The fact that the average commission drifted down to the 5% levels in the last few years was caused, I think, by the rapid growth of RE/MAX across the country, and the ability for their agents to charge any rate they wanted, with no permission from their broker. Heck, most of the RE/MAX brokers never look at most of the listing contracts, or are even aware of what their agents are charging.

    Without a crystal ball, I guess we’ll just have to wait and see what the next few years bring.

  6. Rob- Excellent as always. This is particularly intriguing to me, as I just left a RE/MAX office to start my own place. Here’s what I posted on Russell’s blog:

    Russell, in the Cleveland area, the RE/MAX offices seem to be going the opposite direction. It was a great concept when the market was booming, but in hard times the agents are making a lot less money, and many of them aren’t paying their monthly office bill (or “desk fee”). Some of these offices have their splits so high (95-99%), that they depend on the monthly fee and transaction fees to survive. Not to mention that their business plans depended on the agents pouring tons of deals into their in-house lending and title partners. Agents have their own relationships, and just don’t seem to use the broker’s partners, and the brokers have no power in pushing the agents to use them since they brought them in under the concept of doing business “your way”.

    Most of them are also sitting on expensive office leases, as they originally thought they were going to make a fortune renting desks and small offices to the agents. The fact is, most of those big offices are sitting empty, as the agents started cutting back and working from home. That revenue stream also dried up.

    All these things seem to be the “perfect storm” for RE/MAX that is putting many of them on the brink of going under, even though most of the agents are clueless. It’s a scary situation, and I wonder if other offices across the country are in the same boat, or is this just a Cleveland-area predicament.

    Jonathan said that RE/MAX “doesn’t pursue agents straight out of real estate school”. That’s the company line, and most of the agents drink the Kool-Aid, but I’ve seen just the opposite in the last three years (the other Kool-Aid line is that all RE/MAX agents are full-time, which is not even close to true anymore). The corporate “planners” have saturated areas with too many RE/MAX franchises, to the point where they started competing with each other to see who could get the most bodies. It doesn’t seem like they have any real criteria for who they will take any more, and started signing up anyone who would join. They also seem to revel in stealing each other’s agents, which makes no sense to me, and just cheapens the brand.

    The “100%” concept has even started disappearing, with most of the offices going to 70/30 type plans, with a smaller monthly cash payment, in order to bring in more agents who couldn’t afford the larger monthly fixed payment that allowed them to be on the 95% plan that is offered by most offices. The 100% pretty much no longer exists, as most of the RE/MAX offices went to a 95% plan that supposedly sends 1% to corporate and 4% to the broker, as they simply weren’t surviving on the 100% concept.

    This is what I’ve found with RE/MAX: Once you subtract the RE/MAX monthly, annual and transaction fees, and the 1-4% taken off the top, then deduct the amounts you spend out of your pocket for advertising, signs, etc., that is normally paid by the lower split companies, you really end up at what amounts to about a 50-60% split. The 100% concept is all smoke-and-mirrors. No matter how you slice the pie, there’s a cost to doing business that has to be paid one way or another.

    I’m not sure where all this is leading, but unless the market starts booming again in the next 1-2 years, I personally see commission splits going the other way. High-split offices simply can’t survive on the low volume, when they need high volume to generate transaction fees and title & lender business to offset the higher split. Agents also can’t afford to pay the monthly “desk fee” (a real misnomer, since they really don’t get a desk, that costs extra) required with a high split. I think it will lead to agents willing to accept a lower split in order to get rid of monthly payments, particularly if their broker actually offers them something of value for the split they’re paying.

    Another little-noticed fact that came with the RE/MAX phenomenon was the downward pressure it put on commissions. Agents joined under the lure that they were now free to charge whatever commission rate they wanted, if they felt is was necessary to compete. Most of them came from offices that would not allow them to cut their commission from the typical 6-7% levels, especially without a call to their manager for permission. Suddenly they were free at RE/MAX to do whatever they wanted, and it was the RE/MAX agents who really started cutting commission in large numbers, even down to the 3-4% levels in ’05-’07. The funny part is, no one talked about it, and it seemed to be the “dirty little secret”, as everyone walked around pretending they were full-price agents. The fact that the average commission drifted down to the 5% levels in the last few years was caused, I think, by the rapid growth of RE/MAX across the country, and the ability for their agents to charge any rate they wanted, with no permission from their broker. Heck, most of the RE/MAX brokers never look at most of the listing contracts, or are even aware of what their agents are charging.

    Without a crystal ball, I guess we’ll just have to wait and see what the next few years bring.

  7. John –

    Wow, that comment deserves to be a post of its own. 🙂

    I’m frankly not surprised, because the numbers just weren’t adding up for me as I found out about them. Now, is your market an exception? Perhaps. Maybe there are 100% brokerages out there that are rolling in the dough now that times are rough. I just can’t imagine how, and would love to find out.

    I had this conversation recently with a colleague I respect: words are important, but numbers rule. While creative accounting can fudge numbers quite a bit, they’re a LOT harder to spin than mere words.

    3% profit margin is 3% profit margin, no matter what else you call it. And when you’re making 3 cents on the dollar, you start looking for other business opportunities. I think somewhere in the 8-10% profit margin is the average for businesses in the U.S. given the risks you have to take to own and operate a business.

    The challenge, frankly, for real estate is how brokers bridge that gap from 3% to 10%.

    -rsh

  8. John –

    Wow, that comment deserves to be a post of its own. 🙂

    I’m frankly not surprised, because the numbers just weren’t adding up for me as I found out about them. Now, is your market an exception? Perhaps. Maybe there are 100% brokerages out there that are rolling in the dough now that times are rough. I just can’t imagine how, and would love to find out.

    I had this conversation recently with a colleague I respect: words are important, but numbers rule. While creative accounting can fudge numbers quite a bit, they’re a LOT harder to spin than mere words.

    3% profit margin is 3% profit margin, no matter what else you call it. And when you’re making 3 cents on the dollar, you start looking for other business opportunities. I think somewhere in the 8-10% profit margin is the average for businesses in the U.S. given the risks you have to take to own and operate a business.

    The challenge, frankly, for real estate is how brokers bridge that gap from 3% to 10%.

    -rsh

  9. Rob, I guess I got a little carried away on that last comment 🙂

    I’m not sure what the long-term answer is on the 3% to 10%, but for me it means getting away from having a fixed, high-cost office space, and only bringing on agents who can work from home and know how to scan a document and check e-mail.

    Our goal is to build a team of work-at-home admin support people, connected by a common online server-based CRM so we can work on the same database. I just started playing with a package called REST, and will be purchasing my second license as soon as my first agent switches over at the end of the month.

    I also haven’t seen the value in the franchise model, so also eliminating that monthly nut help bring the profit margin numbers up.

    Here’s some interesting data from the Cleveland-are MLS (NORMLS), showing the number of people registered under each company name. It includes non-licensed assistants, but gives you a good indication of what percentage of agents each company has.

    Howard Hannah: 2495
    RE/MAX 667
    Century 21: 448
    The Russell Realty Co: 444
    Keller Williams: 417
    Coldwell Banker: 345
    Prudential: 273
    Liquid Blue Realty: 1

    OK, I threw that last one in for fun, but you get the picture. Howard Hannah just bought out the previous #1 company, Realty One/Real Living to take over the top spot. They are not a 100% company, and most of their agents are on a 50% split, or some variation.

    The answer to me is that if business stays slow, the splits will go down, and the desk fee model will dry up as agents just can’t pay the monthly bill. Where it goes from there, who knows?

  10. Rob, I guess I got a little carried away on that last comment 🙂

    I’m not sure what the long-term answer is on the 3% to 10%, but for me it means getting away from having a fixed, high-cost office space, and only bringing on agents who can work from home and know how to scan a document and check e-mail.

    Our goal is to build a team of work-at-home admin support people, connected by a common online server-based CRM so we can work on the same database. I just started playing with a package called REST, and will be purchasing my second license as soon as my first agent switches over at the end of the month.

    I also haven’t seen the value in the franchise model, so also eliminating that monthly nut help bring the profit margin numbers up.

    Here’s some interesting data from the Cleveland-are MLS (NORMLS), showing the number of people registered under each company name. It includes non-licensed assistants, but gives you a good indication of what percentage of agents each company has.

    Howard Hannah: 2495
    RE/MAX 667
    Century 21: 448
    The Russell Realty Co: 444
    Keller Williams: 417
    Coldwell Banker: 345
    Prudential: 273
    Liquid Blue Realty: 1

    OK, I threw that last one in for fun, but you get the picture. Howard Hannah just bought out the previous #1 company, Realty One/Real Living to take over the top spot. They are not a 100% company, and most of their agents are on a 50% split, or some variation.

    The answer to me is that if business stays slow, the splits will go down, and the desk fee model will dry up as agents just can’t pay the monthly bill. Where it goes from there, who knows?

  11. Wow, Rob. I am humbled by your response. As a point that I missed fleshing out but need to respond to via an actual post, that I won’t be able to get to tonight – the 100% brokers (who are the largest as far as agents) are not the “name” companies. Phoenix was the birthplace of the 100% company and to see how it has evolved here is my take on the future of the 100% concept elsewhere.

    One truly significant point that I have never seen written anywhere is this: the big 100% companies like Re/Max and Keller Williams charge the agents LESS here in Phoenix than they do anyplace else. For obvious reasons this does not get promoted by them.
    🙂

  12. Wow, Rob. I am humbled by your response. As a point that I missed fleshing out but need to respond to via an actual post, that I won’t be able to get to tonight – the 100% brokers (who are the largest as far as agents) are not the “name” companies. Phoenix was the birthplace of the 100% company and to see how it has evolved here is my take on the future of the 100% concept elsewhere.

    One truly significant point that I have never seen written anywhere is this: the big 100% companies like Re/Max and Keller Williams charge the agents LESS here in Phoenix than they do anyplace else. For obvious reasons this does not get promoted by them.
    🙂

  13. @Russell – Thanks for your kind words, Russell. I’m looking forward to seeing your follow-up. 🙂

    @Alan –

    I think commercial is a totally different beast from residential, so I agree with you 100%. I just can’t imagine a “desk-fee” approach working there; even the Sperry Van Ness model isn’t strictly a “desk-fee” model, after all, because once it’s all said and done, the agents need so much support that you might as well pay a percentage of commission.

    Plus, it is my sense that CRE tends to hold client relationships at the corporate level far better than residential does. I have no proof of that, of course, but CRE really strikes me as being similar to investment banking or law than residential (for now).

    -rsh

  14. @Russell – Thanks for your kind words, Russell. I’m looking forward to seeing your follow-up. 🙂

    @Alan –

    I think commercial is a totally different beast from residential, so I agree with you 100%. I just can’t imagine a “desk-fee” approach working there; even the Sperry Van Ness model isn’t strictly a “desk-fee” model, after all, because once it’s all said and done, the agents need so much support that you might as well pay a percentage of commission.

    Plus, it is my sense that CRE tends to hold client relationships at the corporate level far better than residential does. I have no proof of that, of course, but CRE really strikes me as being similar to investment banking or law than residential (for now).

    -rsh

  15. I totally agree we are moving towards a web-centric model but I don’t see many major brands leading the way into this spectrum. If you search Google or Yahoo for phrases consumers search, like, Las Vegas Real Estate, you don’t see any major brand in the top 10. You see Realtor.com, Yahoo and individual real estate agents holding these valuable top 10 positions.

    If you ask me, these agents that hold these top positions are more valuable than the company they hang their license with. These agents are providing free branding for their firm and because of their positions in the search engines, they have a large reach. These agents could easily move to another firm very easily without it affecting their business.

    Major real estate firms in Las Vegas went out of business or filed bankruptcy this year even though just a few years ago they were bringing in millions of dollars. Their mistake was not investing in the Internet. This is why will begin to see new firms emerging like Redfin that will become a “Brand Name”.

  16. I totally agree we are moving towards a web-centric model but I don’t see many major brands leading the way into this spectrum. If you search Google or Yahoo for phrases consumers search, like, Las Vegas Real Estate, you don’t see any major brand in the top 10. You see Realtor.com, Yahoo and individual real estate agents holding these valuable top 10 positions.

    If you ask me, these agents that hold these top positions are more valuable than the company they hang their license with. These agents are providing free branding for their firm and because of their positions in the search engines, they have a large reach. These agents could easily move to another firm very easily without it affecting their business.

    Major real estate firms in Las Vegas went out of business or filed bankruptcy this year even though just a few years ago they were bringing in millions of dollars. Their mistake was not investing in the Internet. This is why will begin to see new firms emerging like Redfin that will become a “Brand Name”.

  17. @Tony –

    Thank you for the comment. As it happens, I completely agree with your analysis of the situation. Given consumer behavior, holding a top ten SERPS ranking in Google for major key phrases, like “Las Vegas Real Estate” is probably worth more than the brand or brokerage company. And as it happens, I completely agree that those agents who hold such rankings can easily move their license to any broker and do just fine. Finally, I agree with you that the reason why major real estate firms went bust was because they failed to invest in the Internet.

    I think the only place where I differ with you (and a vast number of really smart, knowledgeable realestistas) is what happens going forward. You and many others believe that the Old Dinosaurs are on their way out, driven to extinction by nimbler, smarter, more tech-savvy upstarts, like Redfin. That may very well happen.

    I just believe that the Old Dinosaurs aren’t quite as old, nor are they quite as doomed for extinction. I rather think of many of them as sleeping giants who haven’t woken up just yet… but this market will force many of them to do some serious soul-searching, and serious strategizing for how they stay alive. Many of them will come to the correct conclusions about where to shift their investment. And when they do, they have the resources to make it work in ways that a venture-backed firm that is still burning investor capital does not.

    True, many of them will fail to wake up, and still others will fail to execute properly, and they will be phased out. Creative destruction has ever been the way of the capitalist economy. But to write off all big brokerages is, I think, a bit premature. The next few years will be very, very telling.

    -rsh

  18. @Tony –

    Thank you for the comment. As it happens, I completely agree with your analysis of the situation. Given consumer behavior, holding a top ten SERPS ranking in Google for major key phrases, like “Las Vegas Real Estate” is probably worth more than the brand or brokerage company. And as it happens, I completely agree that those agents who hold such rankings can easily move their license to any broker and do just fine. Finally, I agree with you that the reason why major real estate firms went bust was because they failed to invest in the Internet.

    I think the only place where I differ with you (and a vast number of really smart, knowledgeable realestistas) is what happens going forward. You and many others believe that the Old Dinosaurs are on their way out, driven to extinction by nimbler, smarter, more tech-savvy upstarts, like Redfin. That may very well happen.

    I just believe that the Old Dinosaurs aren’t quite as old, nor are they quite as doomed for extinction. I rather think of many of them as sleeping giants who haven’t woken up just yet… but this market will force many of them to do some serious soul-searching, and serious strategizing for how they stay alive. Many of them will come to the correct conclusions about where to shift their investment. And when they do, they have the resources to make it work in ways that a venture-backed firm that is still burning investor capital does not.

    True, many of them will fail to wake up, and still others will fail to execute properly, and they will be phased out. Creative destruction has ever been the way of the capitalist economy. But to write off all big brokerages is, I think, a bit premature. The next few years will be very, very telling.

    -rsh

Comments are closed.

The Future of Brokerage Paper

Fill out the form below to download the document