Posts Tagged ‘homes’

It’s the Experience, Stupid!

Tuesday, February 9th, 2010

DC3's San Francisco Photostream on Flickr

The epic phrase spoken to Bill Clinton, “It’s the Economy, Stupid!” fueled his rise to presidency. I don’t have any similar aspirations for my title phrase, but I do think it’s one we can all rally around.

We go to Starbucks and pay the equivalent of $30/gallon (if it were gas), for a medium coffee. Why? It’s the experience we crave. The smile and warm greeting when we walk in, and if we’re regulars the simple act of remembering what we ordered last time.

We’ll spend extra time searching for the right restaurant to take our wives or sweeties to this weekend. I’m guessing the food would have been great at any number of places. But if we can find the right experience (the presentation of the food, the lighting, the music, the properly attentive and knowledgeable wait staff), the evening will be memorable!

We pay the big bucks – maybe just once in our lives – to stay at the Ritz Carlton because their stories of the customer experience are legendary.

There’s a common thread to each one of these anecdotes. They all involve people paying more for a truly authentic experience. When the experience meets our ever-increasing standards, do you really ever hear about the cost being the only selective parameter? Almost never. Make no mistake – the product has to deliver. But that’s simply the price of entry. No one expects any less than that the product will meet, and hopefully exceed, their expectations. The trump card in the pile is their experience – which is what you deliver. They don’t know quite what to expect, having been disappointed so many times in the past. And therefore your opportunity to surprise and delight them is more available than perhaps ever before.

It doesn’t matter that we’re in this wonderful retail business called real estate. It’s just Starbucks at a different price level, frankly. Do you want to put an end to the ongoing assault on your homes’ prices and your commission? Just deliver an experience that has them talking about that, and you’ll find them bragging about the great service they got for the commission they paid, and about the incredible house they just purchased and what great value they received. Make that the topic of their next cocktail party. It’s a better conversation starter than, “Hey, can you believe the great price per square foot I just paid for my new home!”. It’s time to turn the discussion around.

What’s it cost?

Thursday, September 10th, 2009

After thirty years in this business, everywhere I look I see irony abounding. I was meeting with a media rep the other day. She calls on a lot of builders and she was expressing her frustration that she rarely even gets started with her “needs exploration” before she is asked, “What does it cost”? She hasn’t even dived into her pitch yet; hasn’t even gotten a feel for whether her medium is a good fit for the customer. But in my experience, this is where most builders start the discussion: the cost of any proposed media. I’m amazed that with that single-minded approach to investing in one’s business, you’d think the allure of “free” social media would be a bigger drawing card for more builders. But that’s a topic for another day.

So where’s the irony? Simple. We deal with prospective buyers every day who walk through our models and whose first question is, “What does it cost?” And we get angered that they don’t understand the difference between cost and value. Sure, cost is one component. But value is built through differentiation and if the builder/developer has done his/her job well through creative land planning and well-targeted architecture, the value should be obvious. But to the untrained consumer it rarely is, so we engage sales professionals to help tell our story and create the value that the prospective buyers sometimes don’t see on their own. We’re proud of what we do. We quite often do it well. But we get miffed at our prospects when they ask, “What does it cost” (which is a tip off quite frequently to the cost/sq. ft. mentality). And yet we turn around and ask the same question to our media reps.

Let’s shoot for some parity on both sides of the aisle. Hopefully we can get prospective buyers to understand the value we’ve created in our community that may actually make it worth a few sheckles more than the guy across the street. And maybe when the media reps come calling to try to help us solve our problem of low traffic and lagging sales, we can ask some better questions than just, “What does it cost”, and move into a more salient conversation about things like target markets, distribution/reach, CPM (in whatever form it takes) and ultimately how to measure results post-placement to tell if a reinvestment makes sense. Test, evaluate, test. In this complex and fast-changing world of how we promote our homes these days, it’s simply not good enough to only come with the cost question.


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