Posts Tagged ‘New homes’

What Wins the Battle?

Thursday, July 23rd, 2009

Through all of my years in this industry and having listened to a lot of the top sales trainers from across the country, there’s a resonate theme about what brings prospective buyers back to your community after their initial visit. It’s either the product you have or it’s the processes you use. And the pundants will tell you, quite correctly, that processes bring back more people than great product ever will. Probably not something we builders want to admit (after all – we designed and built these homes, they must be spectacular!)

So…since most prospective buyers won’t know much about the builder’s processes until they close and experience everything from weekly communication to selections, closing and warranty, processes in this context must mean something else. And it does. The processes referred to here are our front line salespeople. At the end of the day, they make a tremendous difference. Always have, and speculation about people buying their home over the Internet notwithstanding, they always will.

So time for some good soul-searching. Are you providing a customer experience that is memorable…designed to keep your community in the buyer’s “keep pile”? In these times of much buyer fear about dipping their toes into the new purchase waters, are you successfully executing your role as a couselor/consultant to calm their fears, add value to their buying process and being the kind of person they want to deal with in this uncertain environment. Take hold of that concept – youwill bring more people back to your builder’s site than the builder’s fabulous model homes ever will. Own that concept and work to improve upon it every day, and you’ll find yourself start to inch your sales past all of your competitors who assumed it was the builder’s model homes, pools and clubhouses that were creating those “be-backs”.

Where it all begins

Tuesday, July 14th, 2009

I moderated a focus group tonight for a fellow builder who wanted to test some new floor plans and elevations he was thinking about adding. While it was tempting to dive right in and start dissecting the designs, I thought I’d fall back first on something my friend Rick Heaston often talks about. Problems…and how they lead to new housing purchases. So I opened the session with a question about what problem the participants had faced that led them to a new home purchase. And sure enough – there they were. Two of the participants were moving due to the addition of a new family member (children – in fact one of them had twins!). Another two mentioned downsizing – the children had grown up and moved out and they simply wanted less space to maintain. Others were tired of a long commute and the location seemed perfect. Each had their own story to tell. And it was important to listen. At some point, where they lived was the perfect place for them. But something changed.

And that’s what we do in the new homes business. We help solve problems when things change. So who are our customers? Not the happy go lucky folks who often tour our models and eat our free (and delicious!) cookies. We need the people facing problems, and seeking a solution. Do we always have the right answer for any particular ‘problem” buyer? Of course not. But I know too often we try to start the discussion before spending the time to understand the problem. And with time being the new “luxury”, if you’re not interested in understanding their problem and you just want to talk about what great homes you have to offer, they’ll invest their time with someone else who will listen. If we want to sell, it’s time to ask the right questions and then listen before diving into our sales pitch. It’s not only a more effective, but it’s a quicker, path to success.


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