Pumping
Up Your Real Estate Career
If you're a real estate agent, you are well aware of the
downsides that people outside the field know little or nothing
about. Before you could begin working for a broker, you
had to acquire a thorough knowledge of real estate law,
terminology and math. Regardless of which state you live
in, you had to pass a test for your license, and pay a hefty
fee for the privilege of holding it.
While
you may not have had much trouble finding an office to work
through, you might not have expected to have to pay for
advertisements for your listings and possibly for desk space
at the agency. Health insurance? Maybe, if you're lucky,
you'll have the opportunity to pay the full premium for
a group policy. Of course, you've got to sell some stuff
before you can afford to do that. You have to get lots of
listings. You have to close sales and set aside an emergency
fund for the tough months when few or no sales come your
way. Otherwise, you won't be able to pay your own bills,
much less the ones the broker keeps reminding you of.
Talk
about an independent contractor! Not only that. You sometimes
get the feeling you're surrounded by vultures. Maybe not
in your own office-but in the ones down the street and around
the block and everywhere else in town.
Yes,
you're well aware that you're in a heavy-competition business.
You've got someone really
interested in a $450,000 home you showed them last week.
They're practically ready to put the money down today-only
when you check to make sure it's still on the market, you
find out it sold yesterday. The disappointed couple doesn't
want to see anything else, they say, edging their way to
the door. You just know someone else showed them their second-choice,
and they're on their way to that other office now.
Of
course, you're here to serve the client. That's what it's
all about. That's why you work weekends and evenings, when
it's convenient for them to see the properties. That's why
you give every potential buyer your home phone and cell
phone. Better that they call you at the most inconvenient
time than take a chance on someone else closing the sale.
Sometimes it seems as if you've got no time to yourself.
Added
to that is something that even people outside the industry
know: the real estate market swings with the economy. Everyone
knows about buyer's markets and seller's markets. When the
fed inches the interest rate up yet again, you know that
will affect sales. There are fast-inflating bubbles and
bursting bubbles. And of course that means that your income
is dependent on the same economy that drives the real estate
market.
As
hectic as the real estate business is, there is some rather
excruciating down time. Like the Sunday afternoon you spend
hosting an Open House that only a few vaguely-interested
people drift through, probably to get decorating ideas or
just to "see what it's like inside." Or "phone
duty" at the office, which amounts to little more than
being an unpaid receptionist.
If
only there was a way to make some money during that down
time-something you could do no matter where you were or
what time of day or night it was.
Guess
what-there is, and it's called a home-based business. It's
like having a safety net to catch you during the months
when the commission checks are small or nonexistent. The
hours you work at a home-based business are completely flexible,
so if Mrs. McGinty calls to look at a listing, you can drop
everything to take care of your potential buyer, and get
back to your second-income business later on. There is no
time-clock to punch, no boss to answer to except yourself.
You're in complete control of this business. After all,
it's your own!
While
called home-based, you can be taking care of business no
matter where you are. All you need is a computer and a phone.
Well, you've always got those with you anyway, right? Instead
of wasting an afternoon at an Open House, you can use the
time to generate income. Phone duty at the office? You can
get out your laptop and make the time pay you, even if your
broker won't.
Home-based
businesses are exploding as a way to supplement the incomes
of people who work on commission. Knowing you have a second
source of income without the hassles of a boss, commuting,
and rigid scheduling is giving commissioned workers the
sense of security that no other second job can.
Interested? Just fill in
the web form below, and you'll receive free information.