Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My day:
9:30 drop kids off at school
10:00 emails and return phone calls
11:00 drive to clients work to pick up check
11:30 - 1:00 lunch with a potential vendor
1:30 pick up kids
2:00 grandma comes over to watch the kids
2:30 showing
3:15 pick up keys from a closing
3:30 check post office box
4:00 home to check emails again, set up showings for the next day and communicate with clients who I haven't had a chance to talk to since the 10:00 window
6:00 - 7:30 hang out with kids and neighbor
7:30 -9:00 dinner, family time, put kids to bed
9:15 drop off check to client and pick up keys
10:00 - 12:00 run comps, collect previous rental information for an investment property, email client offer to purchase to review.
12:00 - 12:30 DCUM and then bed.
Today was a very light day. I'll do it all over again and more tomorrow. Different stuff, same grind.
So essentially you spent 70% of your time as a courier or chauffeur?
Yes, I do!
Today so far:
9:20- drop off kids
9:30 - showing
10:00 - put sold sign on listing
10:30 - 11:00 coaching call
11:00 - 1 - Pay bills (work and personal).
Now - getting ready to send out revisions to an offer and then go pick up the kids.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I imagine most of you guys who think that this work is easy have never run your own business.
You don't run your own business. You hang your hat under a brokerage. The broker runs his own business and you are essentially an employee.
Entirely incorrect.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I imagine most of you guys who think that this work is easy have never run your own business.
You don't run your own business. You hang your hat under a brokerage. The broker runs his own business and you are essentially an employee.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My day:
9:30 drop kids off at school
10:00 emails and return phone calls
11:00 drive to clients work to pick up check
11:30 - 1:00 lunch with a potential vendor
1:30 pick up kids
2:00 grandma comes over to watch the kids
2:30 showing
3:15 pick up keys from a closing
3:30 check post office box
4:00 home to check emails again, set up showings for the next day and communicate with clients who I haven't had a chance to talk to since the 10:00 window
6:00 - 7:30 hang out with kids and neighbor
7:30 -9:00 dinner, family time, put kids to bed
9:15 drop off check to client and pick up keys
10:00 - 12:00 run comps, collect previous rental information for an investment property, email client offer to purchase to review.
12:00 - 12:30 DCUM and then bed.
Today was a very light day. I'll do it all over again and more tomorrow. Different stuff, same grind.
So essentially you spent 70% of your time as a courier or chauffeur?
Anonymous wrote:My day:
9:30 drop kids off at school
10:00 emails and return phone calls
11:00 drive to clients work to pick up check
11:30 - 1:00 lunch with a potential vendor
1:30 pick up kids
2:00 grandma comes over to watch the kids
2:30 showing
3:15 pick up keys from a closing
3:30 check post office box
4:00 home to check emails again, set up showings for the next day and communicate with clients who I haven't had a chance to talk to since the 10:00 window
6:00 - 7:30 hang out with kids and neighbor
7:30 -9:00 dinner, family time, put kids to bed
9:15 drop off check to client and pick up keys
10:00 - 12:00 run comps, collect previous rental information for an investment property, email client offer to purchase to review.
12:00 - 12:30 DCUM and then bed.
Today was a very light day. I'll do it all over again and more tomorrow. Different stuff, same grind.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I imagine most of you guys who think that this work is easy have never run your own business.
You don't run your own business. You hang your hat under a brokerage. The broker runs his own business and you are essentially an employee.
Anonymous wrote:I imagine most of you guys who think that this work is easy have never run your own business.
Anonymous wrote:They do the listing work: photography, MLS listings, schedule open houses, sometimes host weekday open houses for other agents.
They network a ton, both within the community and with other agents.
Then they do the contract-related work with regard to accepting/countering offers. Ours helped out with stuff before closing (she was present at the inspection, she went in and measured for appliances, she helped us find contractors).
I think it's a job that ebbs and flows in terms of workload: in the high season, they are very busy. In the winter, they have free time.