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The real estate blame game

Media, media bo bedia,
Bonana fanna fo fedia,
Fee fi mo media – media!

Come on everybody, let’s play the blame game

“The Media’s” effect on real estate was the conversation that rose most audibly from the panel sessions, lobby meetups, parties and hoopla in Las Vegas during last week’s NAR show.

I couldn’t escape it. It popped up in nearly every discussion as an element of accepted wisdom about the past, present and future of our industry.

CNN, The New York Times, The Wall Street Journal, Fortune and the like are in devious congress, a cabal intent on destroying the real estate industry as we know it.

I watch the news, read the articles and bear witness to my own real estate investment woes. And I too have participated in the blame game. But as I sat at Gate B20 waiting for my flight home I started to think about how ridiculous this proposition truly is.

Maybe it was the shear exhaustion of the conference that lulled me in an open cast of mind. Maybe it was the two agents who sat beside me discussing the dead real estate market to which they were returning – the one the local the press had “all but written the obituary for.” Maybe it was the fact that the security gauntlet I just passed through — and the “Orange Alert” status in which we all live — did little to dissuade me and 26,000 other real estate folks from traveling, living, partying, working and embracing life this week.

Sitting here, inside the terminal, about to board a United Airlines jet, I began to think outside my own box.

Deflection

John Burroughs once wrote that a man can fail many times, but he isn’t a failure until he begins to blame someone else. By that measure, we are involved in a community failure. By assigning such power to the media we’ve assigned an equal amount of weakness to ourselves.

There is no conspiracy in the media. No cabal. No calculated destruction. I know of no summit that has taken place where editors gathered to declare a jihad on real estate. The victimization we are experiencing is self-induced, a product of our own failure to offer a countervailing force of opportunity.

If the media can be blamed for anything it’s their penchant for sensationalizing. But the only reason real estate is victimized by this is because, unlike other industries that are scrutinized by the press, real estate does little about it. Yes, you will say, “NAR has spent millions on ad campaigns to get buyers off the fence and highlight the opportunities that abound.” Put yourselves in the consumers’ shoes for a minute. Are ads like that really doing it for you?

Fast Food. Tobacco. Domestic auto making. Music. The press covers these industries with the same zeal and greater skepticism than real estate attracts. I read tons of stories about the dangers of trans fat, the backwardness of the major music labels and the evils of foreign oil dependency, yet Americans still pound their Big Macs while driving their gas guzzlers.

What these other industries have and what real estate doesn’t are well-oiled marketing machines. They have a consistent message that deflects the heart attack in a box with a two-all-beef-patty jingle. Carmakers goose us with an idea of style that makes us figure that, hey, as long as the earth is melting, at least we’ll go out looking sporty. Local governments have mastered the art of beckoning residents to hurricane prone, flood-worn and tornado infested communities because they can, for better or worse, reach a place in the mind that triggers desire.

So if the American Consumer is spooked by the media, what is real estate going to do about it?

Hey, let’s throw a party!

If you woke up the day after the NAR conference and read this headline, “30,000 Realtors whoop it up in Vegas while millions of Americans face housing ruin” what would you think?

Or, if the writer spun the story of last week as “a massive gala in Sin City hosted by the National Association of Realtors where tens of thousands of real estate agents, blinking like Christmas trees, congregated in sybaritic suites and carelessly gambled away the profits from the recently ended real estate boom”.

Given the condition of the market, that’s exactly what last week could look like to “the media”. If such a story is written, we’d have only ourselves to blame for believing that what we say, write, put online, and do as representatives of this business goes unnoticed by the public.

Beating the media at its own game

I have a vivid recollection of post 9/11. The airline industry was decimated. Hotel rooms were collecting dust. Joke writers for Leno were glued to news. The country was handcuffed and afraid to go outside until first-term George Bush stepped up and told a frightened nation to get on with their lives. To fly planes, book hotels and get back to enjoying our American opportunities.

That is what a leader does. They give marching orders that stimulate positive action. And this is precisely what is not happening in real estate and why the media coverage of the market is getting so much unwarranted attention.

Honestly, anyone can be a leader. Real estate is so local, that while it would be great if NAR stepped up the plate with a more convincing message, people would be unlikely to heed it. But they do know who their local Realtors and brokers are. And they are looking to them for reassurance.

Want to beat the media at its own game? Be a leader in your market. There are a few out there. They are holding town hall meetings with their customers, as one broker friend of mine has, where honesty about the market is the order of the day. They are the agents who have decided to turn off their lapel lights and turn on their imagination. They are the veterans partnering with younger agents to connect more authentically with a new generation of customers.

They are telling a story of opportunity that makes griping about the media seem silly. You can too.

- Davison


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7 Responses to “The real estate blame game”

  1. My plan?

    Ignore about 90% of the commercial communication messages that hit me every day and focus on the ones that matter – those of my clients and potential clients.

    Say less. Do more. Listen more. Connect with customers and clients more.

    It's sort of a Jerry Maquire thing.

  2. Let us not forget that the media also leveraged the overwhelming greed that rests within all of us, and had a lot to do with over-heating the markets. I, for one, will admit that there was a little devil inside telling me to go out and speculate on some pre-construction. "Sensational" the market was. "Sensational" it is now as well.

  3. Marc Davison says:

    Is it not possible that what is perceived as "bad or unfair" media coverage could actually, in hindsight, be thought of as fair and insightful warnings by the press to the consumer?

    If I remember correctly, up until the press started to dig in, people were buying homes they simply could not afford. Agents were advising clients to offer bids much higher than the selling price and exposing them to harmful mortgage programs because "money is cheap".

    Is it possible that many inside our industry chose not to advise their clients of the dangers of interest only mortgages or short term ARM's because they just weren't the expert they advertised themselves as or weren't the "ethical trusted advisor" people associate with a Realtor.

    Imagine if the press didn't start reporting on the bubble and if real estate was left to continue to inflate at the crazy rate it was at? What impending doom would be facing our nation now?

    I think there's another side to this story and one that could benefit our industry if our associations could get past how many paying members it has in any given month and think about how many poorly educated, greedy, non-consumer conscious members are employed here who possess no market knowledge, no awareness of fiscal responsibility, no awareness of real estate history who preying on the public under the guise of ethics and trusted advisor.

  4. Let's not forget that mortgage brokers and mortgage bankers are supposed to be trusted advisors also.

    What might be interesting is if a REALTOR was also a Certified Financial Planner and a mortgage broker. Then, you could put that person on the hook a little more thoroughly for problems down the road after the transaction.

    Hey Christian. Dave here – the guy with the freshly in-the-can We Rock Chicago video… Nice to bump into you here.

    WellcomeMat.com rocks!

  5. Marc Davison says:

    Let's indeed not forget that at all. They are indeed part of the group of people who have no right to accuse the media of anything other than sounding a much needed alarm.

    Honestly, I think given the need for real estate to revamp its entire message to the world, courting the media rather than bashing it might not be such a bad idea.

  6. Dave, you'll find me wherever the truth is being told to the industry, and your video work is off the charts brotha. Keep fighting the good fight.

  7. Robert Luna says:

    I agree Christian, Keep up the good work Marc I can go on all day on the reclessness of the agents and lenders.The media is not to blame lack of common sense is.