Flight 168 touched down at 2:00 a.m., many hours past the time printed on my boarding pass. Thereâs no do over. No âfly the next time on usâ hook up. The airlines dish out bad times and we accept it.
I sat in the middle seat wedged like a cold cut between two over sized slices of human bread. Each time I leaned forward I had to dislodge myself between two meaty arms on either side that encroached upon my space over the armrests.
The plane sat at the gate for hours while my empty stomach held a press conference. Captain Sprague periodically served up apologies like Tapas. In a variety of small and unfulfilling portions he kept assuring us that weâd be cleared for takeoff âmomentarily.â That seemed to pacify everyone.
Sucking on real estateâs binky
Real estate is no different than the airlines or the government or any entity that doesnât recognize the benefit of being square with its customer. It does the airline no good to tell us weâll be grounded for three hours while they fix the tire. And real estate has found it’s far more advantageous to lull us into certain beliefs by shoving as many real estate binkys into our mouths as possible.
I cite the ânow is the right time to buyâ binky fueled by the NAR â one of this countryâs biggest binky warehouses. They distribute binkys of all kinds to sales agents to pacify us into buying homes, believing all Realtors are saints and spending money we (and, turns our, our banks) donât have.
Four years ago we sucked on 0% ARMS because âmoney was cheapâ and âThe home can only appreciate.â The binky lulled us to sweet dreams of home ownership.
When isnât it the right time to buy I wonder?
Binkys âR Us
I learned about WAMU early Friday morning as I arrived early at a conference. I overheard a presentation from someone advising agents to tell consumers all will right itself by late 2009.
I wondered how those agents would back that statement up. Maybe they wonât need too. Maybe weâll all be too eager to accept the succor.
I looked through the conference brochure and searched for panels on sensitivity training. Or panels that discuss the difference between a huckster and a real estate professional. Or panels on fundamentals of economics. I looked for panels that taught the people who handle the most delicate of transactions, to drop the economic futurist bit and just do sales. And treat people with dignity.
Not here. Or anywhere. Agents attend these Binkys âR Us conferences to get their binky CE points. Jewelry. And cheap advice from other binky salespeople.
I need a new binky
I’m frustrated by the war. Gas prices. A government that shoves rhetorical binkys into our mouths to distract us from the dirty economic diaper in which we sit.
Iâm frustrated trying to find ways to explain it all to my children, especially the older ones, who are caught in a midlife crisis. They arenât yet even 21.
I’m frustrated that I can’t assuage their confusion or my wifeâs, who has this sinking feeling that we are all teetering on the edge of collapse like a cliff-side home in Laguna Beach during an El Nino.
Iâm frustrated that our industry doesnât provide something better than a bunch of binky platitudes, binky ad campaigns, and binky conferences that serve to simply pacify all of us rather that dish out cold hard reality.
Maybe instead of telling us now is the right time to buy how about explaining why it is the right time to buy? How about explaining every nuance of the bailout and what it means for me, your customer? How about placing that information on a spreadsheet, or on your site or have the NAR back it up with fact rather than some air spun ad campaign.
People need more from real estate than just a big binky to suck on. They need the truth. Those who toss the old binky in favor of a new truth binky will be glad they did. The public cannot only handle it , they’ll reward you for giving it to them.
- Davison
Sign up for the 1000watt Spotlight e-newsletter
and keep up with the ideas, apps and people that are changing real estate.



15 Ways to Make Your Marketing Mobile
A mist of difference
10 Tools for MLS Awesomeness
Davison, well put and right on target with how I feel about what we are getting fed to pass on to the public. Our sources, mortgage companies, mass media, and associations like NAR are the same as far as content. The only difference is the local market information we have about our own little real estate world. That is unique to each area of our country but usually not relevant to the news people are looking for unless they contact us directly. So we are guilty of passing on what we have been fed about the national situation but on the local level, find an honest agent and you will be fed the local truth.