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The Critical Role of the REALTOR® In A Real Estate Transaction


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My Sales Since January 2009 to Date


 Article from Florida Realtor® Magazine
Published by the Florida Association of Realtors®

Tom Scaglione says his Microsoft Office XP software suite plays a key role in gaining new listings in his market area. For instance, in February, Scaglione, a sales professional with Future Home Realty, Realtors® in Tampa, put his integrated software tools to good use when preparing for a listing presentation for a $394,000 home in Tampa’s West Chase area.

Because the listing had expired, Scaglione first downloaded the seller’s contact information from the MLS into Microsoft Access, the database component of Office XP. Using a template in Microsoft Word, the word-processing component, Scaglione quickly dispatched a personalized letter and a seller’s marketing plan to the owner.

After getting a positive response from the owner, Scaglione took his Toshiba laptop computer to the listing appointment and used Microsoft PowerPoint, the presentation component, to illustrate the advantages of using his service.

Office-management software such as Office XP — which also includes Excel (spreadsheet) and Outlook (e-mail) — makes it easy for Scaglione to efficiently conduct his marketing and communications tasks, allowing more time with clients and customers. “I get full use of Microsoft Office,” he says.

A real estate professional since 1965, Scaglione has used stand-alone word-processing and spreadsheet software since the mid-1980s. He switched to the Microsoft Office suite in the early 1990s and has upgraded several times since. Early in 2003, he bought a new Dell desktop computer and upgraded to the professional version of Office XP, which includes Access as well as Word, Excel, Outlook and PowerPoint.

Here are some of the ways he uses his Office software tools:

1. Build Contact Lists

Scaglione uses the database-management features of Access to keep up-to-date records of his active clientele, usually 40 to 50 people, as well as previous clients and customers, prospects, referral sources and other members of the community. He gathers contact information — name, address, phone and fax numbers, e-mail address — following a phone conversation, e-mail inquiry or face-to-face meeting. Access also lets him enter follow-up and tracking information, such as the date he received an initial inquiry. “When working with Internet buyers, I send a reminder every three months to see if they’re still planning to move to the Tampa Bay area,” he says. “I don’t want to be a ‘spammer’ [one who sends unsolicited e-mail], so I re-obtain their permission beforehand.
 

2 Integrated Office Suites

Here are two productivity-enhancing office suite applications for real estate professionals:

1. Microsoft Office XP, Microsoft — Professional, new user: $579, upgrade: $329; Standard, new user: $479, upgrade: $239; Developer,
new user: $799, upgrade: ; $549; (800) 936-4900;
http://www.microsoft.com

2. WordPerfect® Office 2002, Corel Corp. — Professional Edition: $459; upgrade: $219; (800) 772-6735;
http://www.corel.com

Scaglione’s Tools

Desktop: Dell
Laptop: Toshiba
Printer: Canon Portable BJ80
Color: Epson Stylus Photo 925
Laser: HP LaserJet 3330mfp
Cell Phone: Two Motorola T720 & T730
PDA: Palm Pilot 515
Software: Microsoft Office XP (including Word, Excel, Access, PowerPoint, Outlook,  Explorer, FrontPage, Publisher and Streets & Trips), QuickBooks Pro, RealFast Contract Forms, WorldMerge

2. Integrate Client Data

Access gives Scaglione a convenient starting point for integrating client and customer records with Office’s word-processing, spreadsheet and e-mail applications. For instance, when it’s time to send a new issue of his electronic newsletter, he exports the mailing list from his Access database in Excel spreadsheet format, and then uses ColoradoSoft’s WorldMerge software to send the newsletter to his target audience.

3. Effectively Sort E-mail

Scaglione, who teaches an advanced e-mail class for real estate professionals, uses Outlook to organize in-coming and outgoing e-mail into different folders, such as articles received from online news services or messages from colleagues.

But he says the biggest benefit of Outlook is the ability to create a master “client” folder to organize online client correspondence. Within that folder, he sets up separate folders for individual clients and customers. “As I receive e-mails, I move them to their folders,” he says. “I also answer their messages from those folders, so my response stays there.” After a closing, Scaglione archives e-mail folders for long-term record keeping.

4. Write Personalized Letters

Using Word’s template function, Scaglione created a variety of form letters. When he wants to contact past clients, customers, property owners or other individuals, he quickly customizes correspondence with the person’s name and address. “Each morning, I can send out 10 to 12 letters in a few minutes using my Word templates,” he says.

5. Prepare Closing Cost Estimates

Scaglione finds that Excel’s spreadsheet templates provide an ideal way to prepare closing-cost estimates for buyers and net-proceeds estimates for sellers. First, Scaglione prepares a template that includes individual costs, fees and other items along with automatic calculation functions that total all the items in one column. Then, he simply inputs the person’s name, property address and contract amount, and Excel does the math.

Scaglione then prints out the spreadsheet for in-town buyers and sellers or uses Adobe Acrobat presentation software to create a portable document format (PDF) that can be e-mailed to out-of-town buyers and sellers. “Excel is an efficient calculator that enhances my ability to do business,” he says.

6. Make Effective Presentations

Scaglione uses PowerPoint to create effective listing presentations — both in person and online. “I can sit down with clients in their homes or e-mail my presentation to them,” he says. “I also include a PowerPoint slide presentation on my Web site for prospects to download. That feature alone puts me in front of people 24/7.”

Scaglione used a custom template for his PowerPoint presentation and tailored it to his needs. “My presentation — about 130 slides highlighting my services, company and marketing program — covers everything from the initial listing to the closing,” he says, “so sellers know what’s involved.”

“One of the best features of any integrated office suite software is that it’s easy to learn, and all the commands and menus are similar ... that’s a time-saving benefit,” says Scaglione.

This column, designed to offer examples of how salespeople and brokers are using software in their offices, won the 2000 and 2001 Best Regular Column from the Florida Magazine Association. The column is for general information only. Opinions expressed here do not necessarily reflect an endorsement of the views by Florida Realtor magazine or the Florida Association of Realtors (FAR).

Questions, comments or suggestions on this article? Send us an e-mail: flrealtor@far.org.

© 2003 FLORIDA ASSOCIATION OF REALTORS


 Article from Realty Times

Realty Times July 3, 2003

Florida Implements Default Transaction Brokerage Statute
by Blanche Evans

Florida real estate statutes have radically changed. Realtors no longer have to present a menu of agency options to consumers, as agency has defaulted to transactional brokerage in the state, but they do have to disclose their transactional brokerage status to consumers for the next five years.

In an open letter to consumers and real estate professionals, Secretary of the Department of Business and Professional Regulation Diane Carr writes that Governor Jeb Bush has "signed into law Senate Bill 2238, chapter 475, Florida Statutes, which was enacted by the 2003 Legislature. The chapter sets forth the law that governs the conduct of real estate licensees and appraisers in Florida."

Carr continues, "In enacting the law, the Legislature and the Governor have put in motion a mandate that is well tailored to protecting real estate rights in Florida. The new law represents the combined efforts of professionals in the real estate and appraisal industries and the Department of Business and Professional Regulation, who combined their expertise to facilitate an in-depth evaluation of the needs of Florida’s consumers and licensees."

The changes which affect real estate licensees number as many as 24, but the statute that is making the most news among Realtors across the nation is 475.278 (1)(b) which presumes that "all licensees are operating as transaction brokers unless a single agent or no brokerage relationship is established, in writing, with the customer." In paragraph 475.278(2)(b), the statute continues written disclosure of the transaction brokerage relationship to the customer through July 1, 2008.

To view the changes to the statutes, click here.

"I served on the workgroup that did the study and changes to Chapter 475 to modernize it," says Tom Scaglione, a Realtor who practices single agency. "We read it line by line and made changes as we saw fit to bring the law into the 21st Century. Most of the work my workgroup did was to the actual licensing for a real estate professional. There was a second workgroup that handled the Appraisal section of 475."

Explains Scaglione, "The work we did was almost totally accepted by the Division of Business and Professional Regulation, DBPR, with only a few changes. My personal feeling about the changes is that it will help to better clarify the profession. We have changed to a presumption of Transaction Brokerage with the opportunity to enter into a Single Agency Relationship with a Seller or a Buyer. We further removed some the penalties from the licensing law and let other administrative law cover fines and punishment. We felt that this was not a part of licensing but a part of Administrative Law.

"We are required for the next five years to give to the consumer a new disclosure which I have attached," says Scaglione. "This just came out today. Looks like you can enter into a Single Relationship on page one or a Transaction Broker relationship on page three. Page two would only be used if you had entered into a Single relationship and had to transition to a Transaction Broker relationship if showing a company listing to a prospective Buyer. Of course with the permission of the Seller."

Scaglione admits that the changes will be "confusing to the average real estate professional."

"The good thing is that after five years, this notice goes away," he says.

Copyright © 2003 Realty Times. All Rights Reserved.


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Everyone is Buying Real Estate... Some For Themselves... Some For Their Landlord...
The Critical Role of the REALTOR® In A Real Estate Transaction


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Home Page MLS SEARCH MLS Tampa Bay MLS All Florida Your MLS Search Bank Owned Listings Short Sale Listings Waterfront Homes Million Dollar Homes Listings by ZipCode Listings By Sub. Feature Home Feature Listings Testimonials Daily News Feed Finance Calculators Commuting Calculator Architectural Styles School Reports Mortgage Info Credit Ratings Free Reports Tampa Links Plus Tampa Bay Map Golf Courses Chambers Buyer Marketing Buyer Agent Info Why Use Me Seller Marketing Marketing Slides Your Home's Value Going It Alone Best Time To Sell REALTOR's® Role Glossary Hillsboro Co. Facts Pasco Co. Facts Pinellas Co. Facts e-PRO Certified Article on Tom eMail Concern REALTOR's® List My Resume
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