- CC’s brief bio [2:48]
- How coronavirus affected CC’s business [4:19]
- The value in real estate teams [12:47]
- CC’s sources for paid leads [15:09]
- How to close 50+ agent-referred deals per year [16:36]
- The touches it takes to maintain a referral network [22:49]
- Reward ideas for past clients [31:59]
- The best combo for guaranteed touches: voicemail and text [33:44]
- Topics for real estate video [39:09]
- Why NOT to get discouraged with low event turnouts [43:19]
- Real estate event ideas [48:19]
- How to run giveaways to grow your business [51:05]
- Tips for tracking and converting giveaway leads [57:59]
- An important lesson CC learned as a new Realtor [1:02:19]
- Plus, so much more.
- Grow Your Real Estate Profits with Our Agent Success Toolbox
- Take Over $13,000 in Real Estate Courses for Just $97
- Real Estate Resources
- CC Underwood on Facebook
- Paul Morris’ Instagram
Paul: Real Estate Rockstars, I am absolutely delighted to have CC
Underwood with me, and we had the chance to meet doing another webinar that I
did for my offices and for our regions. CC Underwood is, I would say, fair to
say famous, certainly inside of our company and elsewhere. Instead of me giving
your bio, why don’t you just tell us
about yourself for starters?
CC: I’m
married. I will be 40 this year, so a big 40 coming in hot. I’m from
Jacksonville, Florida born and raised here, I probably will never leave. I
don’t fly. Interesting little fact. I will drive everywhere. Even if it’s 16
hours, I’m there and back. I have a team here in Jacksonville. Currently,
there’s 14 of us. We have 5 admin, 1 ISA, and 8 agents including myself. I’m
very, very limited in sales, maybe about one a month. Currently, so far, we’re
at 219 close for the year. We’re just over 64 million.
Paul: I am furiously writing that stuff down because they’re astronomical
numbers. I’ll ask you to repeat some of it because I’m writing, and I find it
so interesting. There’s how many on your
team?
CC: 14.
Paul: 14, 5 admin, 1 ISA, and– tell me the rest again.
CC: 8
agents, that includes me.
Paul: 8 agents including you, and then you told me that you do how many sales yourself?
CC: Not
to more than 10 a year, so I get yelled at a lot if I do.
Paul: Who yells at you?
CC: My
director of operations, Katie.
Paul: Okay, good. All right. With 219 closed– I’ll just start the interview
right off by asking you what’s different
during COVID? What are you doing differently? In that, we’ll get some of
the rest of how you do your business.
CC: For
sure. COVID was a big hit for us. We started out really strong year super
goals. COVID happened, and then in May, which is now known on our team as the
main massacre. We had 7 people leave in about 45 days. We had this huge exodus,
some mental, some they needed to work from home, their dynamics changed, their
needs changed. That was probably the biggest turnover that I’ve ever seen for
us. We’re used to a couple a year. We’ve always had low, and that changed
everything. We, at one point, had 19 on the team when we started this year, and
so we’ve lost and we’re rebuilding.
Paul: Let me ask you this. I’m a realtor. I’m doing pretty good on my own. Why in the world would I want to come work
for you just for starters?
CC: For
starters, our team, we have it made right now where our agents, we can prove
that we’re able to generate two to three times more referrals than they would
on their own. We communicate with their database over 100 times a year. We know
that when an agent is top of mind, that they’re able to get more referrals. We
do that better than anyone in this town is stay in touch with our current and
past customers. We love on them. If you’re looking for a team to take all that
leverage off of you, handle all of your marketing, and increase your referrals,
we’re that team.
Paul: I’m sold, by the way. Now, one of the things is that I really, in my
work with realtors, and I have 3,000 realtors working in the offices that I
own. Closer to 9,000 agents in the regions that I supervise, which include the
3,000. Our price point’s a little different, admittedly. Our price point’s
higher, but I find lots of agents who are really good at doing the deals. In
other words, if you give them a house to sell, or you give them a buyer to
service, there are so many that actually do a great job, and yet they don’t
have a great business. That’s the bridge
you’re helping them cross?
CC: Yes,
I think that’s a hard one. I saw that my own business as a single agent, and
then you get in this trap of lead crack that you have to find the next one, and
you have no time. It’s not that you don’t want or care about the people that
you service. You literally have no time because you’re just struggling to keep
it all together. You’re wondering where the next deal was going to come from,
and that is your focus. It’s to stay in business to make money. Nothing wrong
with that. There’s only one of you. You have to choose. Go get new business, or
hang out with the old and until you’re able to hire leverage enough to create
those systems.
I always tell people, “It’s not like you’re not
hiring a realtor for me to get your home under contract right now. You’re
hiring me for the experience.” That 13 years to figure all this crap out,
to test it to thousands and thousands of dollars on CRMs and lead sources, to
find what works for us so that you can just hop on. That whole benefit, really
we’re absorbing you into our world. We’re taking care of you. You don’t have to
stop what you’re doing.
Paul: Can I ask what your split is with the
agents that work with you?
CC: Absolutely.
Whenever we’re hiring, when we bring agents on, typically we will wait until
the very last minute to discuss splits. Typically we will have that
conversation upfront, it is we want them to be all-in. You can’t just dip your
toe in a team and say, “I think I’m going to try this out.” You have
to be all-in. If you’re all-in, that means you believe in us the team that
we’re going to help you get what you want. We don’t go over splits until you’re
signing the contract. When we go through our hiring process, that’s what it is.
Overall, we do have a different split.
If it’s a team listing, all of our agents can work
with buyers and sellers. If it’s a team listing, meaning we have provided it by
an ISA, my sphere, agent referral, they’re receiving 25% leads they generate
for sellers, they receive 35%. We do have a little bit different if it is an
experienced realtor, and they are bringing us their book of business, their
past customers, they’ll get a little bump on that because again, we spent no
money to generate that business, they do. Then if it’s buyers it’s pretty much
flat across the board, it’s they get 45%. Selling four or more in a month, it
bumps to 50. We’re all in sales, you want more, sell more.
Paul: Got it? I’m an agent. Part of the reason why I ask is because I’m
always thinking about what does our
audience want to hear? Our audience is made up of lots of realtors that are
on their own. They’re also lots of very experienced teams. First of all, I want
to get as much for our audience as we can but I also want to cater to your
strengths and the things that you’re good at. I do find it fascinating. I think
if you’re a single agent, and you’re listening to this, there’s a lot you can
learn, even if you’ve never want to join a team because the idea of “Well,
why would I want to join this
team?”
We have reasons and discussion points, this thing, it
can help you move your business to a more purposeful one or more leveraged one,
because again, what I see a lot of is, I see people, they’re very busy. Then
they drop their lead generation activities, because like you said, they don’t
have time to do everything. Then they complete the business. They’re, “Oh!
What’s going to happen?” Then they start lead generating until they get
more deals. Look, do your business how you want to, but it’s not in my view a
great way to have a career and a living and that ups and downs.
CC: You
look how long it takes to get there. We use the term, “Rockstars” in
our industry. Well, my first year in real estate, I sold seven homes, the
second year was 14, I wasn’t a rockstar by any sense of that word, nor was I
the third year when I finally went full time. When you’re looking at a team,
usually it splits right where there’s value of our time and where we spend it
and how much money we make really needs to be a part of that conversation.
There’s no way I would have continued to make it on my own had I not gone full
time cut the cord and just continued to push forward.
Most agents, if they sold five or seven homes in their
first year, that’s still good. It’s not sufficient for an income though. On a
team if you’re looking at it, “All right, well, I can make $40,000 to
$50,000 in my first year, $70,000 the second and six-plus figures in the
third,” and there’s that opportunity. I don’t have to get stuck in the
busy work. I remember how much time I spent when Facebook came along, “Oh,
I got to get a Facebook group.” I had to learn all the time spent learning
how to be a techie, do I need a website? I even paid somebody like freelance, I
think five grand for a website once. I thought I had to have my own cool thing.
No, so wrong. Don’t need it.
Paul: Absolutely. Tell me what’s your
average sale price just so we can calibrate this for our audience?
CC: We’re
right around 270, we’re 270 on the listing side, 290 on the buy-side right now.
Paul: Got it. Great. A flagship office that I own is the Beverly Hills Office
and our average sale price is over 1,400,000 but also, I have an office in
Bakersfield, California. That’s a lot more like the price points that you’re
talking about. That’s one of the reasons why we look at units a lot of times,
“1,300,000, If I did seven houses–” You’re talking about some real
money, yet the beauty of this is you can apply all these systems and models to
get that. I know you’re heavy in contacting your sphere of influence. Are you buying any leads? Are you buying
leads anywhere? Are you generating your own leads outside of your sphere?
CC: We
are. We actually just started that a little bit last year. For Zillow,
basically, we paid the bare minimum, I think $315 a month to be premier. We
found the cheapest zip code that we can find for that purpose. We do get some
leads from that. We do have pay-per-click through our website. Our newest
venture is a company called House Gather and there’s a bunch of agent referral,
lead sources that will pay them, we get leads on a referral basis.
Paul: When agents talk to me about increasing their business, one of the
first things I do is say, “Who are you going out? Who are you meeting? Who
are you adding to your database? That sort of thing. I’ll often tell them,
“Don’t go to the Board of Realtors because it’s all realtors. Go to other
events that you can add people to your database.” The last time I spoke to
you, you’re getting a lot of agent referrals.
CC: Yes.
Paul: Talk to me about that. How are
you getting the agent referrals? Why is that and how is that an important part
of your business?
CC: I
think as agents as professionals, it’s always looking at raising the bar and
this old school mentality of, I don’t want to work with another realtor like
you said. It’s just what you’ve been taught, but I feel especially within
Keller Williams it’s celebrated to do that agent to agent. We don’t need a
third party, we’re not going through relocation. We are the relocation. We are
each other’s biggest advocates across the nation, different states. Anytime
I’ve ever gone to a training, I’ve always made sure that it was in another
location, specifically, a feeder location.
You can be very purposeful, even with agent referral
lead generation, adding value, always being a giver of your own stuff. We’re
open book. Someone says “Hey, how do you do that?” Let me share that
with you dancing on TikTok, there’s a whole agent community. We’ve gotten agent
referrals from TikTok, it’s just finding that common ground and building those
relationships. Currently, we’ve closed 52 homes strictly from agent referrals
and a few of those have been local.
Paul: Wow! Think about that, 52 transactions year-to-date?
CC: Year
to date.
Paul: Wow! 52 transactions year-to-date from agent referrals. One of the
things and I’m just going to pull out some of the highlights here so we can hit
it. One of the things you said is feeder location. If you’re in Jacksonville, how are you determining what’s a feeder
location? I’m in LA, maybe somebody else is in New Jersey or in Michigan. How
do I find a feeder location?
CC: I
think we just look for that common where we receive the agent referrals from.
In our CRM, we do tag them, the city, and state. That’s still a work in
progress as far as super tracking all of this stuff now that we’re becoming
purposeful and we’re aware. The Carolinas are big here. Of course, military
bases are very big here. San Diego’s a nice feeder for us actually. We do get a
little bit of Los Angeles, or just from California to here, Texas is a feeder,
Atlanta and then New York, New Jersey. Those are great feeders, but even within
Florida, Miami and Orlando, they’ll come up to Jacksonville.
Paul: Now I have figured out what is the feeder for me, how do I get the
agent referrals from there? I’m in LA, let’s just say, geez, I found obviously
big cities New York, Chicago, wherever I found that. I did see some people
coming from Nashville because there’s the entertainment community there back
and forth between Nashville. Now, I’m like, geez Nashville might be a great
feeder community from a smaller city for me. How do I get the agent referrals from Nashville?
CC: You
could always go direct. We’ve got a great network. It’s pretty easy to go on
any brokerage website, click down, it says our agents. You could do it from a
nonrelational start because this is good for any brokerage and you can just
find it. You could pick multiple brokers. How many endies don’t have a referral
network that could benefit from something and adding that referral income that
we could all use together? You could call them up and just say, “You know
what, I’ve noticed I’ve had a buyer that’s moving to Jacksonville from your
area so I was curious, do you guys have a Jackson referral partner for your
brokerage, for yourself?” You could call every single agent and really
have that conversation. Don’t just spam them with an e-mail like, “Look at
all my properties in Jacksonville.”
We get enough agent e-mails, as far as that concerned,
or you start relational. You go, you find a city, find a class that is specific
for realtors and you go attend it and you network there. Now, you can serve
that collection, your database. Follow up, “Hey, we met here. I went here.
I wanted to meet you. If you ever have a buyer or seller in Jacksonville, I’d
love to be your referral partner.” Just add value that way.
Paul: I’m just thinking on the fly, I wonder if it would make sense, for
example, to use that example of Nashville or whatever. Rather than cold calling
through a roster of agents, what if I cold-called the manager? Said, “Hey,
it’s Paul Morris from such and such agency in Beverly Hills. I noticed that
we’ve had quite a few referrals from Nashville. You are the biggest firm in
Nashville. I selected you because you have a great this, that. The other thing,
I’d like to establish a referral partnership between your firm and my team
where I’d like to serve whatever and then any referrals that I get from my Los
Angeles network that want to go to Nashville, I’ll keep you guys top of
mind.”
Is that a good–
CC: For
sure. Even things like this. Calling up, say, “Hey, with this virtual
atmosphere that we’re in, I’d love to add value. Here’s my strengths. Do you
ever have a broker meeting where I could come in and I could add value to your
agents?” That’s the biggest thing. Just teach. Go teach. You can be the
person in front of everyone. You have to be in the middle. Go teach and differ.
People are hungry for little nuggets of information how they’re building in
business and that can apply in different markets. They don’t even have to go
anywhere. “Hey, zoom me in. I’d love to teach you about this. Who wants
it?”
Paul: I love it. One of the things you said, and you said so many great
things, I was writing furiously, was that with your database, you’re touching
people a hundred times a year. One of the things, even the really purposeful
millionaire real estate agent book were really talking about 33 touches. Tell
me why you think hitting a database twice a week makes any sort of sense. What’s your messaging to that database that
you’re hitting so often?
CC: That
is always changing also because we are so heavy for referrals. Out of 219,
right now, we’re at 59 that is strictly from referrals in our sphere. 52 were
agent referrals and 40 are our past customer repeats. The majority of our
closed sales are coming from these sources. That’s why we want to stay in touch
if it’s top of inbox, top of mind but also not everyone’s in their e-mail. We
communicate with people through Facebook, through video. We’re starting to
integrate a little more BombBomb a little more video into our messaging and
events.
It’s giveaways, a rewards club. Every time we are
sending out, “Hey, we’re giving away Apple Watch,” or, “Here’s
our Mother’s Day giveaway.” We’re having our virtual– we just had a
virtual cooking class.”
Paul: Wow. I remember you telling me about that. One of the things I’m always
talking to people about is find their superpower. If you love gardening or
whatever, it’s really your passion. Even if you’re not the teacher, you go and
you find the local expert and interview them. That then becomes great content.
You’re fired up about it but it doesn’t need to be gardening. It doesn’t need
to be cooking. Find the things that you’re really interested in and you’re
really passionate about. Then it’s that outgoing message. I guess I’ll ask it
again. If you have a hundred outgoing messages, a lot of things that I see are,
“Hey, we just listed this.”
I look at people’s Instagram and it’s all just listed
or just sold and I’m just like, “Nobody wants to see that.” As a
realtor owning a real estate company, boy, that’s exciting to me. Let me show
myself how much I have sold. Boy, that’s exciting but unless it’s a house next
door to mine, I’m not really interested.
CC: Yes.
You need people to know that you’re relevant as a realtor. That’s fantastic.
You’re looking at this from different angles. There’s your public-facing.
People need to know that you’re an expert. Are you educating them? Yes, they do
want to know that you sell homes too. Are you fun? Are you relatable and are
you an expert or are you giving advice? Your database– Yes, there are times to
ask for referrals. I honestly can’t think of maybe once or twice a year where
we’re actually asking for a referral. Very, very little. A lot of those are in
correlation with if we’re having a contest.
We’re having an internal contest and we’re reaching
out to the database and we’re like, “Hey, we really need your help. This
is going to be fun. We’re all competing against each other. We’d love your
support. In a stellar, this is what we’re looking for.” Every single
month, every October, we have a team retreat, team advance, however, you want
to call it where we plan what we’re going to do for the following year and that
is all-encompassing for public and our rewards club. Those are the giveaways,
the touches, the text messages. “Hey, you want to win an Apple Watch? We’d
love to see you win. We’re having a contest. We’re having trivia nights.”
When you combin our generic weekly database e-mails
with all of the events, with all of the giveaways, it is over 100 touches a
year. We’re calling them. We’re texting them. We’re following up. We’ve got
photos. There’s so much engagement going on and they don’t overlap. We never
start one until we’ve finished another. It’s just constant.
Paul: You said generic weekly. That’s going to be 52. What’s your generic weekly outreach look like? Is it a newsletter that
you’re e-mailing out?
CC: I’t’s
what’s going with our team. Yes, it’s our open houses, new listings. We’re
looking to change that up with a message from me or something cool that’s going
to be relevant about the market. New programs that we offer. We just started a
“Rent Now, Pay Later” program. We want to make sure that our database knows if
someone has an older home and they need to sell their home and they don’t have
the cash, it’s all wrapped in equity. We got a program for you. I’ll be
educating them on cash offer programs. Again, I would say that’s probably the
least, that’s not our strength part. That’s when we’re going to start into
BombBomb.
Paul: That’s the baseline?
CC: That’s
our baseline.
Paul: I love it.
CC: Every
single week, no matter what.
Paul: That’s your baseline and I love it because I think what that can do is
if my baseline is– I’m on the receiving end. Your baseline is, “We’re
going to send Paul 52 newsletters.” One of the things about that is unless
it’s really annoying to me, I’m going to look at that and I’m going to go,
“It’s the thing from CC. Next.” Even if I do that, it does keep you
top of mind. Then if you’re peppering on top of that, things that are
interesting, that captures my attention. I can see how that works very well
together. Whereas, for example, just a 52-week generic alone is going to have a
lot less effectiveness, right?
CC: Yes.
It does. That’s why you have to change it up because everyone communicates a
little bit differently. There are those that they like it. They love e-mails.
They want to see what we’re doing. We have handwritten notes that go well or
still writing thinking-of-you cards that go out to our rewards club, birthday
cards that go out for their birthday month. They’re getting touched socially on
the phone, through print, and through e-mail. They’re going to engage with us.
In some way, we are top of mind.
Paul: That’s your 52, and tell me more about the rewards club or how you figure out who gets what, how does
that work?
CC: Our
rewards club, this is for our sphere and our past customers that’s how you can
enter and there is giveaways. Every single month we have a giveaway. It could
be “post a picture and we’ll choose”. We budget $300 every single
month so that we’re giving something away and we’re having fun. Again, some of
our database is connecting with us a little more socially. It’s a private group
so we can add them, we can remove them, and a lot of times they can even give
us referrals. We can message them directly whenever we want to just say,
“Hey, thank you for RSVPing, we’re going to do the invites.”
Part of that 100 Touch program it is they’re getting
the giveaways so we’re posting in there. For the giveaways, we got at least
once a month when we’re doing giveaways all of our events. We had 10 major
events that were scheduled this year. Of course, we’re having to make those
virtual but we’ve got a touch plan that goes out to them for the events.
Every single touch plan, they’re getting four to five
additional touches for each event. They’re getting a text message, a phone call
like a Slybroadcast that we’ll use for the voicemail.
Then the actual event itself where they’re coming
which is really, really nice. Our virtual events between the mailers now and
the e-mails, you can see how it quickly goes over 100 [chuckles] for everyone.
Paul: One of the things you mentioned, I heard you mention Sly and I know
what that is but that reminds me, a lot of our listeners and folks watching
this would want to know what are the systems that you’re using, what’s the technology you’re using? When
you say Sly, you’re talking about Slydial, right?
CC: Yes
Paul: That’s a way to leave direct voicemails
right?
CC: Yes
Paul: I could do a voicemail to 100 people without calling 100 times and then
maybe they pick up and then I have a conversation that maybe I don’t want to
have. What message are you leaving on a
Slydial and is it they really think you’re leaving a voicemail?
CC: They
do because even though the initial number doesn’t come through, it just drops
as a voicemail. It’ll recognize that number as a voicemail. If it is from their
agent or it’s from the team if they got it saved, they’ll see it. What happens
again, people don’t listen to voicemails anymore. They see it and someway they
text you back. [crosstalk] [laughs] It’s a nice way to engage and it’s just,
“Hey, we just wanted to invite you we’ve got another family night coming
up. We have another trivia, another bingo night just want to make sure you know
you are invited and we hope to see you there.” Very simple.
Paul: I love it, I love it and it’s giving me ideas right now because one of
the things that am interested in doing too, is getting people to a big event
that we have, a mega camp and I don’t have time to call the hundreds of people
that I would like to invite, so great idea. I have an event, so one of the
things is getting an event. Maybe it doesn’t have to be your event. What about
that, what if you go out and you find cool events you didn’t have to put the
event on? Now I’m leaving to my sphere, let’s say, 500 people.
I’m just leaving a Slydial, it’s like, “Hey, it’s
Paul Morris. CC, I was thinking about you, there is this great event which is
the da-da-da-da-ra it’s on Zoom or there is a social distancing event here in
Santa Monica and I would love to see you there,” or at least what’s going
on in the neighborhood. Great move, right?
CC: You
just never know how someone is going to respond. Instead of like “Hey, how
would you like your preferred contact method.” You don’t really know that
on the masses. It’s like any other lead generation, call them, leave them a
voicemail, follow up with a text, send them an e-mail.
Paul: Call them, leave them a voicemail, follow up with a text, send them an
e-mail. I definitely find in my own lead generation is that calling– I don’t
really use Slydial. I know what it is. I have it, I have used it before. I am
going to use it after this, after our conversation so appreciate that. When I
call and it goes to– and I’m usually dealing what I would call high-dollar
calls so I’m not just randomly calling all these people. I’m calling somebody
that’s important for me to connect with and it’ll go to voicemail often and
when I follow up, I leave a voicemail but when I follow that up with a text,
it’s tremendously powerful versus not.
CC: Yes.
Paul: The difference is just massive. That’ll be step two. I’m going to send
all these Slydials now that we’ve had our conversation and then after I do
that, I’m going to type out a somewhat generic message I can certainly
customize it a bit and then I am going to hit send on a text message. “Hey
CC just dropped you a voicemail.” The voicemail will be a bit more generic
because I don’t want to say your name because am sending it to 300 people.
It’ll be like “Hey I was thinking about you, I’ve got this fabulous event
in Santa Monica. It’s social distancing, would love to see you there or at
least let you know I’m thinking about you da-da-da-da-da-ra. Great.”
Afterwards, then I’ve got a text message that says, “Hey CC–” That’s
the only thing I might customize, and then drop the rest of it which is that
generic message. I think that’ll have a big impact.
CC: It
does and as a receiver of so many voicemails, I can’t tell you how much I
appreciate someone just saying,”Hey, guess what my voicemail was
about.” I’m like, “Oh thank God,” and then I can determine if I
want to have a conversation with them, if it actually requires me to have a
conversation with them. I find that as respectful. Just text me what you want
[chuckles] I’ll make the decision if it’s important for conversation or was
just really an FYI and we don’t need to talk.
Paul: I love it, I really recommend doing the things– Back in the day when
we used to be being to do it, a lot of people hated the door knock, so don’t
door knock but find the thing that you really love to do and make sure you do
it because this is still a contact spot for sure.
CC: For
sure.
Paul: Sorry, Slydial. I got a little distracted. What other technology are you using?
CC: We
talked about BombBomb a little bit. I’ve had it for years, we’re really going
to mark out a consistent video content calendar something that could be easily
utilized. Even for educational purposes, you can post that at your database,
they like to be educated too. We use BombBomb for that.-
Paul: Can I ask one question about BombBomb. It’s a video interface. I know
BombBomb, I have used that quite a bit. You can customize a little bit, that’s
cool. On your BombBomb, when you say you’re going to do a content calendar,
you’re going to push it out of the BombBomb, you’re not doing an individual BombBomb, you’re doing a BombBomb that
you’re going to send out to how many people?
CC: For
our database of our rewards club it’s
under 500.
Paul: You’re making one video and then you’re sending it out to 500.
CC: My
favorite thing to do with video is I prepare several topics and then I will
come in, I will record them. I could knock out anywhere from five to 10 videos
super fast. Then the girls, they tell me what topics that they want or give me
an idea. I’ll shoot the videos and then send it over to marketing. They can
edit it and then they can schedule out those posts, whether that be for social
media. I’ll upload them to BombBomb, after they get edited then we can reuse
this for YouTube. It’s multi-purpose.
Paul: I got to dig deeper. I love it because these are great. These are
amazing nuggets. Five to 10 topics, give me two or three examples of what a
BombBomb is going to be about for you.
CC: It
could be an expired video, it could be like, for instance, our new Reno. Our
Reno Now, Pay Later program. It could be a quick overview about. It could be
education on new construction. We’re on a video series on new construction
right now, the lumber prices have increased. It could just be informative like
that. It could be around, “Hey, you’ve received a cash offer from
Zillow.” Or another iBuyer program. What do you do? What does that mean?
How does that compare? Strictly for educational purposes.
It could be our little commercial, “Hey, we want
to invite you to Bingo.” This past one, I did a video to invite them to
the cooking class, which was chicken cacciatore. We were cooking and I just did
a little 30-second “I can’t wait to see you guys there.” and we’re
cooking Italian.
Paul: I love it. For that particular video, did you have a professional chef do the cacciatore?
CC: Yes.
Paul: It’s not CC cooking?
CC: No,
you would not want CC to cook.
Paul: Then you get a professional chef. How do you get the professional chef
to do it?
CC: I
want to say he had done it before, that was one of his little pivots, and I
knew him. He used to run be the chef of a local restaurant. We reached Johnsey.
I knew he made meals and so we went to him we’re like, “Hey, we would love
to have–” At first we were thinking it would be a date night. Now, we’re
not calling it date night, it’s just called a virtual cooking class. It goes
over much better. What we’re finding is we do get a lot of people that will
RSVP. Then, we typically have around anywhere from five to 10 people that show
up, actually show up. That they buy their ingredients.
It’s your own cooking class so he’s at his house in
his kitchen, we’re all at our house at our kitchens and we have the
ingredients. He’s interactive. He’s like, “You’re going to cut it like
this.” He’s asking people, he’s like, “Show me your dish. What do you
have?” questions. It’s very engaging. If someone wants to ask questions
separate from the dish, that are just cooking questions, “Hey, I want to
cook something like this. What would you suggest? I can’t get this right.”
Paul: Wow, you’re giving me great ideas already. Here’s another taste of
reality that I’m not sure I would have thought to ask you. I’m so glad you said
it. That is, you’re doing all this outreach, you’re sending this video out,
you’re creating a BombBomb and it’s like, “Hey, I’m thinking about you.
We’re going to have our chef.” There’s this guy, I was thinking Chef Bobby
because it’s a guy I know, or Chef Jeffrey, Jeffrey Saad, is a guy I interviewed
for this Real Estate Rockstars. He’s a fabulous realtor also.
It’s like, “Hey, we’re having a virtual cooking
class with Chef Jeffrey Saad.” You’re doing all this outreach and guess
what– You’ve got a machine that has done 219 closed units here today, and you’re
working with eight or nine people that show up. I’m going to be honest, if I do
that class, and I didn’t hear this podcast, and I didn’t hear it from you, and
I did all that stuff, and then I get there, and now, it’s my first one. If you
have nine, I’m going to have three or four. I’m like, “Geez, I got Jeffrey
Saad here cooking.” I ran out and bought the ingredients, I’m going to
cook with him, and I got four people, this is a waste of time. That’s what I’d
be afraid of.
Now, it’s amazing to hear you say you’re crushing it
and you’re getting eight or nine. Talk to me about that.
CC: It’s
not about who shows up. It’s never about who shows up. It’s never about the
event itself. You’re offering people an opportunity to connect with you. As we
talk about, it’s all about the connections. This is a contact sport. We’re
reaching out three to four times promoting the events. Then the ones that show
up, we get really great engagement. They’re happy, they’re relaxed, they’re in
their home. Really, we just want to connect with them on something that they
like to do.
It might be a different set of people. It might be a
different set of 10 people that show up for Bingo and a different set of 10
people that show up for Trivia. As you’re finding out what your database
likes– We did a sports theme. We’re trying to change it up. It’s just reinvent
it every single time, change it up. I say this all the time, there’s no
substitute for a face-to-face, no substitute. If you don’t like the door knock
then get those people on Zoom, get them engaging.
You could pick anything you want. It could be a craft
class, it could be, learn to use a dang cricket machine. “Hey, you want to
be crafty at your home and you have a cricket, we’re going to have a cricket
expert.” It’s one of those lasers. You could truly find little niches
within your database to have little fun classes like this. You know what,
people bring their kids on too. They play Bingo with us. The kids are in the
kitchen. It’s really cool, just creating that family environment, and watching
everyone do something as a family together. [chuckles]
Paul: Boy oh, boy. Seriously, I’m so glad that I caught on to that because my
takeaway, and I’ve written it down, and I’m sure I’ll put it in our Instagram
blast for this show, was it’s never about who shows up, it’s about giving the
opportunity to connect or giving your audience the opportunity to connect.
Here’s the cool thing, again, think about yourself as the receiving end of
this. I’m like, “I get the 52 newsletters from CC, okay, that’s cool. Now,
I get a personal invite, maybe, it’s a slide dial followed up with a text or
whatever. It’s saying, “Hey, I’m having a cooking class with this really
cool chef on Saturday night. Here’s the ingredient list. Go around and buy this
stuff. We’ll see you Saturday night.”
Now, I look at that and I go, “No, not doing
it.” I might not even text back and say, “Thanks for thinking of
me.” but I do think in my heart, “Thanks for thinking of me.” I
really do. I’m just talking about me, you could send me 10, 15 of those. I may
never even say, “Thanks,” but I’m like, “You know what? She’s
cool. That’s cool. I’m not into Bingo. I’m not going to cook. I’m going to go
out with my girlfriend on Saturday night, da da da da.” but I’m like,
“That is cool.” How many events are you doing?
CC: We
had 10. We had 10 scheduled, we had to change every single event, post-COVID.
Paul: 10 events a year?
CC: Yes.
I think we had maybe seven or eight last year so we had 10 planned. Once COVID
hit that was again, that’s all part of real estate, something happens, you have
to change what you do, figure it out. We went virtual. Everything we’ve been
doing, the ones that got canceled, baseball games, we typically do baseball
games, that got canceled. That’s where virtual has taken the place. We have
fall family photos that are coming up. We’re still doing the pie giveaway. Then
we actually do a ‘Huge Cookies with Santa’ event every single year and we have
over 300 people that show up. That one actually, it’s for our customers and our
community. That’s the two-part farming event that we do.
Of course, we can’t have 300 people in a tiny little
space with Santa [laughs] so our team came up with the idea of having a
Christmas movie. It’s a golf cart community so a drive-in Christmas show where
we’re going to give them popcorn and little tiny Santa bags, and we’re going to
watch a Christmas movie, all outside, distance.
Paul: Oh, wow. I love it. Now, these aren’t in-person events, just a
question, do you think moving that number from 10 up to let’s say 24 makes
sense? So that now, I’m curating an event and you can do it a little less
hands-on because I understand your cooking class, you’re actually going out,
you’re buying the ingredients, you’re there at your house, the chef is cooking
alongside of you. That’s super cool. I’m going to try that. I’m going to give that
tip to Jeffrey Saad, who’s my famous chef friend who’s a great realtor in LA.
Now, I would want to push this to once every two weeks because people are
really looking for things to do. Do you
think that makes sense or is that just too much or?
CC: I
think if you were so great with your database that it was segmented that you
were able to start to tag and filter people with what they wanted, we are
nowhere close to that. I think with the amount of touches where I say we don’t
want them to overlap, we need time to market and touch, then set up the
Eventbrite links, get the registration, send it. For our process, we’re doing
about two things a month however, they’re not two events. It’s a giveaway for
the rewards club and then a virtual event. We’ve got a giveaway a virtual
event. There’s that constant communication but again, we’re not sure what’s too
much. At this point, they are engaging, and we are getting referrals, that’s
where we are right now.
Paul: We’ve talked a lot about the virtual event, talk to me, because another
big part of what you’re doing is the giveaway, tell me more about the giveaway.
How do I do it? What does that look
like? Who am I giving stuff away to? How are they qualifying? How are you
figuring out who wins the Apple watch? That sounds expensive.
CC: Not
really I think the Apple watch was $500 or something.
Female Speaker 3: No.
CC: What
was it?
Female Speaker 3: I think
Paul: Sure.
CC: 250.
Okay sorry, I don’t buy that–
Paul: from the invisible.
CC: Yes.
In fact the main woman, director of operations, she won’t let me spend $500 on
that. I don’t know what I was thinking. We had one that was that Apple watch,
we also gave away a Roomba. When you’re thinking about giveaways and it’s always
fun to know the disasters from giveaways. We did a call-in to win and the Apple
watch, I don’t wear watches, so I didn’t know how much people like them. We had
people that were dialing one after the other, after the other, we had like 3000
calls coming into a Google Voice number in a couple of hours, it was insanity.
That one did not have the desired effect of us wanting to talk to 100 people
and ask them for referrals though that was the goal.
We now know next time we give away an Apple watch,
their little behinds are going to fill out an entry form. You want to fill it
out 3000 times, be my guest, we want an entry form for that. For database, we
gave away a Roomba and that’s really what it is. You can design it however you
want. Every state has different laws when it comes for giveaways and referral.
Say you want to manage that here in Florida, you cannot be “Entered to
win” it has to be a, I forget the word, but it can’t be a lottery. Here
technically you can’t do a lottery. It’s very skill-based, is the word I was
looking for. They have to answer your question correctly, they have to be the
100th caller, something like that. Be the 100th entry.
That’s how we’re able to stay within our guidelines
and rules for the giveaways. They don’t have to give a referral to win
something. We’re very, very clear, and we actually have program guidelines. We
have a playbook that is written out specifically with pictures, here’s what you
can say, here’s what you cannot say. Anyone in the marketing role can follow
that rulebook and know what they can do, but the whole purpose of we call the
reverse 100 is the goal to get 100 people to call us. We would to call us.
Paul: Wow,
CC: We
do that, our goal is twice a year, no less than twice a year. Ideally,
quarterly and then monthly– Those are just random giveaways. We’ve got a
budget of $300 a month that maybe we’ll give away TPC tickets. We will do movie
tickets, we’ll give away Orlando Disney ride or Adventure Landing. We’re giving
people things that they can use to create an experience. It’s not like,
“Here, we’re going to give you a gift card.” No, what we’re giving
away is something that you can actually use, and you’re going to remember.
Paul: I love it. Wow. What I can learn from this is amazing. I need to do
more and more of these interviews with more people like you because I get
smarter every time I do one of these, this is great, thank you. One of the
things you said was if you did the Apple watch thing again you would do an
entry form because then you’re capturing data. I understand that. What would the entry form ask for? It would
say name, it would say address, or phone number, email, how do you prefer to be
contacted and what else? What, if anything else?
CC: Not
addresses. We’ll probably just do; name, phone number, email, do you have a
real estate need? Done. Very, very simple.
Paul: All right. I love it. You want to get a hundred callers to call in, so how are you advertising? How are you
getting a hundred callers to call in?
CC: I
would say your gift matters, your giveaway matters, know, your audience know
that. big is better or you have to think, what would somebody want that they
wouldn’t buy for themselves for the most part? Technology things are always
really cool, and let’s say Roombas are expensive, those little robot things and
everybody wants one. We advertise on Facebook, we do live broadcasts, leave a
voicemail, we send a text message, they get the email, it’s in our weekly
emails, “Hey, we’re doing a giveaway,” and if it’s a public giveaway
you will run a Facebook ad for it, just for that extra boost, when we’re doing
it for the public.
Paul: How many of these are just to your
database, your sphere, and how many are to the public?
CC: We
do a lot to our database. We have once a month, minimum of 12 giveaways for our
database, and we did one call-in to win which was the Roomba. We will likely do
another one before the end of the year or entry.
Paul: When you do the call-in to win, you might
have just said this, but when you do the call-in to win is that to your
database or is that to the public or it could be either?
CC: It
would be both. Preferably if it’s your database, you do want your database to
call you, but again, you need people to man the phones, you’ve got logistics to
think about there. The timeframe you could, “Hey, call in between 12:00
and 4:00.”
Paul: What are they saying when they call in,
when you have the people answering the phone?
CC: “Hey,
thanks for calling blah blah blah,” and they’ll say your normal intro
script and all right, get your name, they verify, it’s the same thing that
would be in the entry form. What is your name?
Paul: What’s your intro script?
CC: I’ve
got it written, I’ve written it down.
Paul: I love it. You’re a phenom at this, you’re amazing, and when I asked
you for your intro script you say, “Hey let me check it out, let me read
it.” I love that because I love how real you are and the amount of
businesses you do and the experience and you’re saying, “Hey we got this
wrong,” or “Oh you want my simple basic script? Hang on I have to
actually get it so I can read it.” That’s cool, I love it.
CC: It
is really simple, I can tell you. It’s probably something like– We know, we
have a tracking number so if they’re calling, we know why they’re calling.
That’s really important, that’s how we knew we had 3000 people in a very little
time. It was tracked. Better Voice was the system that we were using to track
to get those numbers. You definitely want to have multiple people on there.
“Hey, it’s a great day,” you can use your regular intro scripts,
“It’s a great day to sell on the CC team. CC, how may I help you?
“Hey, I’m calling about the Apple watch.” “Oh, great, fantastic
let me get your information. What’s your name, what’s your email, your best
email, or your phone number?”
If it’s for your database and you are on a team, one
question I would ask was, “Who is your agent?” Then, “Great
we’ve got you down. Thanks so much for entering. Oh, by the way, our team has a
massive goal to sell homes, who do you know that’s looking to buy or sell real
estate that we could talk to?That’s how we casually, I always say, say it
casual with purpose is, “Oh by the way our team has a really big goal, who
do you know is looking to buy or sell?”
Those are the very few times when we would ask. We’re
giving them something and a lot of times agents are like, “I don’t want to
ask because I feel like I’m using them. I’m just calling to ask for a
referral.” No, now you’re giving something of value to them, it’s much
easier to get off the phone and say, “Oh by the way, who do you
know?” If they say yes or no– The idea is to have purposeful conversations,
and after they say yes or no or give the name, “Thank you so much. I hope
you win. Have a great day.”
Paul: You pick the winner randomly or you pick
the people you like the most?
CC: Depending
on your state, again, it does need to be skill-based, so for us if we’re saying
you need to be the 100th caller and unique, we learned that was a purposeful
word, 100th unique caller so they don’t call again, or we’re looking for the
100th entry. You could enter the script, “Hey, you’re entry number
54.” Whoever is calling you want to make sure they’re keeping a tally on
which number they truly are.
Paul: Got it. These are amazing notes I’m getting. Is there any other
technology that you haven’t mentioned that you use, that you find very useful?
You said Home Voice, again, that one, I don’t know-
CC: Better
Voice.
Paul: -Home Voice. What does that do
for you?
CC: Better
Voice, it’s like a Google Voice number. You can choose your area code and it
will help choose a phone number for you.
Paul: Okay. I got a text message from you because you’re so great, after the
last time we did a webinar and it had a LA number.
CC:
[chuckles] LA number?
Paul: Yes. You texted me from an LA number. I was like, “Wow, what’s
this?” Okay. That’ll remain a curiosity, but okay.
CC: I
like
Paul: Understood. What’s one issue
that you’re currently dealing with? What’s one problem that if we’re able to
solve it, it would make your business a lot better or easier or more fun?
What’s a pain point?
CC: Pain
point for us right now, of course, less things. I think, like a lot of people
right now, the shortage of inventory. Being creative, we’re mailing out love
letters to neighborhoods for buyers that we can’t find homes, really just
pulling out all the stops, having ISAs, doing whatever we can. Have, people
call old expireds, for the buyers that we currently need homes from, “Hey,
you never sold your home, but we actually have a buyer looking in your price
point and your neighborhood. Would you still want to sell to them
directly?”
The mailers have actually gotten us a couple of
listings or we’ve directly put buyers under contract with home. A lot of
off-market sales are going on right now, listings. You know someone that needs
to sell their home in Amelia Island or Jacksonville.
Paul: I love it. What’s one thing that if you could do a redo on as a realtor
getting from your first year of seven houses sold to right now, what’s something in that 13 years that you
would do as a redo?
CC: We
haven’t missed [crosstalk] I would say probably my most important lesson, and I
say this, I would stop comparing. I wouldn’t have compared myself. I wouldn’t
have looked at everyone else’s business and thought, “Hey, I need to do
that.” I really didn’t know who I was as a realtor. I was like, “Oh,
I need to be like them. I need to buy this CRM and pay $3,000 a month and get a
1000 leads that I had no business.” I was never going to be able to call
those people, just, “Hey, I’m going to do it, I’m going to do it.” It
was awful knowing I was not going to be that person.
I’ve always been a marketer. If I would have, like you
said, find your passion, find your strengths. If I was true to that in the very
beginning, be in a different place, much faster.
Paul: Interesting. Staying true to who you are, I just call that being in
your superpower, figuring out what is your superpower and staying with that,
instead of trying to be– Look around and I see people that do one thing great,
or another thing great, sure, we can take lessons from them however, knowing
what you’re really good at versus what somebody else is good at, makes all the
difference in the world.
CC: It’s
very different and I’ve found even growing a team, when I got to that point
where I could finally grow a team through the ways other people were growing a
team, I was miserable, they were miserable. You could just tell no one wanted
to do it that way.
Paul: Another way to do it, and maybe you’ve answered this, really is, what
advice would you give yourself as a rookie agent, but maybe it’s, stay true to
yourself, or do you have another answer to that?
CC: Yes,
definitely, stay true to yourself. It’s good advice, know who you are. You
don’t have to laugh about or you don’t have to be the professional realtor,
right? You need to be you, just be authentic, be smart. Go educate yourself. Be
the best that you can at what you want to do.
Paul: Being a phenomenal realtor alone does not get you the business that you
need to do, that you need to have. That’s why when I do these interviews, I’m
so on it in terms of how do you get your business? How can we learn? What can
we learn more to get more business? No matter how many tips you give, by the
way, I always give my tips out publicly because so few people actually do it.
You could get more agent referral business by doing a podcast like this,
sharing all of your secrets than you will, creating some sort of competitive
issue. I love your willingness on that, for sure. Is there anything I didn’t
ask you that you feel is good information to a very broad Real Estate
Rockstar audience?
CC: I
think the one thing that has been my business mantra is, “Where people
flee, I will go.” and I use that a lot. It is when the majority has an
opinion, I am going to be the first person to interrogate it and figure out
why, and is there a way that I can gain some leverage from that. It’s a smaller
space. The same thing happens with COVID, when the business changes, okay,
well, everyone at that point, just stopped. Everyone did nothing. When the
majority is like, “Okay, well, I have to do something. Not doing anything,
it’s just not an option.”
We even had that conversation with our team. This
isn’t an option. We need to change our events. We have to do something and move
forward for peace of mind, for sanity, to keep us focused on moving forward.
Even if it’s something tiny, change your business. Our model has changed every
couple of years and it’ll continue to change.
Paul: I love it. Why don’t I just ask
you what’s a way our audience can get in touch with you? Maybe your Instagram,
social media, that sort of thing, because I’d love to follow you and learn more
about what you’re doing day-to-day? What’s a good venue for that?
CC: I
would say connect with me on Facebook. My personal Facebook, CC Underwood, it
does have little dots in there, but there’s really no dots in my name. Connect
with me on Facebook. It would be the absolute best, or certainly, you guys can
email me at CC, which is Charlie Charlie@sellingwithcc.com. Those are the two
best places. I’m actually a very private person so you’re not going to get a
whole lot from seeing, but definitely connect with me and I’m happy to share
and just do what I can to help your business.
Paul: Sure. I love it. So gracious, for somebody that does the amount of
business that you do, really cool. You can find me at Paul Mark Morris, which
is M-A-R-K, Morris, M-O-R-R-I-S. You can find me on Facebook, on Instagram
where I’m spending more and more time. I’m going to figure out, TikTok. Yes,
I’ll get on the TikTok dance club, I guess. Of course, Real Estate Rockstars
Podcast YouTube channel, and Instagram. We’re going to post all of that
stuff. Our editor will go in and help me out with all that stuff as well. We
ask everybody to give a free gift, which I saw that you sent in, but I didn’t
have time to click on it and figure out what is it. You’ll tell us what’s the
free gift.
CC: It’s
going to be our touch plan that we talked about today. You can see exactly how
we budget and allocate what those gifts were for our giveaways. You’re going to
be able to see everything, our events, and the giveaway. We’re going to send
that out to everyone.
Paul: Wow. That is massively generous of you to do, and really, really
appreciate it because it’s really lifting up the realtors and our audience,
really, really useful. We’ll post that as well in our giveaway section. Thank
you so much. I really appreciate it.
CC: Thank
you.
Paul: Real Estate Rockstars another great interview. I just think that you
can’t go wrong listening to CC Underwood and incorporating some of these
things. If you have any referrals and in Jacksonville, I know where I’m going
to send mine. There you go. I love it. Thank you very much.
CC: Bye.