- Florida’s coronavirus restrictions [1:38]
- Florida’s real estate markets stay strong [3: 17]
- How to build trust with potential clients [4:14]
- Why trust must be earned [7:13]
- Where to start with a potential client [10:09]
- The no-pressure approach to sales [11:41]
- How Robert won real estate rookie of the year [14:53]
- How to win your first few deals [17:33]
- Robert’s real estate niche [22:53]
- The book that quadrupled Robert’s sales [27:53]
- Good Talk, Great Sales by Robert Paolini [34:33]
- The four pillars of communication [37:18]
- A revised hierarchy of needs [40:03]
- Robert’s real estate training philosophy [43:06]
- Plus, so much more.
Related Links and Resources:
- Grow Your Real Estate Profits with Our Agent Success Toolbox
- Take Over $13,000 in Real Estate Courses for Just $97
- Enroll in Pat Hiban’s 6 Weeks to 7 Figures Course
- Real Estate Resources
- Good Talk, Great Sales by Robert Paolini
- Ninja Selling by Robert Kendall
- Email Robert
Aaron: Rockstar Nation, this is Aaron Amuchastegui. Hey, I’m so excited to get
to interview Robert Paolini from Florida today. Robert and I recently
connected. He’s a new member of GoBundance. He has been doing real estate
stuff. He has developed an awesome real estate book and curriculum and some
different things that he’s really been trying to impact the world and impact
real estate offices everywhere. I’m super excited to get into it. Robert,
thanks for joining me.
Robert: Thank you so much, Aaron. I am very excited to be on the show.
Aaron: It’s so cool to have you right now. What city are you from in Florida?
Robert: Palm Harbor.
Aaron: Palm Harbor. We were joking before we started recording that I’ve heard
right now that Florida is the place to be. It’s the most important election
state, I’ve heard a time or two recently. My understanding when I see in the
news, life is somewhat back to normal in Florida. Are things operating as it
was pre-COVID, is it like that? What’s the real story?
Robert: It is today, but who knows. If the numbers fly out of control, they’ll
cut off the restaurants again, but as of a week ago, yes, the restaurants
opened like normal. It’s just masks are mandatory wherever you go. Texas I’ve
heard we share in that it’s a great place to go and invest, especially in real
estate and we’re sharing the same gulf.
Aaron: Texas is similar stuff right now, everything is open. We’ve got your
masks when you’re walking into the restaurant. It’s been interesting. A lot of
our listeners know that about three months ago, I started an RV trip with my
family and we went from Texas up through Oklahoma and all the way up to South
Dakota and Iowa, and Missouri. I got to do some interviews with real estate
agents along the way. It has been really interesting to see the different parts
of the US, and how COVID has been impacting them, whether it became to how we’d
reacted to COVID or businesses, or people moving and changing their mindsets
and things like that.
We went into some states where there was no masks, no
social distancing, it was business as usual, and went to other places where
everything was completely shut down. Places where people were very much
struggling because they couldn’t go to work. There’s plenty of jobs out there
that people can do remotely and there are plenty of jobs out there that people
just can’t do remotely. What have you seen with the real estate market in
Florida over the last year?
Robert: I’ve actually seen it boom, and more so in the last six months. In
fact, from the end of March until the end of September, I had the best run of
real estate sales of any part of my career since I’d started in 2015. I
attribute a lot of that to the relationships I’ve built, which we’ll get into,
which is part of the philosophy of the book I wrote Good Talk Great Sales,
which was such a huge launch, but I wasn’t alone. When the dust settled, I
looked around and yes, some people that didn’t have those relationships built
didn’t see a spike, but overall statistically with interest rates being low and
like many other states inventory being low, it’s keeping a really high demand
on real estate for sure.
Aaron: Tell me about that. Relationships is something that you’ve been
pitching and talking to, it’s important to you. How did that convert into huge
business? Half of our listeners have had a huge business boom since COVID and
half of them have really struggled to figure out what to do next. What was the key? What did that
relationship do? How did that turn into a sale?
Robert: I think when everyone’s in a crisis and you’ve got that fight or flight
issue, I think the biggest value is trust because people are afraid. People
don’t know what to do, if they should, why they should. If someone’s using
Webbate, or advertisements, or even door knocking, or cold calling, you’re not
really breaking the threshold of that trust factor in the eyes of the consumer,
but when you have a relationship, when people trust that you have the capacity
to do what you say you do, and they already trust you and they already know you
and like you, it really sets the tone for transactions.
Even if they aren’t even sure if they’re going to do
it, they just want to know if they can. The moment that reality hits that they
can, if they can, then they’re ready to move right away. It’s trust that fuels
those reactions when you have relationships.
Aaron: Do you have any ideas of a quick way to build trust? If somebody trusts
you because somebody else told them, “Hey, you got to go talk to
Robert.” You’re having a conversation with a new client now in this world,
what are some of the things that someone
can do to try to build trust early?
Robert: That is a very good question. The short answer is you can’t do it that
fast. I’ll give you an example. Let’s say my wife, for example. We’ve been
happily married for almost 17 years, but if she would have come up to me and I
went up to her the moment I first saw her and said, “Hey, beautiful, will
you marry me and spend the rest of your life with me?” She probably would
have just run for the hills and we wouldn’t be married today. Trust is
something that I think has to be earned, that has to be learned. In real
estate, there’s this thing called know, like, and trust. I always in my
trainings, I’m asking agents of the three what’s most important and almost
always they say trust.
An overall 30,000-foot view, trust is the number one
factor, but you can’t go in there trying to get trust first, because then
you’ll look shady. You’ll be the car salesman, the mechanic, and they’re really
not going to– they’ll see right through it. If you’re being honest, you
probably aren’t being truthful because you have to know more about that person
to truly deliver what they need and then earn that trust. The key of all of
those three things know, like and trust is if you want to build trust with your
clients, with your database, with your sphere of influence, do things that are
you and that are help them to get them to like you, be yourself.
Just add value as far as earning the likability,
having fun with them, whether you’re showing houses, or you’re at a listing
appointment, you’re not nervous, it’s not all about the numbers. I’m always
trying to crack jokes. I’m always seeking ways to make people laugh because I
know once they get to know the real me, and they like me, then the rest is a
slam dunk, the trust will come.
Aaron: Like that. The trust is the goal or trust is maybe the most valuable
thing that you can have in times of crisis. I love that as yes, in times of crisis
people need trust because they’re uncertain and they’re uncomfortable and
they’re going to go with who they can trust. Trust isn’t something you can
manufacture. You can’t buy that. You can’t make it there. You said know, like,
and trust. First, they need to know you and that’s going to be from all sorts
of different outreach. You said at the beginning, when you’re doing that
outreach, they can’t trust you yet, because you don’t even know who they are
yet. Then they need to like you, and you’re saying that the biggest way to get
people like is just to be yourself. Do
you do any extra outreach? Do you have certain conversations that you do,
anything that you do to remind your sphere who you are so they like you?
Robert: Absolutely. The first thing I do when I meet with a client, especially
a seller is I’m trying to identify if they can sell their home and if they can
reach that goal. Most agents would walk in there and just either nervous or
bold enough just to try to get them to hire them. They’re not even thinking
about what the client needs, what’s best for the client, so they build up this
pressure, and coincidentally, they can’t be themselves, and half the time they
don’t even know it. They’re nervous or they’re thinking about, “Well, all
that matters is I get them to sign this listing agreement before I go.” It
alters every bit of their behavior along the way. The goal is to set it up to
where all you’re trying to do is discover exactly what their story is, what
they need and increase that likability just by being yourself.
I don’t even actually bring any documents, including
an actual listing agreement to my listing appointments, because I know they can
change their mind the next day, I haven’t really got anything started. I want
to release the pressure off them and make it about the first step of our
relationship and I have to know every bit of their story. Then I come back to
them with a recipe for success and that makes my feeling easier from the
beginning. It makes the process with them at their house more effective and
more transparent, and just stressless altogether. In the end, it sets the tone
for relationships down the road and referrals, upon referrals, upon referrals.
Aaron: I like that.
Aaron: All right. I like the no-pressure approach to sales, so that’s
definitely a mindset now. Is there a transition point for that? Right now it’s
the first outreach, it’s the first appointment. “Hey, what do you want to
do? Then do you just play it by ear, do you wait for them to reach back out to
you? Do you have some specific steps
that you try to follow or is everything different?
Robert: No, in fact, the process of the listing appointment is very precise and
it’s the same for every single person, and there’s a call to action at the end.
The mindset I’m trying to create is almost a sense of fear that they’re afraid
I’ll forget to send them the listing agreement to sign. I already know the basic
coverages of the listing agreement that they’re probably concerned about. Like,
when are we going to start, with dates, inclusions, exclusions, the price. To
be honest with you, commission is a big part of it, but I almost never get
asked that. I just tell them at the end and it’s something I don’t have to
rebuttal, which is another beautiful thing about my process, because I’ve been
asked by dozens of agents how I do rebuttal the commission, and they look at
it, or they look at me like I’m a really good salesman and that’s why, but I’m
actually not.
I’ve only had two jobs my whole life where I’m
actually doing sales. It’s more or less if I did my job right in discovering
what they need and what the problem is, or what the goal is. I’ve labeled back
to them that I know that, but not directly, then and I have some transparency
in the whole process to them where they understand and come almost headlights
on your car at night, they don’t like you from point A to point B. They just
get you from turn to turn. Once I’ve set the tone for that, and I’ve conveyed
to them the process that will help them achieve the specific goal, or solve the
specific problem we’ve talked about, then the commission doesn’t even matter.
What they’re looking for is to achieve that goal with that process and make
that profit, which is the sale price minus the commission and fees.
Aaron: They want to know what they’re going to end up with. They want to know,
“Hey, my neighbor sold their house for this. My neighbor sold their house
for $350,000? Does that mean I’m going to walk away $350,000?” You say,
“Well, no, it’s not quite like that.” I guess most people they
understand that, but if you can take control of that situation, it gets to
remove the questions from that. I like that you’re answering some of the
questions ahead of time, and you say if you’ve done your job right, then you
don’t have to do the rebuttal because there isn’t a rebuttal. When did you get your license?
Robert: In 2015 actually, in the very beginning. In fact, I started with Keller
Williams in 2015, but I failed my test the first time I took it, which was a
few days before Christmas, actually. In 2014, that Christmas, as you can
imagine, it was quite depressing, but I rallied and I passed it right after
before the new year and started with Keller Williams right away and ended up
becoming the 2015 Rookie of the Year.
Aaron: That was out in Florida?
Robert: Yes.
Aaron: What was your first-year like? How did you
get to be Rookie of the Year?
Robert: I come from a 13-year stick of the indoor-tanning industry, and being
in Florida people might think that’s a little strange, but–
Aaron: I would not have thought that actually existed out there.
Robert: With people’s busy lifestyle, but the desire to hold the standard of a
tan here in Florida, it worked, in 13 years quite a bit. We worked it up to
about four different locations within an hour of each other. I think that set
the tone for the relationship part of things because if I had to start from
scratch, I don’t think we’d be talking right now because calling people that
don’t know me just to upset them in the hopes that I get one person that will
take it to the finish line with me wasn’t worth it.
The first six months of my first year, I was trying to
tap into that, but lo and behold, even the know and like wasn’t that good on
the trust with something that was different than what people knew me for the
last 13 years. It was a slow start. In fact, the first six months I only sold
three properties, but it only took a few victories. Of course, the timing was
good, and middle of 2015 we were riding the bell curve like we’re going up a
roller coaster. I just drove the momentum, and from the last six months, I sold
another 20 homes and ended up finishing my first year with 23. Then that’s how
I did it.
Aaron: I like that. You took your sphere and your relationships that you’d
have from a previous job if I heard this right. It’s people that you met in the
tan industry, those are the people that you started to reach out to and said,
“Hey, I’m an agent now.” Because they know, and they liked you. It
made the conversation starter a little bit easier. That’s even as similar as
somebody on Facebook going, “Hey, I’m a real estate agent now.” Just
getting the word out to their friends, like, “Hey, I know you guys knew me
from this, but now I’m doing this.” The one hurdle that you saw at the
beginning was because you hadn’t done any deals yet, you were a rookie. They
were like, “Hey, that’s great that you’re doing real estate now, but I’m
not going to be your first guy.”
Like, “Yes, I know and like you, but I want
somebody that’s actually good at real estate, and you’re not good at real
estate yet. Then once you’ve done a few, now he’s good at real estate.”
Then it really took off. For those first three, how do you get those first three people, they know and they like you
from other stuff, but they don’t trust you yet because you’re not in real
estate? How do you get them over the fear that you’re not going to be good at
real estate? I think so many of our listeners are new agents like that.
They are reaching out to the people that they know from their kid’s school, or
somewhere else, and they’re saying, “Hey, I’m an agent now.” How do
you overcome them saying, “Yes, but you’re a new agent.”
Robert: That was tough, but I think if anything, it was their mindset. They
just didn’t have as much of a fear, like the one gentlemen is my mentor still
to this day and I’ve probably sold another 10 properties just because of him.
He had a $500,000 home that he asked me to sell, and that was the biggest trust
factor I felt. He was also the reason why I decided not to bring listing
agreements to the listing appointments because I sat with him knowing that he
called me to do this, even though he knew it was my first house I ever sold,
and yet he wanted to hold the listing agreement and read it over the weekend
before he signed it. I thought to myself if he is thinking that way, and he’s
giving me the trust to do a $500,000 deal, and he’s known me for years, then
maybe a lot of people will think like that.
I really don’t want that spinning in the back of their
mind while I’m talking to him, I’m trying to learn about them and me even worry
about what I’m supposed to do with my process, if that happens, or when it
happens. Ultimately, that deal was listed and it sold. The other two were
buyers that were actually customers. They didn’t actually know me well enough
to actually be afraid. On the selling side of things, there’s a little less
risk, but the likability part and me being myself and making jokes and walking
around with them and being excited to be there with them and not have a poor
attitude and stuff, I think that made the whole experience better. Then that
ultimately gave me the confidence to market and then do better and try to learn
more and offer and add more value.
Aaron: I really like that. I like the idea of saying, “Hey, people are
going to want to take the time to read something.” It’s almost like it
would kill your chances of a listing, or if they signed it, they would regret
it. There’s a chance that it would hurt that trust. Like, “Hey, you got
them to sign something without giving them chance.” One of the epic ways
you got that trust is doing there. One of the things that Pat Hiban talked about
when I interviewed him on here was taking those first couple of deals and
trying to say like, “Oh yes.” Once you did a deal for somebody, he
was able to say, “Oh yes, I do all the firefighters.” Or I know that
one or it was teachers. He sold a house for a teacher and then he got to tell
them, “Oh, I sell all the houses for the teachers.”
Did you see anything like
that that became your specialty? Was there something that you
got that started to fill a niche that way, or was it just you kept pushing out
the effort letting everyone know your agents and they came from all walks of
life?
Robert: It is the latter. In fact, I haven’t actually niched my process until
recently because the best thing I can offer somebody, and the way I title
myself is I am a real estate marketing and sales expert. My key is, in fact, my
website is called geteverypenny.com. It doesn’t even sound like real estate but
what do people fear the most if you want to sell their house or what do they
want the most? It’s to get every penny. That’s the goal. The fear is that they
would leave money on the table. I’m definitely niching that down as a sales and
marketing platform to cut through the noise of the saturated “ugly
houses” in the market and use the transparency of the new real estate world
to their advantage and not a disadvantage.
Aaron: How many deals would you do in a year now?
Robert: I probably average around 50. I’m getting ready to scale it up. I
average about 20 million a year. I’m probably at about, I’m a little lagging
behind now. I’m probably 15, 16 million. Just me and a buyer’s agent that I
have under me.
Aaron: Your whole team is you and a buyer’s agent?
Are you doing mostly listings?
Robert: Yes. That’s my forte.
Aaron: Listings is your forte. Most of it is or all of them coming from your
sphere or now some of them coming from your website and your new branding?
Robert: It’s all sphere and sphere depth. I’ve got a referral from the mother
of a couple that I sold their house that was referred to me from somebody else
that was referred to me from somebody else. We’re talking like, when you
advertise or you market or you have digital funnels or something, you’re
constantly performing actions to go wide, which take more of your time and
intentional and timely applications but with the seeds that I plant that you’ll
learn that people learn to plant by reading the book, you just constantly have
an inflow of the phone ringing of depth of all those other people I’ve served
before today. Yes, I would consider them still the sphere. Yes, zero of my deals
come from any random advertising or marketing.
Aaron: That’s awesome. One of the questions we usually ask people is other
than your sphere, how are you getting most of your listings? You’re saying
you’re working so hard at developing great relationships that you don’t need to
go hunting outside your sphere. You’re staying plenty busy within your sphere
and the people that are that referral base. You’re so much based on playing the
long game, building good relationships, building trust, that everything grows. What was the growth like from 2015 to now?
Did you gradually do more and more every year because of that? The first year
you said you did 20, how did you do on your next year?
Robert: It actually was pretty stagnant until 2018 because I didn’t really
“hit rock bottom” in my own world until the end of 2016. 2015 was
great. I thought 2015 was great, 2016 would just roll with that momentum and be
awesome. I had one deal that just had an awful situation happen. It threw me
for a loop. I was trying to correct it and I see some of the marketing within
my sphere, I just spent a lot of time trying to correct that. Once the dust
settled, I didn’t have any momentum for new leads. I finished 2016, I think the
last few months, I might have sold three houses.
It really caused me to think about am I happy here in
this office at this brokerage? Is the system that I thought was going to work
working? The answer was no. Actually, I finished my second year with roughly
the same amount of volume in sales. It was about 20 to 25 houses. For the next
year and the year before that in 2016, I probably did about 67 million in
volume, which isn’t bad but in Florida, your average purchase price is
$250,000. Agents are dime a dozen. There’s more agents within 100 miles from
where I am than there are bricks behind me. That was a huge uphill battle. I
was new to the industry.
Another caveat that comes from that is there’s a lot
of people in that boat. A lot of people just starting off that no people if
they died tomorrow, there’d be a ton of people at their funeral but they don’t
really have the money or the resources to start generating the income. You can
do it with who you know and what you have with where you are.
It wasn’t until I started with Berkshire Hathaway in
2017 where my new broker at the time, he’s still my broker, introduced me to a
book by Larry Kendall called Ninja Selling. I’m not sure if you’ve heard
of it. Ninja Selling changed everything for me because once I read it, I
realized that this was my ticket. This was the way that I could generate real
estate sales without the traditional cold calling or having a spin wheel to win
a prize at an open house or put your business card in a fishbowl. I wasn’t big
on the gimmicks. I wanted to be cut and dry with people and help them do what
they do. In turn, they would help me do what I do. Then from 2017, after I started
establishing Ninja Selling, part of the program is book reading. They
give you like 200 books.
I bought them all and I was reading number 15 and a
light bulb went off. I just started to put it all together and then I jumped
from I think maybe 6 million in year ’17 to 20 million all by myself. That’s
when I wrote the book because I realized, look, most people would assume that
if you’re like a Ken McElroy and you’ve been doing this for 40 years and
someone’s new, they might assume because they’re not him, they can’t do it. I’m
new, I just started and I’m afraid to even call up a stranger and ask if they
want to sell their house. If I can do it, anybody can do it. That’s the beauty
of Good Talk Great Sales.
Aaron: One of the things you talked about in your pre bio was having that
moment where enough was enough and deciding you need to make a change. Was that
it or was it the end of that year where you were like, “Hey, why am I
doing all this?” and then that made you jump into the new thing and start
doing the books? Was there anything else that really helped push you to start
really going up? It sounds like you got to a point where you said you’re going
to do whatever it takes.
Buying 200 books and reading 15 of them is really
getting into trying to– You were committed, if you were like five books in on
this thing, you got to be going like there’s 195 left on this plan. If you’ve
committed to something like that, you’re saying, “Hey, I’m going to
succeed in real estate.” You made a change of mindset and said no matter
what, this is going to be your career and you’re going to really work hard. Was there any other motivation behind that
or other things that helped? How did you get through 15 books?
Robert: Absolutely. By now, I’ve read all of them and plus some. That’s why I
had to write my own, which basically encompasses the best of all of them into a
real estate and sales relationship that also is buffered with negotiation
skills. Not the brutal kind but relationship building and networking. For me,
yes, there was a little bit of another element besides that one transaction.
Personally, 6, 7 million of volume is not bad. That’s low six figures and
coming out of the indoor tanning industry, it was fine. Coming towards the end
of that industry with four locations and there was just a lot going on
personally.
We had some debt, we had sales were going down, I was
really distracted because I still had the tanning salons up until the middle of
2017. I started to realize that this isn’t good. I’ve had the best couple of
years that I’ve had my whole life and I’m still struggling, I got to figure
this out. I got to a point where and I realized that people won’t do what they
should do just to get what they want, but they will when someone tells them
they can’t have what they need. I got to a point where I wasn’t worthy of the
house I lived in, the cars I drove, or the businesses I owned. I had to change.
I just told myself I would never do the same thing
again that I do every day ever again. I’ll wake up and start my day different,
I’ll think differently, I’ll dress differently, hence the bow tie Bobby. I
learned so much in reading those books, like the parasympathetic communication.
In other words, if you’re communicating to somebody in a way that there’s fight
or flight that they need to know whether you’re going to help them solve a
problem or achieve a goal.
55% of what you’re trying to get across is visual. You
got to look like you’re in the right spot. 38% is based on your tone and tempo
of your words and how when you’re gone, that’s how they’re going to perceive
it. 7% are the actual words that you say. Understanding that, I just wanted to
revamp everything and then I read another book, which you’ve probably heard of
because I think he’s a Go-bro, if not, he should be but Hal Elrod’s Miracle
Morning, that was it. Between Ninja Selling and The Miracle
Morning, I just from the first, actually, it’s been 1000 I think in 43 days
but since January 2 of 2018, I’ve run one to three miles every single day. I
still haven’t stopped. To this day, I think I’m at 1100 miles that I’ve run
just committing to the goal, knowing that why– Just reminds me of why I’m
running and the journey that I’m on. Yes, absolutely. My back was against the
wall. As difficult as it was and as crazy as it sounds, it was 100% worth it
and I would do it over again 100 times.
Aaron: I know Hal’s book, The Miracle Morning, that was a big part of
my story. Hal is one of the other members of our GoBundance masterminds. He’s a
good friend of mine, lives out in Austin. He has his own masterminds behind
that Miracle Morning community. He’s been on this podcast before. For
anyone out there listening, if you’re having trouble really getting motivated
or really if to find enough time in the day to do it, somebody be like,
“Hey, I want to do all that but I just can’t do all the things I need to
do,” his solution that he comes up with in that book is super inspiring.
He’s had millions of followers as a result that it has
really changed their life. I’ve met so many people that that was a turning
point moment. It was a turning point moment for me back in 2015, 2016 when I
read that in The Four-Hour Workweek. Robert, tell us now, let’s go into
more detail about your book. You said your book, you pretty much were reading
all the real estate books out there and then you went from 6 million to 20
million in a year.
You went from having an average/good role as a real
estate agent to a great production and it was from those books that you read.
You wrote your own book about how a guy like you can go from 6 million to 20,
from average to great. You took the best parts of those other books and
combined it. Just tell us about your book. What’s in it? How does it go through that process? If somebody goes and reads it,
what are they going to get out of it?
Robert: It’s in three stages. That’s a great question. One is the power of
thinking and how to think because everybody thinks their own way and it’s based
on quite a few things but success has a very particular way to think and look
at things. Then also that converts into mindset. Mindset has always been huge
for me. In fact, it started in 2005, both of my parents died of diseases that I
personally believe were brought on just by personal stresses that they just
took on their whole lives. They were in the hospitality business, managing and
heading large groups of people. They just weren’t big on processing that
stress.
My mother had ALS, Lou Gehrig’s disease, out of
nowhere and she was healthy and exercising her whole life. My father was a
health nut guru, in great shape. He had brain cancer and prostate cancer. I
just refuse to believe that that stuff was just so random. I just thought
mindset is the way and as I started, this was 2005 by the way, I was full-blown
in the tanning industry. I had never thought I would do real estate. Once I
started reading all those other books, a lot of them were mindset and a lot of
them were talking about how mindset works with the body and the actions we take
and the choices we make and what we’re willing to do, what we’re not willing to
do.
I focused on that. I focused on the programming. If I
kept printing a sheet of paper that had an error in it, it would not be smart
of me to keep erasing the printed paper every single time I printed one out. It
would be better to go right to the source, change it, and all the prints after
that would be better. I know there’s elements involved in real estate sales and
even marketing that require a little bit of an edge above and beyond being the
Mother Teresa of real estate where I’m just so happy and there’s no problem and
it’s like I’m burning incense or something. It’s more or less being honest with
myself and others to identify the need and come up with a solution that’s best
for them.
That is the gist of the book. Even the chapter about
negotiating, a lot of people, just the word negotiating, you almost have to be
a Harvard debate champion or graduate from some big sales school or have this
intimidating demeanor. To be honest with you, good talk has an acronym, the TALK,
and it stands for truth, attention, listening, and kindness. Those are the four
pillars of all communication, including in its most impactful in negotiating
and it’s so passive-aggressive that the other person usually doesn’t even know
what’s happening.
I got that from a book called Never Split the
Difference by Chris Voss, who is a beast. He is a beast. Negotiating for
him is we’re talking international espionage but I translated it to with
mirroring and labeling and we can get into that too with the client that just
lets them– I also call it speaking without words. It’s almost implying that
you understand using techniques like that. Even things like negotiating, which
are so impactful, I needed to get the information out to the world that says
you can do it this way and really succeed.
Aaron: I love that too. Chris Voss’s book, Never Split the Difference.
He was an FBI negotiator. He’s a hostage negotiator. So many times somebody
says, “Hey, I’ll offer you 190.” You go, “No, I want 200. Let’s
split the difference for that, 195.” When he was negotiating for lives, he
couldn’t say, “Hey, that person needs to come to me alive.” They
couldn’t say, “I’ll give you half the hostage back.” That was the
whole concept of he had to win every negotiation 100%.
For you guys out there thinking some of this, checking
out that book as well. Bobby, you have sent us over so many different things
we’re going to get to share with everybody in our Real Estate Rockstars
toolbox. In there, you’ve got some downloadable book on there, you’ve got some
different kinds of forms, some mindset exercises, some things like that. Tell
us about some of the stuff that people will be able to go download and get out
of the toolbox from your system.
Robert: Awesome. Yes, absolutely. The mindset one I think is great because, to
be honest, nobody wakes up in the morning with the agenda to just cause a
ruckus in their life. They don’t wake up going, you know what? I’m going to cut
someone off, make someone mad, and ruin someone’s day or ruin my day, but
ultimately, things happen. I created this little mantra called HAHEWIWE.
HAHEWIWE is basically the first two letters of four words that are sequential
in what I consider the new hierarchy of needs, which is happy, to be happy,
happiness, health, you got to be healthy, H-E, wise, you have to know
something, you have to gain knowledge and wisdom, which is W-I, and WE, which
is wealth.
As you probably know from Gobundance, wealth is not
gold bullion, wealth is not tons of cash or Bitcoins. It’s freedom. Even David
Osborne says it in his books, it’s all about freedom and choices or something
particular to the person. Maybe it’s just sitting on the couch with your family
and relaxing without any kind of stress. You always have to have the end game.
Your wealth is your goal, is your why. You have to have the why. When people
can keep that in mind and know that those four have to be attained or focused
on every day, then they can stay in the right mindset.
If you know you want to be happy, you’re going to start
your day off with gratitude, you’re going to do things that you’re going to
feel good about yourself that you’ve accomplished. To go back to Miracle
Morning from Hal Elrod, I have not gone to the gym or worked out after 7:00
AM in three years and I’m in pretty decent shape. I used to get stressed out at
the gym that in an hour or two of working out, someone’s going to call me,
they’re going to need something and it just messed up my workout and messed up
everything. I do it long before that.
The key is just to working on the way you feel and
what makes you feel good. To be happy, once I’m done at seven o’clock and I’ve
done all that and I know half the people are still sleeping, then I start my
day with joy. Even if I wake up groggy, I’ll do some breathing exercises or
just some prayer and be grateful for my wife, my children and I’m happy. Let’s
say somebody cuts me off and now I’m not happy. I know my goal is to be happy.
I’m now becoming more aware of why I’m feeling this way and I gauge what I’m thinking
by how I’m feeling which most people do whether they realize it or not.
I think, “Does it really matter that this person
cut me off? No.” I’m driving to work. I’m making myself better. I know I’m
happy because I know I’m growing and I’m adding value to the marketplace and
I’ve done all that I’ve done. Then it doesn’t ruin my day. What do we have?
84,600 seconds in a day? There’s an old saying that if somebody took $20 out of
your bank account, that they stole $20 and you had $86,400 in there, would you
be so mad that you’d throw away the other $84,000 or $86,380? No, you wouldn’t.
Why would someone’s two seconds of annoying you get your heart pounding and
ruin your whole day and you give all that up? I just can revert back to
happiness and just knowing HAHEWIWE prevents anything from ever getting to me,
but then I also have to know my next responsibility is my health.
If I wake up late, I’m hitting snooze a million times,
or I’m feeling groggy or I’m– You hear people say, “Oh, I’m so
tired” or “I don’t feel good” or “I’m constantly getting
colds.” You know what I mean? If you ever had the excuse more than once
that I don’t feel like it then in the other books that I’ve read, I can’t
remember the title, but it says treat your health like you’re the only one
responsible for doing it because you are.
Then I’ve created a regimen of exercise, supplements,
eating right, sleeping well, even the water I drink, I bought a $400 special
stone cast Berkey water system for the purest water that I could drink for the
best health. Then the wisdom is to know that I want to read every day. Until
2018 I didn’t read a book, but just once in a while, and I still didn’t finish
them. Now I’m reading 30 minutes to an hour, a day in a few different time
blocks of either an audible or in the morning, I definitely read a book-book,
constantly gaining a little edge on information because if I can get 1% better
every day at the end of the year, it will exponentially boost the capacity for
me to serve all my clients.
Then, of course, the wealth is keeping that carrot in
front of me, knowing what I really want, knowing why I’m doing it, and that
helps me overcome challenges. Rather than letting those challenges suppress my
actions and my attitude, I can stay focused on my goal grounded by my
happiness, which I know is important. My health, which is under control, and
the knowledge that I’m gaining every single day.
Aaron: I love it so much of your strategy– People are like, “How do I succeed in real estate?”
So much of the stuff you’re talking about is not the traditional things that
people hear with that. You’re like no, you want to build trust. You want to
build the relationships, you want to become a good, happy person in what you’re
doing. I think that is a super unique thing with what you’re doing. Now, you
coach people, you do training with big teams, even offices, and things like
that as you’re growing into and you’re expanding out how to really help. You
talked before we got on and started recording that one of your goals is that,
you love this stuff so much that you just really want to have like every
brokerage out there that they want to get real talk certified that they want to
have a program.
I can see now as you get to talk about it why because
it’s not just a real estate training program. It’s like a philosophy in a way
of life that will pay off in real estate, but also in life. What are your visions and your plans for
that sort of training? Is it a lot of one-on-one stuff? Is it when COVID opens up, being able to go
and speak in classrooms? Is that a one-day thing? Is it a couple of hours
thing? What are the different levels of training and things like that you’re
going to be doing?
Robert: The lag goal is for all brokerages nationwide to at least know of or
incorporate certain parts of Good Talk Great Sales into their training.
Developing a philosophy that not only betters the agents’ business and betters
the agents’ mindset for a better life, a better relationship with their spouse,
with their children, with their friends. It’s made me a better father, the
principles from Good Talk Great Sales, but the caveat is it’s better for
the industry and for the consumers. If you want to talk about trust, most of
the time if someone has anything negative to say about realtors or real estate
professionals, it’s because they’ve received call after call or flyers of just
because they’re on a database because they owe very little on their mortgage,
and yet the end result was bad results that we’re all liars and we’re no good.
I don’t want the industry and I’m a third-generation
realtor. I don’t want the industry to be like the mechanics of the ’80s. I want
people to not have to get phone calls from people they don’t like and people
they don’t know, and I want them to have great results and create a trust
factor altogether. The real plan is to build those relationships with
brokerages and brokerage owners, to do a plethora of different venues, meaning
large Zoom events, large face-to-face events. I’ll speak to a million people if
we have a big enough room, but ultimately, I’d like to– My plan is to get
together with somebody else to create a digital education and training platform
with maybe workbooks involved, digital training, a video system, my website, Good
Talk Great Sales is the beta version of that. It’s my semi-professional
version of many different topics in real estate in two to six-minute videos.
Aaron: That’s awesome. People are going to be able to find a lot of the stuff
that you have in our Rockstar toolbox, plus they can go to your website and see
that for a taste of it, and right now people can start– I think people will
start reaching out to you as they hear this. I can see a lot of different offices
probably thinking about how different your spin is on something that’s going
on. Just like you said at the beginning, in times of crisis– I think that
the– Again, half the agents are doing great. Half the agents are not. The
crisis is here, people are polarized. People are having a tough time that
everything that I’ve read is showing that next year in 2021 is going to be more
difficult for most people than it is now.
When it comes to unemployment or businesses closing or
jobs changing and things like that, people are going to be having a hard time.
Crisis is something that’s going on and being able to create that trust and
that relationship, I just love how you pointed that out. Tell us again, as
we’re closing up, what is the best place
for people to find you is your website, any other ways to reach out to you?
Robert: Goodtalknation.com is probably the best or my email which you have, or
my phone number. I mean, they could even call me.
Aaron: For the guys that are people that are driving in their car and they’re
not going to see it. Why don’t you go
ahead and say what your email is that you want people to reach out to you?
Robert: Awesome. It’s my name basically, but just the first initial of my first
name. It’s R and then Paolini, P-A-O-L-I-N-I @bhhsflpg.com.
Aaron: Awesome. We’ve got it on here and my guys will add that to the show
notes so that people see it. Real Talk is his book. Robert Paolini, I
think you’re going to do big things in changing the industry with your mindset
here. I’m super excited that our agents could hear about that today. There’s no
better time for people to focus on trust and relationships within the industry
out there. The websites again, you had two different websites.
Robert: It was Good Talk Nation is the main one, but the Amazon is where you
find the book, amazon.com you just type in Good Talk Great Sales, but my
YouTube channel, it’s easier to find the YouTube channel right through
goodtalknation.com. I gave you the email, but Good Talk Nation if they click
the links, the little social media links in the upper right-hand corner, click
the YouTube one, it takes you to the location of all the videos and there’s got
to be 50 plus.
Aaron: Awesome. People go Good Talk Nation, go check out that YouTube, watch a
few of those videos. You’ll probably learn a ton from those videos, and you
also get to see if you might want to have more conversations with Robert.
Robert, I can’t wait to get to hang out with you at one of the GoBundance
events coming up in Tahoe. Good getting to chat with you today and thanks for
joining us on Real Estate Rockstars.
Robert: Likewise. Thank you so much, Aaron. This was awesome. It’s a great
pleasure, and I really appreciate you.
Aaron: Thank you.