Think-Realty-Year-End-2017

SUCCESS MINDSET

BUSINESS FOUNDATIONS

Creating a FirmFoundation forYour Real Estate Business SOLID FOUNDATIONAL PRINCIPLES LAY THE GROUNDWORK FOR INVESTING SUCCESS.

by Ben Rao

BEN RAO’S RULES FOR BRANDING

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• How does real estate play into it all?

n real estate, you have to have a firm foundation – literally. If your property has a cracked foundation, you will likely take serious losses as you deal with shifting floors, instability, falling property values, and banks are less interested in lending you money. Just as a bad foundation is a huge, sometimes hidden pitfall in a physical property, it also represents a hidden threat to building your real estate investing business. No matter what type of busi- ness you run, there are certain foundational principles that you must follow if you want to be more than a real estate investor and instead be a real estate investing business. Think about a commercial construction site. You drive by it every day and sure, there is movement. Machines come and go. Workers walk around. Maybe some dirt moves, but for the most part it looks like nothing is happening. Nothing really changes for months or, in some cases, years! Then, one day, the entire thing goes up in moments. What were they doing for all that time? Creating a secure foundation. Ask yourself this question: Why am I in real estate? The answers are basically the same for most people: • Creating long-termwealth via tax reduction and long-term income • Creating short-termwealth via flipping or wholesaling • Tax advantages • Self-Employment and/or company building • Changing the world Once you have answered this question for yourself, ask yourself a few follow-up questions. The goal is to better understand your “Why” for yourself and then establish your real estate business’ foundation, clarity, and direction toward your goals. Ask yourself: • Why do I want to have the things I listed above? • What do I personally want to accomplish in business and/ or life?

These answers are your compass for your business and this will move you toward your goal and stability in your personal and busi- ness foundation. Once you have this, you now have a foundation to build your marketing and brand around. Your brand tells the story of who you are, what you do, and why you do it. If you have a clear, pervasive brand, you will find that instead of having to bring people into your business and convince them to work with you, they will instead look at your business and figure out where they fit into your business based on your brand. This extends from your motivated seller leads all the way to your tenants, buyers, and business partners. When people are attracted to your business, your business begins to grow faster with less work. Part of effective

I didn’t have my brand built in 12 months or anything close to it. It took me years to put together, and I made mistakes. Hopefully, these guidelines will help you think about how you want to handle your branding and avoid some of my mistakes. •  Do not worry too much about your

looking for their category of product or service, and they have carefully built a solid reputation around that product or service. Furthermore, there clarity in branding helps them to dominate public perception of the category so that their company is the first one you think of when you think of that category. So how do you accomplish this with your real estate investing business? First, think about who you want to be (in terms of real estate), where you are located physical- ly, and what products or services you provide. Do not try to be all things to all people. Q: What if you have several real estate businesses that tie into each other but are separate? For exam- ple, you are an agent, an educator, and an investor. A: This is a tough question, and there is no one right answer. If you want to keep all of these things together, you will need to drive people to you as a person and brand yourself, then subtitle the things you do and offer after they have been attracted to you. If this solution does not work for you, personally, (and not everyone can make this work), then you will need to separate everything and give each business a distinct message. Once you’ve decided what message you want to convey, start con- veying it in every environment in which you work. This definitely means investing in a good logo and, subsequently, some memo- rable business cards. Depending on the type of real estate you do, you might want to purchase yard signs as well. Put that logo, your website, and your phone number on those signs and get them out there so that everyone who drives by that sign knows what you do and how to reach you!

domain name. Make it easy to remember, but do not pay an exorbitant amount to get the “perfect” .com. •  Do not use clip art on your website or marketing material •  Do not spend $5,000 on your first website •  Do not try to be all things to all people •  Do get cards and signage •  Do be memorable and creative

branding may involve owning a category of real estate investing, possibly in a specif- ic geographic area. For example, if you are a wholesal- er, then you might want to be known

Think Realty Coach & branding expert Ben Rao

MINDSHARE: The relative public awareness of something. For example, your real estate business will compete for mindshare in your market. You want people to be aware of your business when they need your specific product or service.

•  Do align your investment strategy with your brand These are some guidelines that have worked for me. Not everyone agrees with them, and some investors are very successful using a different set of guidelines. At the end of the day, I have built many successful businesses, and I can only say what was effective in my experience.

as the wholesaler for one particular market or city. Here’s what I mean by owning a category: •  Who do you think of when I ask who “owns” coffee? Probably Starbucks. •  How about French fries? Probably McDonalds. •  Who dominates the concept of search engines? It’s got to be Google.

Why does nearly everyone have the same answers for these ques- tions? Because the company in the answer “owns” that category and are very precision on what they do and do well. They have created the perception that they are the best and/or only route for people

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Ben Rao is the executive vice president of Think Realty Benefits and a Think Realty coach. Learn more from Ben at https://thinkrealty.com/coaches.

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