Our next story comes from regular contributor Jess Kindt who shares the two key lessons she took away from a potential listing that almost became a very dangerous situation.
- Research the client and the property before you ‘jump’
- If you even have a ‘whiff’ of something being up – always trust your gut, and get out!
Transcript
Hi. My name is Jess Kindt.
I certainly have my fair share of horror stories and confessions, but I have picked one that does stick with me that I haven’t really spoken to anyone about. I was a business development manager for a little agency in New Farm many moons ago. I was really desperate to build a portfolio as quickly as possible. It’s a quite a tight marketing, New Farm, and it certainly was at that point.
Anyway, I get this call out of the blue which rarely happened, saying, “My name is such-and-such. I own this property at such-and-such place. Can you meet me there in 10 minutes?” I get really excited, and I’m like, “Yup, absolutely.” Oh my gosh. It’s a really a first listing presentation so I rush, rush, rush. I walked up to this property on my own and find … It looked like it had been abandoned for a good 20 years. It had graffiti all over it, had no front steps. You pretty much had to hitch yourself up into the property.
When I initially got the phone call, he sounded a little unusual. I had sort of almost like an inkling at that stage, but this cemented that choice for me. I decided not to go into the property. I tried calling this gentleman, couldn’t get a hold of him. Went back to the office, told my director all about it.
About 20 minutes, half an hour later, I hear this huge screaming, like this ranting and raving coming from the door right up into our reception area. We had this young receptionist who was absolutely petrified.
I had no problem. I walked straight up to him. I’m like, “I’m so sorry.” “Are you the girl that …” I mean, he was calling me every name under the sun and I won’t repeat it. I said, “Yes, I am. I’m so sorry. I’ve been trying to call you.”
He goes to grab me around the neck. He was huge. This guy was like six-four maybe 120, 130 kilo. I was absolutely terrified. The Adrenalin took over. He’s actually trying to grab me to take me out the front of our office. I started just panicking. Luckily for me, my director who could probably hold his own in a fight let’s just say, rushed out to the front and actually physically removed this guy.
I just couldn’t believe what had just happened. I had a little bit of a moment where I thought, “God, imagine if I had gotten out of the car at that point to meet this guy.” No one really knew where I was.
I guess what I’ve learned from that experience moving forward, make sure just qualify. Qualify that property, qualify that client. Don’t ever just drop everything for a client either. Give yourself enough time to put yourself together, think rationally, think calmly, and then go and win that business. Thank you very much.
Every Agent has a Story Season 2 is brought to you by
Every Agent Has a Story: Liana Slipetsky
Our next story comes from Liana Slipetsky, Co-Founder of iAgree, who shares the two key lessons she learned, following a roof replacement job that was
Every Agent Has a Story: Suzie Hamilton-Flanagan
This story comes from Suzie Hamilton-Flanagan, Head of Property Management at BresicWhitney, who shares the key lessons she learned during a beachfront OFI. Risk management
Every Agent Has a Story: Josh Altman
This story comes from Josh Altman of Million Dollar Listing Los Angeles, who shares the lessons he learned helping a customer find a lease and
Every Agent Has a Story: Marcel Dybner
This story comes from Marcel Dybner, Head of Property Management at Besser and Co, who shares the key lessons he learned during one of his
-
How I sold it: from contract collapse to digital winOctober 24, 2024
-
Jessica Cao’s auction successOctober 24, 2024
-
Australia faces record low housing affordability, new report revealsOctober 23, 2024
-
The 10 habits of highly confident real estate agentsOctober 23, 2024