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Nov 05
2010
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Have Money - Need Apartment. PS Don't Irritate, Annoy or Otherwise *iss Me Off!
Posted by: Daisy Nguyen on Nov 5, 2010 10:52 |
In today's apartment marketplace, when a prospect walks into your doors, they are READY to lease from you. With all the information available on the internet, your facebook page, your twitter account, your website, apartmentratings.com - believe me. They've seen it, and your prospect is STILL interested. They may as well have a sign around their neck that reads, "Have Money, Need Apartment."
What's preventing you from leasing to them?
I call it the PS factor. They sign around their neck that reads, "Have Money, Need Apartment," should also have a postscript that reads,
P.S. Don't IRRITATE, ANNOY, AKA Don't *iss Me Off - Otherwise You WILL Lose Me!
I'm sure you've never annoyed, irritated or *issed your prospects off, or have you?
Here are 5 sure fire ways to lose a perfectly good & ready prospect AKA What NOT to Do When Leasing Apartments:
- Assume I want the cheapest apartment you have available. Start off selling me on price and price alone: Contrary to popular belief, finding your next apartment HOME is not a decision solely based on PRICE alone. ASK, LISTEN, OBSERVE and use the information you find to your advantage. When shopping for a home, most people do not try to find the cheapest thing they can find. CASE-IN-POINT: I recently did some apartment shops in a busy downtown market. I was dressed appropriately. My boyfriend and I asked to see a luxury unit in the 1500 - 2000 square feet range. We did not mention any budget. They leasing agent did not ask or try to pre-qualify us. Keep in mind, this is a luxury apartment complex, with rents in the $3000 - $5000 range. She immediately took us to what she referred to as the "entry-level" apartment unit. I was appalled. It wasn't 1500-2000 square feet, it was 900 square feet. For whatever reason, she decided to show us the cheapest unit. Had I been a snobby, willing to over-pay prospect, I would have been insulted, irritated, and a TOTAL waste of my time. Instead I reminded her we had asked for a 1500 - 2000 square foot unit, this apartment did not meet our needs. She replied that those are the most expensive units, only available on the top floors, where a premium was charged. (WHAT? Remember, I never mentioned that I had a budget, but it was obvious that she couldn't believe ANYONE would pay THAT much for an apartment unit!) We finally did get to the larger units. Don't assume it's all about price. Especially if you are in a luxury market, what drives people to spend money on luxury expenditures is NOT price. Because of the economy we are currently in, because of the financial pressure going on in OUR lives, don't assume that your prospect has those same financial pressures. And NEVER NEVER NEVER, in any way shape or form, imply that you are showing them the cheapest most affordable unit - unless they specific ask for it. Cheap has a negative connotation. DON't start off on a negative note. You've just irritated me.
- Make Long Excuses: If there are questions or objections, keep your answers short and sweet and move onto something positive. If I'm asking about the parking, don't give me a long-rambling excuse on why the parking is $50.00/month. Just let me know what it is and move on unless I have an objection. If I inquire about moving in on the 27th of the month instead of waiting until the first of the month, don't give me a long excuse of why I can't or go through a long list of things you're going to have to take care ofo just so that I can move in a couple of days early. - I don't care about why it puts you out. Just let me know if you CAN or can NOT, or if you need to check on it and then move on to something positive. There is no need to make excuses for anything. It's a waste of time, and I'll start to wonder if you're always making excuses for anything/everything that happens....Now you've gotten me wondering, and I am even more irritated!
- Show me things I told you I am not interested in: If you do, it's a total waste of my time - you must not respect my time, I'll assume you didn't listen to me when I told you I wasn't interested in XYZ, and you just gave me information overload. CASE-IN-POINT: The same agent above, surprisingly asked us if we had any pets. We stated that we didn't. As we were going through the tour, she showed us the pet spa, the doggy park, and the pet-only elevators. This added another 15 minutes to our tour. I reminded her that we had no pets, and in fact, I have terrible allergies to pets. (Hoping that she wouldn't continue to show us all the pet amenities.) If I was an deathly-allergic-to-pets prospect, seeing all the amenities that they offered to pet owners would have scared me. AND, we had a lunch appointment at noon, and she was quickly eating up all our time with pet amenities and cheap units instead of showing us what we really wanted to see. Now I am TOTALLY irritated.
- Overload me with information: Don't regurgitate your entire sales brochure to me. If I tell you I'm only interested in 3 things, give me those 3 things. Don't overload me with information. Not only will you inundate me, I might even feel stupid. I don't lease from people who make me feel stupid. CASE-IN-POINT: Same apartment building mentioned above, I named the 3 most important things to me were a.) 1500 - 2000 square feet b.) closet space was EXTREMELY important to me c.) common area entertainment spaces like pool or clubroom. The apartment building was also a green building, seeking LEED certification. As a prospect, I thought that was "nice," but I didn't really care to find out where the cabinets came from, how the air in the building was used to heat & cool adjoining units rather than heating/cooling the existing unit therefore conserving energy, or what the content of the "recycled content carpet" was made of or how. All this was explained to me in excruciating detail, all while eating into my upcoming lunch schedule....NOW they've escalated from irritating to annoying.
- Rush me: I'm not talking about trying to close a lease on me - I'm talking about trying to rush me and get me out of your office. If you have something better to do, do it. When I'm in your office with a sign that says, "Have Money - Need Apartment" and YOU have vacancy. I'm the most important thing on your schedule. If you look at your watch too often, or seem to rush from model to model to amenity, and try to move me along - I'm not feeling the love. Actually, I'm feeling quite the opposite - you must not want me. If I'm going to live here, I need to feel that you will service me, and not rush me through everything, including my first meeting(s) with you! I once had a TV salesman tell me that he wasn't going to call the other store to look for my tv unless I was going to buy it from him - all I had asked for was 5 minutes to talk it over to my boyfriend. There were no other customers waiting around for help, and the store was pretty slow. My feisty reply was, "If you've got something better to do in the next 5-10 minutes, go do it. Before you do it, please find your sales manager for me, so that I can ask him to find me someone who has 10 minutes to sell me a TV." Now I'm royally *issed! Congratulations! You've just lost my sale!
These are 5 Sure-Fire Ways to Loose the Sale/Lease. Don't let it happen to you!
Have you seen any annoying or irritating things that killed a sale recently? Leave me a comment and share!
You can read the original blog entry on my blog at: http://blog.rentsoda.com/2010/11/have-money-need-apartment-ps-dont-irritate-annoy-or-otherwise-iss-me-off/
Daisy Nguyen is owner and CEO of RENT SODA, a consulting company offering apartment marketing, business & operations consulting and apartment industry training.





