Sunday, July 29, 2012

The issue - not enough first time priced homes available!


WASHINGTON (July 19, 2012) - Existing-home prices continued to show gains but sales fell in June with tight supplies of affordable homes limiting first-time buyers, according to the National Association of Realtors®.
Total existing-home sales1, which are completed transactions that include single-family homes, townhomes, condominiums and co-ops, declined 5.4 percent to a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 4.37 million in June from an upwardly revised 4.62 million in May, but are 4.5 percent higher than the 4.18 million-unit level in June 2011.
Lawrence Yun, NAR chief economist, said the bigger story is lower inventory and the recovery in home prices. "Despite the frictions related to obtaining mortgages, buyer interest remains solid. But inventory continues to shrink and that is limiting buying opportunities. This, in turn, is pushing up home prices in many markets," he said. "The price improvement also results from fewer distressed homes in the sales mix."
According to Freddie Mac, the national average commitment rate for a 30-year, conventional, fixed-rate mortgage fell to a record low 3.68 percent in June from 3.80 percent in May; the rate was 4.51 percent in June 2011; recordkeeping began in 1971.
The national median existing-home price2 for all housing types was $189,400 in June, up 7.9 percent from a year ago. This marks four back-to-back monthly price increases from a year earlier, which last occurred in February to May of 2006. June's gain was the strongest since February 2006 when the median price rose 8.7 percent from a year prior.
Distressed homes3 - foreclosures and short sales sold at deep discounts - accounted for 25 percent of June sales (13 percent were foreclosures and 12 percent were short sales), unchanged from May but down from 30 percent in June 2011. Foreclosures sold for an average discount of 18 percent below market value in June, while short sales were discounted 15 percent. "The distressed portion of the market will further diminish because the number of seriously delinquent mortgages has been falling," said Yun.
NAR President Moe Veissi, broker-owner of Veissi & Associates Inc., in Miami, said there's been a steady growth in buyer interest. "Buyer traffic has virtually doubled from last fall, while seller traffic has risen only modestly," he said. "The very favorable market conditions are helping to unleash a pent-up demand, which is why housing supplies have tightened and are supporting growth in home prices. Nonetheless, incorrectly priced homes will not attract buyers."
Total housing inventory at the end June fell another 3.2 percent to 2.39 million existing homes available for sale, which represents a 6.6-month supply4 at the current sales pace, up from a 6.4-month supply in May. Listed inventory is 24.4 percent below a year ago when there was a 9.1-month supply.
First-time buyers accounted for 32 percent of purchasers in June, compared with 34 percent in May and 31 percent in June 2011. "A healthy market share of first-time buyers would be about 40 percent, so these figures show that tight inventory in the lower price ranges, along with unnecessarily tight credit standards, are holding back entry level activity," Yun said.
All-cash sales edged up to 29 percent of transactions in June from 28 percent in May; they were 29 percent in June 2011. Investors, who account for the bulk of cash sales, purchased 19 percent of homes in June, up from 17 percent in May; they were 19 percent in June 2011.
Single-family home sales declined 5.1 percent to a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 3.90 million in June from 4.11 million in May, but are 4.8 percent above the 3.72 million-unit pace in June 2011. The median existing single-family home price was $190,100 in June, up 8.0 percent from a year ago.
Existing condominium and co-op sales fell 7.8 percent to a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 470,000 in June from 510,000 in May, but are 2.2 percent higher than the 460,000-unit level a year ago. The median existing condo price was $183,200 in June, which is 6.9 percent above June 2011.
Regionally, existing-home sales in the Northeast dropped 11.5 percent to an annual pace of 540,000 in June but are 1.9 percent above June 2011. The median price in the Northeast was $253,700, down 1.8 percent from a year ago.
Existing-home sales in the Midwest slipped 1.9 percent in June to a level of 1.02 million but are 14.6 percent higher than a year ago. The median price in the Midwest was $157,600, up 8.4 percent from June 2011.
In the South, existing-home sales declined 4.4 percent to an annual pace of 1.73 million in June but are 5.5 percent above June 2011. The median price in the South was $165,000, up 6.6 percent from a year ago.
Existing-home sales in the West fell 6.9 percent to an annual level of 1.08 million in June and are 3.6 percent below a year ago. The median price in the West was $233,300, up 13.3 percent from May 2011. Given tight supply in both the low and middle price ranges in this region, sales in the West are stronger in the higher price ranges.
The National Association of Realtors®, "The Voice for Real Estate," is America's largest trade association, representing 1 million members involved in all aspects of the residential and commercial real estate industries.

Where Homes Are Selling the Fastest - in case you were wondering

Where Homes Are Selling the Fastest

What Consumers Like About Realtors in case you wondered

What Consumers Like About You

What Consumers Like About You

Customer satisfation is an important part of your job. These tips will help take you a notch above satisfaction in the eyes of your clients.
Consumers like you. They really like you! In a 2004 benchmark survey by Quality Service Certification Inc. of San Juan Capistrano, Calif., more than 90 percent of buyers and 88 percent of sellers said they were either very satisfied or satisfied with the services provided by the real estate sales associate with whom they worked.
Those figures are mirrored in newer research. In the 2006 NATIONAL ASSOCIATION OF REALTORS® Profile of Home Buyers and Home Sellers, 84 percent of consumers surveyed were very satisfied and 13 percent were somewhat satisfied with their practitioner’s knowledge of the purchase process. Just as critically, 83 percent and 12 percent respectively felt the same way about the practitioner’s honesty and integrity.
Since consumers in the NAR survey rated honesty and knowledge of the purchase process as the most critical factors when choosing a practitioner to represent them, the research demonstrates that most consumers are finding what they want and need when they work with a real estate professional.
But most doesn’t mean all. Consumers become aggravated when sales associates make them feel unimportant, fail to provide adequate guidance on pricing issues, and have trouble getting along with others, sometimes jeopardizing the transaction. And it’s the unhappy consumers, even if they’re a small percentage of your customer base, who can derail your success. Author Richard Buckingham (Customer Once, Client Forever, Kiplinger Books, 2001) estimates that dissatisfied customers tell 15 to 20 people about their bad experience.
To help you recognize what you’re doing right and where you’re falling short, REALTOR® Magazine went straight to the source. Here’s what consumers told us about the real estate practitioners they’ve worked with.
Are you Paying Attention?
One of the easiest ways to lose business is to make consumers feel that they’re not worth your time. Responsiveness was ranked as very important by 92 percent of home buyers and sellers in the NAR survey. Communication skills were ranked very important by 83 percent of consumers.
You’re busy, no doubt, but are you too busy to make each customer feel like the most important priority in your day? If so, you’ll end up with an Andrea Burns on your list of failed business relationships. Burns, a public relations manager in Denver, went into her first real estate purchase with the impression that real estate practitioners were aggressive salespeople who didn’t care about her needs or wants. A salesperson she met at an open house did nothing to dispel that notion.
“He thought I was small potatoes and didn’t take time to talk to me,” says Burns. “He gave me his card and went through the motions but didn’t come across as somebody I wanted to do business with. He was looking for somebody to buy right away.”
Friends referred Burns to another salesperson, who was “the complete opposite,” she says. “We probably looked at more than 40 homes over several months. I wasn’t in a hurry, and he didn’t push me. He had my best interests in mind.”
Working with her new agent, Burns joined the nearly 89 percent of buyers in the 2004 QSC survey who were pleased with their agent’s ability to provide advice based on their specific needs. “He made sure I wasn’t looking at things I shouldn’t be looking at,” she says. “He’d tell me, ‘You don’t want this house,’ or ‘This house has a problem with this.’ It was like shopping for a house with my big brother.” Buyers and sellers who responded to the 2006 NAR survey also ranked market knowledge (91 percent) and local area knowledge (78 percent) as very important.
Colleen Gelardi knows what it’s like to work with a salesperson who doesn’t seem interested. Gelardi and her husband, Mike, listed their Aurora, Ohio, home with a top producer, after which the home languished on the market. Gelardi believes the house didn’t get offers because the sales associate didn’t consider the sale important. “She sells a lot of very expensive houses, and we sold our old house for $100,000,” says Gelardi. “That was nothing for her. I don’t think she really cared to work too hard on it.”
When the listing expired, the Gelardis listed with another sales associate, who sold the home and helped the couple find a new, much more expensive home. The first salesperson “didn’t know we could afford a much bigger house and got mad at us when she learned we’d bought a pricier home through another salesperson,” says Gelardi. “It was like we should be calling and begging her, ‘Please help us buy our house.’ But she wasn’t helping us.”
The Gelardis’ second listing agent saw both transactions through to a happy ending. “I have nothing but good things to say about her,” she says. “She found us a new insurance agent who was able to reduce our insurance costs across the board. Our basement in the old house was bad, and she knew somebody who gave us a great price to fix it. Anything we needed, she knew somebody to help. She’s a great networker.”
Show Them the Money
Many consumers who were surveyed also reported dissatisfaction with their agents’ ability to set and negotiate home prices. Only 70 percent of buyers and sellers were very satisfied in their agent’s negotiating ability, according to the 2006 NAR survey. Similarly, only 76 percent in the QSC survey felt that their agent was very satisfactory at negotiating price.
In our interviews, we learned that consumer complaints run the gamut, from salespeople who aren’t aggressive enough in setting a home’s price to associates who fail to negotiate altogether.
Greg Borowski, a software project manager in Phoenix, has used the same salesperson for 10 transactions over 14 years and is very satisfied overall.
“I can always trust the deal will go through the way it’s supposed to. She’s very thorough, and she knows contracts inside and out,” he says. But when it comes to pricing, Borowski, who calls himself a semi-professional real estate investor, keeps his own counsel. When he and his partner, Jonathan Kenger, sold their Phoenix high-rise condo two years ago, his salesperson recommended a price based on comps, but Borowski’s gut told him it was too conservative. “It was a tight market, and prices were going up weekly,” he says. “We raised the price $20,000 over what she suggested and sold for full price in a week. Then we wondered whether we should’ve gone higher.”
Katherine L., an attorney in Oak Park, Ill., ran into an extreme example of inability to handle pricing and negotiation properly when she and her husband sold their condo and then bought a home. In each transaction, her sales associate failed the pricing test.
“Although she showed us comps on our condo, our salesperson never gave us advice on what price to list it at. She went with what we suggested,” says Katherine. The couple ended up reducing the price three times, always on their own initiative. “We’d ask, ‘Do you think we should do a price reduction?’ She’d say, ‘Well, probably.’ She wasn’t saying, ‘This unit came on the market for this amount, so to undercut it, you should go for this.’ We had to keep evaluating the market ourselves and trying to figure out where to price our home.”
On the buy side, the couple made an offer 15 percent below the “upper $600,000s” list price on a home that had been on the market for months. “The listing salesperson heard the dollar figure and flatly refused to show our offer to the sellers,” says Katherine. “I’m a lawyer, and I know that’s an ethical, if not a legal, violation.”
Her agent’s reaction to the “shouting match” over price was a disappointment to Katherine and her husband. “Our salesperson was quite alarmed and transmitted her feelings to us,” she says. After a pitched battle between the sales associates and their brokers, the offer was presented. But because there was so much animosity between the agents, the sellers asked to negotiate directly with Katherine and her husband. The parties eventually agreed on a price about 5 percent below the list price.
Katherine said she recognizes the changing market contributes to pricing difficulties. “The fact that it’s a buyer’s market now and that it switched so quickly has thrown everyone—buyers, sellers, and real estate practitioners—for a loop,” she says. Still, she doesn’t believe any of the practitioners in the transaction handled themselves well. “We needed an agent to help us negotiate price, and our agent couldn’t do that.”
Set Communication Expectations
How, when, and how often to communicate about the transaction are issues that can create another gap between consumer expectations and sales associate performance. Only 85 percent of buyers and 81 percent of sellers in the QSC survey were very satisfied with the quality and frequency of communication from their salesperson.
Amy R. listed her home in Chicago with a family friend, but that didn’t seem to make staying in touch any easier. The salesperson sometimes failed to call promptly after showings to provide feedback. When he did call, he still wasn’t really communicating. “He’d call and say, ‘We’re done with the showing,’ ” says Amy R. “But he wasn’t forthcoming with details. I’d have to ask him questions about how many people were there and what their comments were.”
That not only irritated Amy and her husband, but it also made them question the associate’s ability. “If he wasn’t giving us feedback, how was he marketing our place? How much was he following up with other associates after a showing if he didn’t call us?”
Poor communication as well as a breakdown in service also arose on the buy side. “He knew we wanted to move to the suburbs but that we had no idea where we wanted to go. Yet he wasn’t giving us any guidance at all,” says Amy. “He didn’t say, ‘I found some research you might find interesting about this suburb,’ or ‘I know people who live in this suburb.’ ”
Disappointed with their friend’s complacency, the couple began researching suburbs on their own. They settled on one southwest of Chicago and found a buyer’s rep there by driving through neighborhoods and seeing which salesperson’s signs were most common. They signed up for new-listing updates at her Web site—and the suburban salesperson demonstrated she knew how to communicate by promptly contacting them to arrange showings.
It was only after the couple did that legwork themselves that their Chicago agent offered to provide a referral to a suburban practitioner. “He didn’t tell us he knew anybody there until we’d contacted another salesperson,” says Amy.
Go From Like to Love
If you’re saying to yourself, “I’m a pro. I’d never let communication or negotiation problems come up,” congratulations. But don’t rest on your laurels. Even if you think you already provide great service, keeping quality up requires more than good skills and good intentions, says Larry D. Romito, president and CEO of QSC. To ensure consumers will love your service every time, you need to implement written service processes to follow in every transaction you do.
QSC program participants, for example, give clients a service guarantee that promises specific actions, from a written marketing plan for sellers to helping secure mortgage preapproval for buyers. The program also offers a way for consumers to evaluate participants’ service through a questionnaire sent by an independent research company. Results are compiled on the company’s site.
Although he was skeptical, Jeff Blahnik, ABR®, CRS®, co-owner of the 250-associate Five Star Real Estate in Grand Rapids, Mich., is now a believer in creating formal systems to track service. “When you tell people you’ll do these specific things, it forces you to raise your level of performance,” he says.
Another critical part of improving the consumer experience is developing a system for how and how quickly you respond when a customer is less than thrilled with service. At Rose and Womble Realty in Virginia Beach, Va., every customer concern goes right to the top. “We have nothing to sell but service,” says CEO Jim Rose.
That’s why when any office in the company receives a complaint, Rose immediately sends a personal letter to the individual, stating he’ll ensure the issue is resolved. He also contacts the department head or the brokerage office manager involved to be sure the customer is satisfied. “We review both sides of the problem. But even if consumers are wrong, they’re right,” says Rose.
To make sure problems don’t fall through the cracks, Rose has his administrative assistant add a reminder to his tickler file. That way, he remembers to follow up on the issues that haven’t been resolved within seven to 10 days.
The company also regularly surveys clients. Incentives for relocation employees and partners, such as mortgage loan officers, are determined by the results, says Terri Stickle, the company’s vice president of customer service.
Constantly fine tuning your service based on client feedback is equally critical in building customer satisfaction. Mechanisms such as customer surveys help ensure that your idea of good service matches what really matters to your customers. In addition to its Quality Service Certified program, which trains sales associates in customer service, Romito’s company maintains a Web site where consumers can review lists of certified agents and see ratings by past clients.
Still not sold on the benefit of a formal quality service program? Consider what it might do for your balance sheet. “Most clients who’ve been with us for a year or more are seeing reductions in their annual errors and omissions insurance premiums in the 10 percent to 30 percent range,” says Romito. One client company decreased its annual E&O premiums by a whopping 52 percent, he says.
Beyond cost savings and high satisfaction ratings, getting your service just right is what leads to the wow experience that keeps people coming back. “Sometimes real estate transactions aren’t fun, but this was a really fun process,” says Carol Jorgensen of Okemos, Mich., describing her experience in buying a second home. “There was no pressure at all, and our sales associate became like a friend.”
See, they really do like you.
Filisko is an attorney and freelance writer and lives in Chicago.
Free Customer Tracking
The NATIONAL ASSOCIATION OF REALTORS® offers brokers a free, Web-based customer satisfaction survey. After real estate brokerages register, NAR’s system automatically sends clients a thank-you e-mail (you can use a prewritten or customized version) that includes a link to a 17-question satisfaction survey. There’s a survey for sellers and one for buyers.
Clients’ responses are saved in a secure database; NAR analyzes the survey results and sends you both your clients’ responses and national and regional averages. For more information or to sign up, send an e-mail to eresearch@realtors.org.
You’re Great — But Your Practices Aren’t
A new study from the Consumer Federation of America, a consumer advocacy group based in Washington, D.C., confirms what earlier studies have shown: Consumers—particularly those who’ve recently worked with a broker or salesperson—have a favorable view of you.
The CFA study showed that 68 percent of respondents and 73 percent of those who’d used a broker or salesperson recently viewed real estate practitioners and their practices favorably. An even higher percentage of those who’d used a broker or salesperson recently — 84 percent — viewed their own broker or salesperson favorably.
CFA surveyed about 2,000 people, including more than 500 who’d used the services of a real estate practitioner in the past five years.
CFA — which has been critical of real estate industry practices—says that if consumers better understood industry practices, they might not be so approving.
Only 36 percent of respondents (and 58 percent of those who had used a broker or salesperson in the past five years) said they were knowledgeable about “real estate agents and brokers and their consumer services.”
Questioned about specific practices that have been the subject of CFA protests for many years, consumers expressed disapproval. For example, the federation has been a vocal opponent of dual agency and what it views as lack of competition in pricing of real estate services. Here’s what respondents to CFA’s survey had to say on those topics — along with the NATIONAL ASSOCIATION OF REALTORS®’ take.
  • Dual agency: A slight majority (52 percent) said they don’t believe that dual agents can effectively represent the financial interests of buyers and sellers, and 62 percent said there is a potential conflict of interest when the seller’s agent and the buyer’s agent are affiliated with the same company.
  • NAR’s take: State law should determine what agency practices are allowable. Real estate practitioners should make timely and clear disclosure of their agency relationships, a belief shared by 82 percent of recent buyers and sellers in the CFA survey.
  • Commission rates: Sixty-three percent of those who recently bought or sold said they believe a 5 percent or 6 percent commission on a $300,000 home is too high. The CFA survey didn’t cover other price points, but Executive Director Stephen Brobeck said, anecdotally, he’s seeing increasingly variable commission rates.
  • NAR’s take: All commissions are negotiable.

With all the For Sale By Owners around Boiling Springs, is there a value issue with Realtors?

Consumers See Your Value


Consumers See Your Value

Consumers are in sync on what's good service. Of course, if you listened only to the media, you might never know this.
You’re tops among consumers. So says a report from the Consumer Federation of America. More than two-thirds of surveyed consumers view real estate brokers and sales associates favorably. The figure is 73 percent among consumers who’ve recently used a professional real estate service, and it jumps to 84 percent among those asked specifically about the professional that they last worked with.
Those numbers are all the more impressive when you consider when the CFA conducted its survey: June 2006, when homes were selling at an annual rate of about 6.6 million units. There’s good reason to think those figures would be even higher today because of our much more normal market environment. In June 2007 existing-home sales were on track to hit a more modest 5.99 million units, and year-over-year price growth was essentially flat. With this challenging environment, the services of a real estate professional become that much more important to consumers.
Consumer recognition of your value is also reflected in statistics NAR collects annually. Year after year, the majority of consumers choose to work with a professional. Indeed, the FSBO share of home sales has been hovering around 15 percent for years. This isn’t surprising considering FSBO homes generally sell for less than those brokered by professionals.
A consumer satisfaction survey NAR’s been conducting for the past year shows results similar to those of the CFA survey: In a zero-to-10 index, with 10 being the highest, the average score was 9.3.
These findings show that you and consumers are in sync on what’s good service. Of course, if you listened only to the media, you might never know this.
Many pundits think they know consumers better than you do, and that’s why they keep challenging your value and insisting that consumers need alternative ways to sell their home.
The fact is, consumers have for decades had fee-for-service and other alternatives available to them, and they’ve always had the option to sell their home on their own.
But what the CFA and our own findings show is that consumers want hassle-free, professional representation. Let the academics and self-anointed experts scratch their heads over why consumers keep making the “wrong” choice.

So i chose Real Estate - does that make me a bad person?

How Americans View You


How Americans View You

In Gallup’s latest survey on the honesty and ethics of various professions, real estate agents can find reasons to smile.
Are you an honest, ethical person? I don’t know many people who would answer that question in the negative. Yet, we tend to doubt the ethics of others. At least that’s the conclusion I come to when I look at the results of a recent Gallup survey about honesty and ethics. Of 21 professions in the survey, only six were rated "very high or high" by most respondents.
Code of Ethics Refresher
Dec. 31 is the deadline for Code of Ethics training. REALTORS® must complete the training every four years to maintain their membership.Take the training free online.
Although "real estate agent" was not among those top six, there’s good news in the survey: The profession was rated as having very high, high, or average ethical standards by 77 percent of U.S. adults. And the percentage who rated agents’ honesty and ethics as high or very high (20 percent) represents an increase of several percentage points from Gallup measures of the 1990s, when the high/very high number was consistently in the mid-teens. By contrast, look at the results for another profession: During the 1990s, business executives typically scored in the low to mid-20s in the high/very high category. In the latest survey, the number dropped to 18, while 32 percent rated their ethics as low or very low (compared with 22 percent for real estate agents).
Americans' confidence in business executives has been eroded by scandals in the energy, financial services, and telecommunications industries. Yet real estate agents haven’t suffered the same erosion in reputation as a result of the housing crisis. No doubt, people recognize that individual real estate agents didn’t have control over the factors that caused the housing crisis. That explains why they fared better than business executives in the low/very low category. But what’s causing more respondents to rate real estate agents in the high/very high category? Could it be that the industry has made strides in winning the hearts and minds of American consumers?
I recently saw some online comments about how little consumers know or care about the NATIONAL ASSOCIATION OF REALTORS®. That may very well be true, but does it matter? Through positive outreach to consumers and the media via HouseLogic.com, Real Estate Today radio, and more than a decade of national TV advertising, NAR is helping to build stronger ties between REALTORS® and consumers. I say helping because NAR is only part of the picture. Similar work is happening at state and local associations and in individual offices, where agents are winning hearts and minds one client at a time by persevering through very difficult transactions.
Will real estate agents ever break into Gallup’s top tier among doctors, nurses, and clergy? Let’s check back in 2014 when Gallup is scheduled to ask again about real estate agents’ honesty and ethics.

Home Owners Torn on Strategic Default: Right or Wrong?

Home Owners Torn on Strategic Default: Right or Wrong?


Home Owners Torn on Strategic Default: Right or Wrong?

Forty-five percent of Nevada home owners recently surveyed say “there is nothing wrong” with walking away on your mortgage obligations, according to a new report, “Face of Foreclosure,” released by the Nevada Association of REALTORS®. On the other hand, an equal number of home owners say home owners have a “legal and ethical obligation to pay their mortgage if they can.” 
The number of home owners who find “strategic default” socially acceptable is growing in the state, which has consistently had one of the highest foreclosure rates in the country the last few years. In 2011, 23 percent of Nevada home owners who lost their home to foreclosure said they walked away from their mortgage. In 2012, 27 percent of foreclosed home owners say they strategically defaulted on their mortgage. 
Strategic default is when a home owner is financially able to make their mortgage payments but decides to stop, usually because the property is underwater. 
“This year’s report shows it’s more socially acceptable to strategically default on your mortgage,” says Blane Johnson, NVAR’s president. “I hope banks and government leaders will look at this to help them get ahead of these issues.”
For those who decided to walk away from their mortgage, 40 percent said they had been advised by their lender or financial adviser to stop paying their mortgage so that they could qualify for more assistance with their home loan.  
NVAR is calling on lenders to do more to help distressed home owners, such as through refinance and loan modification programs or streamlining the short sale process so that fewer home owners will opt to walk away from their mortgage. 
The survey also found that despite the plague of foreclosures in the state the last few years, most Nevadans still overall favor home ownership. Nearly 80 percent of home owners surveyed who have faced foreclosure say they want to buy a home again one day, according to the report. 
Supplementing the report, NVAR developed a video featuring interviews with local home owners, real estate and mortgage professionals about foreclosures in the state. You can view the report and video at www.FaceOfForeclosure.com.
Source: “Face of Foreclosure Report,” Nevada Association of REALTORS® (2012)

Who Subprime Mortgages Hurt the Most

Who Subprime Mortgages Hurt the Most


Who Subprime Mortgages Hurt the Most

Black Americans disproportionately held subprime mortgages during the housing boom and are now facing foreclosure in large numbers, The Washington Post reports.
While lenders insist they don’t calculate race into deciding who qualifies for a loan and what terms, researchers continue to examine why there is such a stark difference among the races. 
The Federal Reserve is studying how the recession affected credit scores by race. Large gaps exist among the credit scores of black Americans compared to white Americans, which banking groups say helps explain why more blacks were offered subprime mortgages -- which a lower credit score is needed to qualify for -- than white borrowers. The subprime loans helped make home ownership more available to more black Americans with lower credit scores, but the higher interest rates and fees also put them at more risk of default, analysts say.
The disparity among the races with home lending and credit scores is “raising fears among consumer advocates, academics and federal regulators that the credit scores of black Americans have been systematically damaged, haunting their financial futures,” The Washington Post reports. 
In a past study conducted by the Federal Reserve on credit scores by race, the Fed found in 2003 that less than a quarter of blacks had prime credit scores compared to about 65 percent of whites. 
“It’s one more way that credit scoring . . . sort of sets in stone income and wealth disparities between minorities and whites,” Chi Chi Wu, a lawyer with the National Consumer Law Center, told The Washington Post. “The playing field was never level.”
Low credit scores among blacks, bank groups say, is also why blacks were being denied loans at higher rates than whites. 
The wealth of blacks decreased 53 percent during the recession, driven largely by the drop in home prices, according to the Pew Research Center. Home ownership rates among blacks have also dropped, reaching its lowest level in 16 years.

Wednesday, July 25, 2012

Here comes the next worry for homeowners?


While the housing market is showing signs of picking up across the country, housing experts warn of a new concern for home owners: resetting home equity lines of credit. 
Home equity lines of credit often require low payments in the initial years as home owners only pay the interest on these loans at the onset. But later on, these loans reset with higher payments when home owners have to start paying down the principal. 
About 44 percent of home owners with home equity lines of credit through Wells Fargo have paid only the minimum amount due on these loans, reports The New York Times. 
Many borrowers may soon see their home equity lines of credit reset with higher payments and those higher payments may be too much for some borrowers. 
The Office of the Comptroller of the Currency recently warned of the danger these resetting payments could pose for many home owners across the country. The OCC warned that nearly 60 percent of all home equity line balances would require payments of both principal and interest between 2014 and 2017. 
The report highlights three main threats home equity borrowers face: Rising payments as they begin to pay back the principal and not just the interest on these loans; the risk of rising interest rates (many of these loans have adjustable rates); and refinancing challenges “because collateral values have declined significantly since these loans originated.” 
Many of the home owners have seen their property values decrease since they first took out the home equity loans.
“These are among the riskiest loans in any bank’s portfolio,” The New York Times reports. “As borrowers are pressed to pay principal and interest, write-offs are almost certain to rise.”
Source: “Here Comes the Catch in Home Equity Loans,” The New York Times (July 14, 2012)

Great opportunity for Spartanburg small businesses

I have enjoyed my membership in this organization, and I believe you will as well.  Can't beat the cost and the events are well thought out!  Whether or not you can attend the meeting, see the link to memberships.


MainStreetChamber - Spartanburg
 

 Join us Wednesday, August 1st 8:30 -10:00
New Member OrientationWhere: Plaza on Main
               174 E Main St, Spartanburg

When: Wednesday, August 1st 8:30am - 10:00am

A light breakfast will be provided for you. 

This informative meeting will introduce you to MainStreetChamber-Spartanburg and the benefits of your FREE membership.  All memberswho have recently joined the Chamber are encouraged to attend. Bring a guest! This is an exciting opportunity to learn more about the future of the Chamber, how you can get involved and how you can promote your business to other members and the Spartanburg Community.
All events are FREE to attend and a great networking opportunity! 
Anyone who attends a meeting will have the opportunity to become a VIP Card member and save $10.  New members who invite another small business member can purchase 2 VIP cards for the price of one!

 
Not a member yet? Join for FREE now or come to the meeting and find out what all of the buzz is about!

Click this link to join MainStreetChamber!
 
Click this link to RSVP!

What is killing the deals in real estate now?




This recent update from Real Estate news highlights the issues that still remain in the housing market, all of which are relevant in our communities in the Upstate.  One of these is around emotion, one is around value and one is around risk, and they are all interrelated.

Because of uncertainty, people have fears in making the decision to sell and accept the hit from the current market pricing.  There is a great set of interest rates out there right now that are more difficult to obtain than ever.  Makes me wonder if there is a reluctance to lock their funds and those of the secondary market in long term loans at these rates.  Finally, those who want to buy up, are still saddled with their current homes who are still on the market.  Those buyers who are out there are seeking deals, so a seller looking to turn equity from one house to another is particularly at risk of the lowball offer being a tough issue.

Wish I knew the answer.  Any thoughts?









3 Top Home Buyer Deal Killers

Recent surveys have shown that more Americans have a thirst for buying real estate, with home affordability at record highs and mortgage rates at record lows. In fact, real estate buyer agents report a 59 percent increase in buyer inquiries this year compared to last year, according to a recent survey conducted by the Real Estate Buyer’s Agent Council.
So what’s preventing some buyers from making it all the way to the closing table? 
REBAC surveyed its buyer agent members to determine the top issues preventing home buyers in their local markets from completing a home purchase. The top three obstacles identified in its 2012 survey are: 
  1. Economic insecurity
  2. Difficulties in obtaining financing
  3. Problems selling current home
The number of home buyers citing difficulties obtaining financing has fallen markedly in the last few years. In 2011, 65 percent of home buyers cited this as a big hurdle to purchasing, and 61 percent cited it in 2010. This year that number has dropped to 49 percent, as economic insecurity overtakes it in having the biggest effect on stalling home sales, according to the survey. 
In 2011, the top three issues cited by buyers were difficulties obtaining financing, problems selling a current home, and holding out for lower prices, according to the survey. 

Saturday, July 14, 2012

Could a Millennial be your home buyer?


The article below paints a positive view of the potential for the Millennial generation to be the next wave of first time home buyers.  The thought is that with low interest rates and access to money, and with home prices at historic lows, they may make the decision to enter the buying market even though they have been putting off marriage, (a good sign of a home buyer) until later.  If you own a home that could be considered entry level, you might want to take a look at your finances and decide if this is a good time to try and list your property.

By Katherine Tarbox, Senior Editor, REALTOR® Magazine
In 1993, the term “Generation Y” first appeared in Ad Age, to describe the age group who was about to embark on their teen years. While generations usually don’t have strict years to confine a group, most put the start of Generation Y — also known as the Millennial Generation, Generation Next, and the Echo Boomers — at the year of 1982 and the end at 2000. This year the first Millennials will begin to turn 30, a sign that this generation is growing up. It’s also a good sign for the housing market.
The Millennials are primarily the offspring of the Baby Boomers (those born from 1946 to 1964) and older Gen Xers. During the ‘50s and ‘60s, the average births per year in the U.S. went from 2.8 to 3.4 million per year and reached 4 million in 1964. While birthing rates dipped in the late ‘60s and ‘70s, in 1982 they began to spike up near that 4 million mark (hence, the nickname “Echo Boomers”), which again created a boom the in population. And this growing population is ready to enter the housing market.
There are some things working against this generation, though. They remain the most underemployed age bracket, with some economists putting their employment-to-population ratio at 45 percent, the lowest it’s been in 60 years. It’s hard to peg the employment rate for this group as many have been forced to take part-time jobs when they are qualified for higher work.
In addition, a study released by the Pew Research Center last month shows that Millennials are waiting a while to take those wedding vows: Just 20 percent of those aged 18 to 29 are married. That’s a crucial driver of home ownership: According to an August 2011 study by the University of Chicago study conducted by Jonas D. M. Fisher and Martin Gervais, single people are more likely to rent.
The positive news: With low interest rates and low prices, this generation is eager to buy, according to a study conducted by the University of Michigan’s Survey of Consumer Attitudes, which polled 6,000 households. First-time buyers are critical to housing, as they allow other sellers to move to the upper ranges of the market. The study also said that the recession has done little to affect Americans’ overall attitude toward buying a home.
Of course, many Millennials are looking to rent. As NAR Chief Economist Lawrence Yunpoints out in his November 2011 column, a stronger rental market will lead to a stronger housing market. As rents increase, more will consider the cost of owning vs. renting, and may tip some to buying. Also as investors enter the market to buy rental units, they are helping to drive prices up, such as in the Miami market, which finally saw prices rise last year. Yun estimates that Miami could see 10 to 12 percent appreciation in 2012, and other markets could follow.
Eventually, though, members of this generation will settle down, and when they do, they’ll need housing. And if the economy continues to improve, 2012 might be the year they start to do just that.

Echo boomer impact on the home buying market


So the question becomes, why is this so?  I believe is is the easier access to borrowing.  Our parents, and my generation were much more likely to save up to buy, than to purchase a home with very little downpayment.  The relaxed lending standards have helped get more people in homes, but at the same time, with house prices so at risk to market swings, the echo boomers have much more to lose in a downturn,a nd perhaps in many ways may be contributing to the current low pricing in the market?


Report: Pay Attention to the Echo Boomers

The echo boomers — those born between the late 1970s and early 1990s — are expected to help drive a housing market recovery in the coming years, according to a new report by Harvard University’s Joint Center for Housing Studies. 
Already, this generation is outpacing the number of baby boomers who at the same age were home owners. Studies show that about 900,000 households are made up of echo-boomer home owners, which compares to 500,000 baby boomers who owned homes at the same point in their lives. 
About 31 percent of echo boomers have already made a recent home purchase, according to data from the National Association of REALTORS®. 
That number is expected to grow, according to housing analysts. About 5 million echo boomers turn 21 every year. According to KCM, a market and real estate commentator, echo boomers will likely add 1 million new households per year over the next decade. 
Source: “Echo Boomers Are Becoming a Contributing Factor to Housing Recovery,” Business Insider (July 11, 2012)

Will hiring that requires relocation pick up with news like this?


I was reading through the daily real estate news yesterday and this article caught my eye.  Having been in the job market for quite a while, I was told several times, even by John Tesh, that companies were looking to hire people already working, rather than those unemployed currently.  Because these employees are often found in other parts of the country, the ability to recruit and hire them has been hampered by the barriers related to the sale of the current home.

This is a major impediment, the cost of relocating, with so many homeowners underwater due to lower initial down payment requirements.  However, if homeowners get a renewed sense of optimism, we could see a greater willingness to move, impacting the jobs market with the subsequent trickle down impact on unemployment.  This would possibly be due to the unshackling of the homeowner from his or her perception of loss.  In the real estate world, there is still a reluctance by many people to take less than they paid for their homes.  This is actually one factor impacting the rise in home sale prices.  So many of those whose houses who lost value are holding on, while those in more profitable areas of the country are selling.  Higher end homes are also selling.

The real questions still remain unanswered, but there are some words coming out of the real estate business that says the market has hit bottom, and is on the way up.  This, combined with record low mortgage rates may create a situation where the average days on market will decrease.  Mitigating this somewhat is the fact that many of the backlogged foreclosures have begun processing, meaning a possible glut of these homes by early next year.

What does this mean for you as an employer seeking to bring in the best talent from outside?  Well, first, I would recommend using as many analytic tools and good interviewing techniques as possible to assure yourself of a desirable candidate.  Then, you might consider a guarantee on the sale of their home.  Give them the money to pay six months of mortgage or rent payments in the new city, then agree to purchase their home at market value after the time is up.  Make this arrangement prior to their signing with a real estate agent, so that you would not have to pay the commission if their six months with the agent expires. My company can assist you with this plan should you be interested.

Bottom line, if ever there was a time to make a riskier offer to hire from afar this might be it.

DAILY REAL ESTATE NEWS | FRIDAY, JULY 13, 2012
Rebounding home prices are lowering the number of home owners who are considered “underwater” on their mortgage, according to a new report by CoreLogic.

More than 700,000 home owners are no longer considered “underwater,” owing more on their mortgage than their home is currently worth.

At the end of March, 23.7 percent — or 11.4 million — of home owners with mortgages were considered underwater on their mortgage, according to CoreLogic’s latest report. Three months prior, that percentage was 25.2 percent, or 12.1 million home owners.

Mark Fleming, CoreLogic’s chief economist, attributes the decrease to recent gains in home prices, a drop in for-sale inventory, and fewer distressed sales, which are all helping more home owners see the values of their houses increase.

About 1.9 million home owners were 5 percent underwater during the first quarter. If prices continue to inch upward, these owners are expected to climb out of underwater territory, according to CoreLogic.

"While the overall stagnating economic recovery will likely slow [the] housing market recovery in the second half of this year, reducing the number of underwater households is an important step toward reducing future mortgage default risk," Fleming says.

Source: “700,000 Home Owners no Longer Underwater on Mortgages,” CNNMoney (July 12, 2012)

Friday, July 13, 2012

What does the foreclosure risk mean about home sales timing?

Recent wire reports indicate that Banks have finally caught up with the mess they created around foreclosure activity a year ago.  Because of paperwork mistakes and carelessness, many homes that could and should have been foreclosed on in 2011 held out into this year.  The banks have begun preparing to place a new wave of these foreclosed houses on the market, probably by early next year.  In June, the number of houses entering the foreclosure process increased on an annual basis for the second month in a row.

A glut of foreclosed houses added to the market will likely exert downward pressure again on home prices, making the purchasing of a house even more cost effective, but importantly, bought to live in long term, not as an investment.  There is no indication of a rapid rise in home prices that would make adding a foreclosed home an investment diamond.

Now, for those of you who are considering selling your home in the next year or so, you should think about a couple of things.  First, if you have enough equity to get through the sales process, there should be some very good value homes on the market entering next year.  Secondly, if you wait until the early part of next year to sell, you may be faced with a lower market price than if you sell before the foreclosed homes hit.  Third, if you have the patience to wait, begin adding $50 per month to your house payment to increase the equity in your home.  Accelerate the pay-down of any second mortgages, with a plan to get them off your books within 18 to 24 months if possible.  Then, when it becomes clear that the real estate market is cycling back up, you will be in a much better position to sell with equity available for your next purchase.

At least that is my opinion.  What do you think?

If you would like a free competitive market analysis, to get an idea of what your home is worth right now, let me know and I will arrange for you to have this done.

If Mortgage rates are so low, why aren't people buying?

According to recent wire reports, the 30 year mortgage rate is now 3.56 percent, and 15 year mortgages, a good refinancing option are now down to 2.86%, a new record.

So why aren't people rushing out to buy houses with these great numbers?  Well, first off, which houses would they buy.  Existing homes that would a desirable step up are in many cases owned by people who are not ready to put their houses on the market until they appraise higher.  Additionally, in order to buy a new house, those who would move up have to sell theirs, and while there are many potential first home buyers, those who started out with 80-97% mortgages may have negative equity in their homes, much less the funds available to pay for the real estate commissions and other selling expenses.  Buyers continue to demand help with closing costs as well as continuing to push other transactional costs onto the seller to reduce their out of pocket expenses.

So, what must change?  In my opinion, a conscious decision by those with enough equity to sell at a profit, no matter how small, to sell the home they are ready to leave, and go ahead and purchase their next home with a reasonable down payment from savings.  This decision is not easily made with strict financial calculations, it is going to be about long term contentment.

Monday, April 9, 2012

Questions for Strategic Imagination

So, you are in business, and your company has a strategic plan?  What is the thing that you find most challenging about it?  What would you like to be different?  What is the question, where if you had an answer, could change the success rate of your organization?  Wisdom Selling would like the opportunity to address your question.  Please like us on Facebook and enter your questions, or join our group on Linkedin.

The more practice we have in applying this technique, the better our ultimate product offering will be.

Thanks.

Using Imagination in Strategic Planning - Introduction

Does your plan give you enough room for flexibility? Is there any opportunity for you to reach your destination in another way than the specific roadmap you have written down?  Imagine if the only way to get from your town to another, such as from Spartanburg to Greenville was the Interstate, and you knew you had to be there in the 33 minutes. This should be no problem, right, because that's how long Google map says it takes to get there. So you tell your most important customer that you're going to be in Greenville in 35 minutes, and you take off down the interstate.

A friend of mine had a meeting in Greenville the other day, and as he was heading down the interstate, a truck coming the other way hit a sign which stretched all the way across the interstate knocking it down.  The sign was blocking traffic in all six lanes of traffic, three in each direction. My friend was just past the previous exit and not able to reach the next exit, so he was stuck on the interstate for an hour and a half. He ended up having to cancel his seminar and send 30 potential customers back home.  He had no flexibility or other options.  He couldn't imagine or create a different route, because he never been to Greenville before and all he knew was the interstate.

Now those of us who've lived here a while know that you can take Highway 29, or a myriad of other back roads and end up in Greenville as long as time is not the critical factor. Any time you travel on Highway 29 you know you're going to have 30 stoplights to navigate, and there is a random number of times you'll get green and time to get red.  I say it's random but I actually believe that the red lights are timed to match how much of a hurry we are in. I know they get me every time I'm in a rush.

You might look at the trip from Spartanburg to Greenville and think it is just crazy that the only way you allow yourself to get there is the Interstate. You would certainly know the other ways, or you would have a map that showed multiple routes to get there, and since you have been there before, you wouldn't commit to a time that didn't allow you to deal with any risk any traffic any slowdowns, or anything that might delay you like a phone call where you have to pull over and look up some information in a notebook you carrying with you.
We would not commit to do something that doesn't make sense from a trip standpoint, and yet we as company leaders often plan our future - the next 12 months or the next 24 months - as if there's only one way for success to happen. The organization will sell a certain amount, at a certain margin and at a certain price to a certain group of customers beating a certain group of competitors to the punch and everything they do will be sustainable. The organization is confident the market will not change and are confident that they will get all the business that they need out of this deal.

The reality of strategic planning is that anything we’re looking at for the future is full of unpredictability. The science of risk management is all about mitigating your risk by planning for different scenarios. Strategic Imagination is the same process, in that we use our imagination to come up with alternative scenarios, multiple paths to success and ways to hedge our bets for maximum success opportunity. We know that success in itself can be defined in a number of ways for almost any company.  We don't necessarily have to give our plan goals one set of criteria and consider ourselves successful only if we hit those criteria in the time frame allotted. Can you imagine your company as successful, with a different set of goals than you currently have today? Can you imagine reach your goals in a shorter or longer period of time than you have given the company to do so? Can you imagine having a set of shareholder benefits of working with your company that can vary, based on what you need them to be, in order for the company to be most successful? Would you want to give your shareholders a dividend when you need that money to reinvest, or would you want to give your shareholders a dividend so that they will continue to buy and keep this help the share price up, so that you can sell shares and generate capital for the company?

There are all sorts of options out there for strategic success, but we need to be able to dream a bit in order make them reality. And that's what Strategic Imagination is all about. Stay tuned for more and send us your strategy questions.

Tuesday, March 20, 2012

Definitions of Strategy that are already out there.

DEFINITIONS OF STRATEGY FROM THE BUSINESS WORLD

BizShift-Trends is a blog from www.biztrends.com, a strategic sales organization.  I was sent this link, and I think you would find it beneficial as well, as we continue the debate of what strategy is.  This is one of the best compilations of definitions of strategy and all credit goes to BizShift.  At the bottom of this article is the link to their blog.

Without a strategy it is highly unlikely you will achieve your goals – this is true not only in business but in just about any aspect of life. ~Alastair Hyde
Strategy and tactics together straddle the gap between ‘ends and means’. In short, strategy is a term that refers to a complex web of thoughts, ideas, insights, experiences, goals, expertise, memories, perceptions, and expectations that provides general guidance for specific actions in pursuit of particular ‘ends’. Strategy is the course we chart, the journey we imagine and, at the same time, it is the course we steer, the trip we actually make. Even when we are embarking on a voyage of discovery, with no particular destination in mind, the voyage has a purpose, an outcome, an ‘end’ to be kept in view. Strategy, then, has no existence apart from the ‘ends’ sought. It is a general framework that provides guidance for actions to be taken and, at the same time, is shaped by the actions taken. This means that the necessary precondition for formulating strategy is a clear and widespread understanding of the ‘ends’ to be obtained. Without these ‘ends’ in view, action is purely tactical and can quickly degenerate into nothing more than a flailing about.
The writer and consultant, ‘Leanne Hoagland Smith’ wrote an interesting example that demonstrates the concept, as follows: Just think about a recent driving experience into a previously unknown traveled route without a GPS (Global Positioning System). As you are driving you find road construction that keeps you from exiting and now you must travel to the next exit, follow the sometimes ambiguous detour signs on probably less than ideal secondary roads until you finally reach your intended destination. So, what does this have to do with strategy or even business results?  How do you know where you are in your business compared to where you want to be, and more importantly are you taking the right actions to get there? The GPS for your business is really a ‘Goal Planning System’. Each goal is a point on the map (think action plan) that brings you closer to your desired results. Without this plan, you are engaged in the role of ‘Captain Wing-It’, instead of ‘Captain Focus-It’. You are ‘spraying and praying’ your actions all over the place with the hope, fervent hope I might add, that something will stick. This is also called working harder not smarter. Maybe it’s time to activate your own strategy, because the research shows that driving by the seat of your pants in today’s global marketplace just doesn’t work.
In the article “Strategy, Strategic Management, Strategic Planning, and Strategic Thinking” by Fred Nichols writes: Strategy is a word with many meanings and all of them are relevant and useful to those who are charged with setting strategy for their corporations, businesses, or organizations. Here are a few definitions of strategy offered by various writers:
Strategy According to ‘B. H. Liddell Hart’: In his book ‘Strategy’, he examines wars and battles from the time of the ancient Greeks through World War II. He concludes that ‘Carl Von Clausewitz’s’ definition of strategy as ‘the art of the employment of battles as a means to gain the object of war’ is seriously flawed in that this view of strategy intrudes upon policy and makes battle the only means of achieving strategic ends. Then, ‘Liddell Hart’ arrives at this short definition of strategy: ‘the art of distributing and applying military means to fulfill the ends of policy’. Deleting the word ‘military’ from Liddell Hart’s definition makes it easy to export the concept of strategy to the business world.
Strategy According to ‘George Steiner’: Generally considered a key figure in the origins and development of strategic planning. His book ‘Strategic Planning’, is close to being a bible on the subject. Yet, Steiner does not bother to define strategy except in the notes at the end of his book. There, he notes that strategy entered the management literature as a way of referring to what one did to counter a competitor’s actual or predicted moves. Steiner also points out in his notes that there is very little agreement as to the meaning of strategy in the business world. Some of the definitions in use to which Steiner pointed include the following:
·         Strategy refers to basic directional decisions; purposes and missions.
·         Strategy consists of the important actions necessary to realize these directions.
·         Strategy answers the question: What should the organization be doing?
·         Strategy answers the question: What are the ‘ends’ and how should we achieve them?

Strategy According to ‘Henry Mintzberg’: He argues that strategy emerges over time as intentions collide with and accommodate a changing reality. Thus, one might start with a perspective and conclude that it calls for a certain position, which is to be achieved by way of a carefully crafted plan, with the eventual outcome and strategy reflected in a pattern evident in decisions and actions over time. This pattern in decisions and actions defines what Mintzberg called ‘realized’ or emergent strategy. In his book, ‘The Rise and Fall of Strategic Planning’, points out that people use ‘strategy’ in several different ways, the most common being these four:
·         Strategy is a plan, a ‘how’, a means of getting from here-to-there.
·         Strategy is a pattern in actions over time; e.g., using a ‘high end’ strategy.
·         Strategy is position; offering particular products or services in particular markets.
·         Strategy is perspective; vision and direction.
Strategy According to ‘Kenneth Andrews’: In his book ‘The Concept of Corporate Strategy’, he says;  corporate strategy is the pattern of decisions in a company that determines and reveals its objectives, purposes, or goals; produces the principal policies and plans for achieving those goals; defines the range of business that the company is to pursue; the kind of economic and human organization it is or intends to be; and, the nature of the economic and non-economic contribution it intends to make to its shareholders, employees, customers, and communities. Andrews draws a distinction between ‘corporate strategy’, which determines the businesses in which a company will compete, and ‘business strategy’, which defines the basis of competition for a given business.
Strategy According to ‘Michael Porter’: He argues that competitive strategy is ‘about being different’. He adds; ‘it means deliberately choosing a different set of activities to deliver a unique mix of value’. In short, Porter argues that strategy is about ‘competitive position’, about differentiating yourself in the eyes of the customer, about adding value through a mix of activities different from those used by competitors. In his earlier book, Porter defines competitive strategy as ‘a combination of the ‘ends’ (goals) for which the firm is striving and the ‘means’ (policies) by which it is seeking to get there’. Thus, Porter seems to embrace strategy as both ‘plan and position’. (Note: Porter writes about competitive strategy, not about strategy in general.)
Strategy According to ‘Kepner-Tregoe’: In their book ‘Top Management Strategy’, they define strategy as ‘the framework which guides those choices that determine the nature and direction of an organization’. Ultimately, this boils down to selecting products (or services) to offer and the markets in which to offer them. ‘Tregoe and Zimmerman’ urge executives to base these decisions on a single ‘driving force’ of the business. Although there are nine possible driving forces, only one can serve as the basis for strategy for a given business. The nine possibilities are listed: products offered, market needs, technology, production capability, method of sale, method of distribution, natural resources, size/growth, return/profit.  It seems ‘Tregoe and Zimmerman’ takes the position that strategy is essentially a matter of perspective.
Strategy According to ‘Michel Robert’: In his book ‘Strategy Pure & Simple’, he argues that the real issues are ‘strategic management’ and ‘thinking strategically’. For Robert, this boils down to decisions pertaining to four factors: products and services, customers, market segments, geographic areas. Like ‘Tregoe and Zimmerman’, Robert claims that decisions about which products and services to offer, the customers to be served, the market segments in which to operate, and the geographic areas of operations should be made on the basis of a single ‘driving force’. Like ‘Tregoe and Zimmerman’, Robert claims that several possible driving forces exist but only one can be the basis for strategy. The 10 driving forces cited by Robert are: product-service, user-customer, market type, production capacity/capability, technology, sales/marketing method, distribution method, natural resources, size/growth, return/profit.
Strategy According to ‘Treacy and Wiersema’: In the book ‘The Discipline of Market Leaders’, they assert that companies achieve leadership positions by narrowing, not broadening their business focus. ‘Treacy and Wiersema’ identify three ‘value-disciplines’ that can serve as the basis for strategy: operational excellence, customer intimacy, and product leadership. As with ‘driving forces’, only one of these value disciplines can serve as the basis for strategy. Each of the three value-disciplines suggests different requirements: ‘Operational excellence’ implies world-class marketing, manufacturing, and distribution processes. ‘Customer intimacy’ suggests staying close to the customer and entails long-term relationships. ‘Product leadership’ clearly hinges on market-focused R&D as well as organizational nimbleness and agility.
Although there are many similarities in the definitions above, there are also some important differences. We are left, then, with no clear-cut, widely accepted definition of strategy; only different views and opinions offered by different writers working different agendas. Then, what is strategy? Is it a plan? Does it refer to how we will obtain the ‘ends’ we seek? Is it ‘position’ taken? Just as military forces might take the high ground prior to engaging the enemy; might a business take the position of low-cost provider? Does strategy refer to perspective, to the view one takes of matters, and to the purposes, directions, decisions and actions stemming from this view? Or, does strategy refer to a pattern in our decisions and actions? For example, does repeatedly copying a competitor’s new product offerings signal a ‘me too’ strategy? So then; what is strategy? Strategy is all these; it is perspective, position, plan, and pattern. Strategy is the bridge between policy or high-order goals on the one hand, and tactics or concrete actions on the other. However, regardless of the definition of strategy, or the many factors affecting the choice of corporate or competitive strategy, there are some fundamental questions to be asked and answered. These relate to; mission & vision, objectives, competitive positioning…  So then; what is the definition of strategy? The quick response is that there is none; strategy is a broad, ambiguous topic. We must all come to our own understanding, definition, and meaning.