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Builders to Arizona Real Estate Agents: Help Us Sell!

With once-massive waiting lists dried up and thousands of homes sitting empty in new subdivisions, Valley builders are trying to jump start sales by offering hefty financial perks to real estate agents.

When the Arizona housing market took off two years ago, builders’ mind sets were “We don’t need you,” said Christa Burlakoff, owner of Principal Residential Group in Phoenix. “They started ignoring Realtors.”

Agents went from receiving 3 percent commissions and higher from builders to $250 referral fees, Burlakoff said.

“That killed our pocketbooks,” she said.

Arizona Real Estate Agents Then the market turned, inventories shot up dramatically and homes began sitting on the market longer. Mortgage loans in the region were rarely applied for. Something has to give.

It’s a cyclical process, said John Fioramonti, managing director of real estate research firm Hanley Wood’s Valley office. When the market is hot, builders don’t offer commissions or incentives, he said.

But when the market turned sour in 2006, they began giving 6 percent to 10 percent commissions, Fioramonti said.

“That’s outrageously high to try to mend some fences,” he said.

Valley builders need to rid themselves of an estimated 12,000 to 14,000 homes. And from a marketing standpoint, reaching out to real estate agents is more cost effective because they have instant pools of Arizona mortgage applicants to tap, Fioramonti said.

For Scottsdale-based Hacienda Builders, roughly 60 percent of its business comes from agents. The company recently launched a new incentive program for agents that offers greater rewards, including Westcor gift cards and up to a 7 percent commission, for each additional sale.

“We know Realtors are a vital partner,” said Susan Paul, vice president of sales and marketing.

Paul, who joined Hacienda about a year ago, said she’s used similar approaches in her work for other builders. She plans to keep Hacienda’s program going in sluggish and robust markets.

A lot of times, builders have tunnel vision and create gimmicks that don’t last, but when someone brings in repeat business, “you should reward them,” she said.

It’s not just the builders who are offering home buyer incentives.

Homeowners trying to sell existing properties are too, said Frank Dickens, president of the Arizona Association of Realtors. Dickens isn’t convinced, though, that offering incentives to agents is a major advantage for sellers.

“A good [mortgage broker] will do what’s best for a certain consumer,” he said. “The last thing they look at is what the compensation package is.”

Principal Residential’s Burlakoff has been in the business 16 years and seen the cycles of builders offering bonuses in slow markets. This time around seems different, Burlakoff said. Builders are educating and partnering with agents, instead of ignoring them when they bring in clients, she said.

“It’s no longer, ‘Sit down. Shut up. Don’t move,’” she said. “It’s about come and see our design center. Come meet our people.”

SOURCE: The East Valley Tribune

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