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May 25, 2007

Ten Skills an Originator Must Master - Part 2

The purpose of this post is to give a delineation of what it will take for a loan officer to become an expert and thus differentiate themselves from the competition. If you are interested in just getting by, I would suggest you stop reading at this juncture.  If you are truly interested in learning what it will take to succeed, this will at least give you an outline for the road.  It certainly does not include every facet or course I would recommend, but it gives you the idea of how varied and comprehensive we must be.  Our industry touches upon many facets of people's lives and we can't help people without taking into account all aspects of the real estate finance transaction.

1.       Learn the real estate process. I know of loan officers who say they don't like working with real estate agents and still others who have never bought a home.  With regard to the first situation, I say simply-get over it.  You cannot afford to ignore what can be anywhere from twenty-five to seventy-five percent of the market in a given year.  You are in the real estate industry and agents are a major player.  Your refinance clients will purchase a home sometime in the future and an agent will be involved.  You need to learn how to deal with the right agents and how to control the sales situation.  Not only should you play in this market, you should take a real estate licensing class.  Not to sell real estate but to understand what agents do.  In other words, you must become an expert in not only your field, but in your targets' field as well.

Regarding the absurd situation of someone selling mortgages and never owning a home, I listen with amusement when someone tells me that they can be effective without being a homeowner.  If I were a real estate agent trying to convince someone to purchase a home, why would I send this person to someone who can't convince themselves to purchase?  A vital aspect of sales is empathy, and you can't empathize with prospects that have experienced something you never have experienced.  Perhaps you can sell real estate as a commodity, vying for the lowest bid, but you are never getting off the treadmill in this way.

2.       Learn the three economic reasons to own a home.  It is truly amazing both loan officers and real estate agents are not experts calculating and explaining the economic benefits of homeownership; leverage, rental equivalency and inflation protection, because these concepts because are the basis of our whole industry.  It is why the industry is called the American dream.  Not mastering this is akin to selling with your hands tied behind your back. Imagine teaching Realtors these concepts, instead of pushing products.  Believe it or not, real estate agents are not taught these concepts in real estate school.  What a way to differentiate yourself by teaching them the most important concepts they will ever learn.

3.       Learn the economics of your rate sheet.  This is another way you can distinguish a bit player from an expert. We try to make loan officers competent by teaching them how to read rate sheets.  But do they know why one program costs more than another?  Do they understand spreads?  Most loan officers are reduced to general statements such as "it costs more because of risk."  It is not always because of risk.  And sometimes this statement sounds and is ridiculous.  I always have a great time giving examples of this in class while I get loan officers to understand the relationships of pricing.  One of my first seminars to real estate agents was titled "Everything a Realtor Should Know about the Secondary Market."  Do you think I had a hard time convincing them I was an expert when everyone else was delivering rate sheets and doughnuts?

4.       Learn important economic concepts of real estate financeWe are not selling a bunch of loan programs.  We are selling financial instruments.  We need to understand how these instruments can be used to achieve financial goals.  Concepts as the efficacy of different levels of prepayment and debt consolidation come to mind at this juncture. How can you call yourself a trusted advisor without mastering these?  Our goal is not merely to give people what they want, but to help fill their short-term and long-term needs.  Note this requires more than knowledge of loan programs. A loan officer learns programs.  An expert learns how to utilize these programs to help their clients achieve their short and long term economic goals.

5.       Learn how to compare loan programs based upon future scenarios - including ARMs vs. fixed, points vs. no points, one loan vs. two loans, negative amortization and more.  For example, do you know the three major scenarios to describe the possible future patterns of interest rates and what they mean?  You need to understand the historical case, the worst case and FIAR case scenarios and how to work them into comparisons for your clients.

6.       Learn how to underwrite as well as process a loan - including the intricacies of taxes and self-employment.  I laugh at trainers advising loan officers to call upon CPAs, knowing full well that when the CPA starts talking about intricate tax returns the loan officer is completely lost. You don't have a right to call on CPAs unless you are an expert in tax return analysis. To this end, I don't think you should just learn how to read a tax return, I think you should take a tax preparation course.

A loan officer should not just learn how to process, they need to learn how to underwrite.  How can you take control of service levels if every time you send a loan to an underwriter it is as if you have sent it into a black hole?  You should know more than the underwriter knows with the goal of underwriting each file BEFORE it goes to the underwriter.  That includes reviewing the appraisal.

7.       Learn how to control your customers and the processIf you want to deliver great service with less stress in your life, you must take control of the process.  If you don't you will start with an imperfect product and an imperfect product will result in an imperfect process.  How can you exceed your customer's expectations if you can't even deliver adequate service? Experts are well beyond this juncture. 

I once closed closed over sixty loans in one month. Do you think I could have done this without taking control?  If you are meeting with clients two and three times during the process and real estate agents are running after you to get status, you are reacting and are certainly not in control.  Not taking control causes the treadmill or "roller coaster" model of production and subjects you to countless hours of stress every month. The long-term result?  Lower production levels or complete burnout.

8.       Learn how to market from within the loan process.  Taking control of the process puts you in a position to avoid costly and inefficient marketing methods such as cold calling or purchasing leads.  Do not expect a referral base to start appearing after a few years of going in the wrong direction.  Every time you leave the process to market, you take yourself further away from a successful business model.  Experts learn where the opportunities are.  What the foundation model does is help open your eyes so you don't miss these opportunities. When you are running around out of control and then marketing all over the place you will miss so many of these opportunities that are right under your nose.

9.       Learn what is right and what is not.  If you want to lead, you can't do so moving in the wrong direction or coming from the wrong side of the line.  You may close a loan and make more money tomorrow or next week, but you will never leave the treadmill because you will not qualify to work with leaders.  Leaders understand the importance of relationships.  Rate shoppers do not.  I firmly believe that much of the fraud that occurs in this industry, including predatory lending, occurs because we have not clearly drawn the line for loan officers. Experts are not wondering where the line lies.

10.   Become an expert in sales and marketing.  Over the years I have spent an inordinate amount of time correcting much of the training most loan officers and Realtors receive.  What sounds like good advice such as "you have to ask for the business" and "you must overcome objections" actually can be counter-productive.  For example, the secret to getting referrals is not asking, it is positioning yourself to ask.  This is why so many of us find asking so uncomfortable.  If asking were the secret, I believe many more loan officers would be out there asking instead of saying, "oh, I know I should be..."

Even traveling one step beyond being an expert in sales and marketing within your industry, you must become an expert in sales and marketing within the industry of your target.  Loan officers should not actually be attending "loan officer" marketing seminars. They should be attending "real estate agent" marketing seminars. My first rule of synergy says that everything you do must achieve a second objective, even your educational plan.  Why not surround yourself with your targets while you learn how to help them? 

Yes, it will be a lot of work.  But if you try positioning yourself as an expert you will achieve what many keep searching for.  Finally your efforts will help you get closer to your long-term goals of a satisfaction within your career.  Those who know that they can deliver more value not only are in a great position to ask for the business, those seeking counsel approach them every day.

Loan officers hear questions every day such as "what is your rate?"  Experts hear questions such as "what do you recommend I do?"  How would you like to spend the rest of your career, answering the first question every day or the second question?  This is the choice you have. Unfortunately we are so busy trying to chase down the next deal and becoming competent, most of us never reach that position.  I am here to tell you that not only is reaching this goal possible, it can be achieved with the right road map.

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