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Consumer Reports


Realty agents to the rich and famous must go all out

http://www.jewishworldreview.com | (KRT) Last time you went house hunting, did your real estate agent's chauffeured Bentley pick you up?

If not, you probably weren't shopping for a luxury home in Manhattan, where high-end condos and townhouses run $10 million, and up. Prospective buyers at any income level need to be treated well, real-estate agents say, but sealing a high-end deal often requires special treatment.

"You have to deliver them to the property in high style," said Barbara Corcoran, chairwoman of The Corcoran Group, a New York City-based real estate firm.

"In New York, that's not a taxi. It's a Bentley or a Rolls Royce, if you can afford it, with a private driver," she said. "That's very flattering to the buyer.

"Then, of course, you use your car and driver to drop off a thank-you note to the person, and have your chauffeur hand deliver the note. It's a home run," she said, noting that her firm has found homes for the likes of Richard Gere, Courtney Cox Arquette, Sting and Bianca Jagger.

The firm's current listings include a $35.3 million, 7-bedroom, 7-bath, 10,000 square-foot condominium overlooking Central Park, but a more average example might be the $12.9 million condo with 2 bedrooms, 2.5 baths and about 5,000 square feet.

Of course, the sphere of New York City luxury homes is a world unto itself.

"If you have a property worth $1.5 million, by any other standard that's a luxury property, but in New York that's middle class," Corcoran said. In her city, luxury starts at $3 million.

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While New York City may be the only high-end market where agents use chauffeurs, well-heeled buyers everywhere require a level of expertise that a midlevel buyer might not, agents said.

"To deal with high-net-worth people, you have to be perceived as an expert," said John Cotton, president of Cotton Real Estate in Cape Cod, Mass., where waterfront homes start at $2 million - for a teardown.

"They deal with experts in all areas of their lives. When they want to deal in real estate, they want an expert in real estate" and market values, he said.

With high-end homes "just looking at square footage and number of bedrooms doesn't give a clear indication of how much a home might be worth to a buyer," said Peter Toner, a real-estate agent with Prudential California Realty in La Jolla, Calif., where he sells both luxury and midprice homes.

Instead, high-end property agents need to be able to interpret the raw data on comparables, he said. The view, the size of the lot, the way the house faces and amenities are among the factors that play a part in a high-end buyer's decision.

A softer top-end market doesn't make an agent's job any easier.

"None of the super-rich people ever really have to sell, and so they pick and choose what offers they want to entertain," Corcoran said. "And right now, very rich people aren't making incredibly high offers on these properties, so we have a little standoff going on, so we have more of those properties on the market than we've had recently."

That means agents must spend more money on advertising, and work harder to maintain their relationships with unhappy sellers. In a soft market, agents "promote (the property) a lot longer than expected, and that's going to cost them a lot more money," Corcoran said.

Also, "they're going to have a trophy-property owner who's not going to be happy, and the maintenance of the relationship is more of a challenge. Sellers often hope a real-estate agent can make the market for their property, but they can only deliver the market.

"If it ain't there, it ain't there. It's rough. There are a lot more top agents in New York dropping very expensive listings (because sellers) won't adjust their sales price, because it's just too darn exhausting to hold onto it."

That's less of a problem in La Jolla, Toner said.

"We're actually seeing more sales on the top end than we did last year," he said.

Two notable recent sales: A home that fetched $11.25 million, with 5 bedrooms, 7.5 baths, nearly 11,000 square feet, a pool, an ocean view and a dining room with retracting roof; and a new beachfront home that sold for $3.9 million, with 5 beds, 7 bathrooms and 5,700 square feet.

The right advertisement is key in securing high-end real estate sales, experts said, but not because a buyer will purchase the house advertised: Sellers will list houses with agents who have slick ads.

"Ninety-eight percent of every marketing budget for real estate in America is still spent on print advertising, which makes every seller feel happy because they feel flattered, but it gives every broker a headache because it's expensive and it never sells property," Corcoran said.

Agents place ads to keep sellers happy, and as enticement to bring in buyers. But while agents in the midlevel home market will settle for point-and-shoot photos, professional photographers are called in at the high end. "When we photograph, it can take three or four hours to get one shot done" to get the lighting just right, Cotton said.

Another difference in the high-end market: Sales take longer.

"The operative word is patience, because you have to wait, some times a long time, for the right property to become available," Cotton said.

"We know one person who really wants a large property on the ocean. He spent more than $6 million for an interim house, so he can be on the scene and wait for the perfect property to come on the market," he said.

Toner said he worked about 11 months on one recent sale, a $2.9 million home - complete with orange grove, tennis court and pool - opposite the Rancho Santa Fe Golf Club near San Diego.

Like all sales work, high-end luxury real estate requires an extensive network of contacts.

"High-end people stick together. You know how fish travel in schools? I won't say high-end people are like fish, but they want to be with people who have similar backgrounds, similar achievements, similar aspirations, so once you start to do a good job with someone in that group, they will refer others," Cotton said. "No matter what kind of business you're in, (if you work with) high net worth individuals, you don't break into it over time. It takes time to establish trust."

And to massage egos, some said.

"They don't want to know you have another client. They want to believe they're the only ones in the world," Corcoran said. "You have to treat their time, their constraints and the enormous pressure they have on their plate, with great respect and adoration."

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