It’s A Small World After All...Understanding And Working The International Market

International Real Estate   Written by Stefan Swanepoel on 09/2007 - Word Count: 477
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Over the next five years, as the globalization of property ownership and generational mobility blend and shape the world, we are going to see a smorgasbord of foreign companies, both online and offline, become active in the us real estate industry.

 

Many leading us brokerages, especially national franchises, have not only been working with international buyers for many years, but have also aggressively expanded their reach into foreign markets. Brands such as re/max, era, century 21, realty executives, coldwell banker and realty world are already shaping the real estate landscape on most continents around the globe.

 

Still this has strangely enough been almost exclusively a one-way street. Although many real estate brokerage companies from europe, australia and even south africa have been researching the lucrative us market, few have actually made the decision to enter it. This has left the us companies with the ongoing advantage of expanding to foreign countries while enjoying no real international competition domestically. This will almost certainly change over the next five years.

 

Global expansion for american brokerages has not been easy. In many cases us companies had to pay their “dues” as they worked through 3 -5 years of learning the rules, regulations and nuances of the local markets. In some countries the local government policies regulating real estate are not only vastly different from the us but be non-existent for licensing, home ownership and education.

 

Meanwhile international clients are closing transactions daily in almost every market across the us. In the years ahead as the immigrant and minority segments become an increasingly larger part of the real estate market, most agents are going to be forced to make a much larger commitment to diversity and the understanding of the international arena.  That in itself sets forth a challenge for the average us agent. While minorities and immigrants share many of the same characteristics of all buyers and sellers, they also have many characteristics that require special attention that are unique to each country and culture. Cultural diversity is a growing phenomena and the successful real estate professional of tomorrow will need a few different strategies to effectively interact with people of different ethic backgrounds and countries. 

 

For those interested to getting more involved in the global market, the challenge is to understand the various religious customs, cultural diversity and the language differences among the numerous multicultural clients. Some valuable and interesting sites to use to start the process are:

 

·     International real estate federation - www.fiabci.com

·     International consortium of real estate associations - www.worldproperties.com

·     Translation services – www.worldlingo.com

·     Cultural awareness – www.getcustoms.com

 

To stay on top of all of the trends and your options, get your copy of the encyclopedic 159-page 2007 Swanepoel TRENDS Report detailing the top 10 trends at www.ReTrends.com. 

 

 

 


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Stefan Swanepoel is widely recognized as the leading visionary on trends and change in the real estate industry. He has penned 13 Books, Whitepapers and Reports including the 1998 Amazon.com bestseller, Real Estate confronts Reality (1997), the sequel Real Estate confronts the Future (2004), Swanepoel TRENDS Report (2006 & 2007) and the Swanepoel TRENDS Report (2008).  His academic accomplishments include a bachelor’s in science, a master’s in business economics and diplomas in arbitration, mergers and acquisitions, real estate, computer science and marketing.  Stefan serves as Chairman and CEO of RealtyU Group, Inc., the largest career development company in the real estate industry educating over 350,000 agents every year. For information about Stefan’s speaking and consulting services,



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Copyright© 2007, Stefan Swanepoel. All right reserved. For information contact FrogPond at email susie@FrogPond.com.