Broken Promises of a Career in Real Estate? It’s not you, it’s me.
A career in real estate is a bold choice…even if Selling Sunset makes it look easy to host some open houses, schmooze high-net-worth clientele, and clear $250k.
It requires a unique blend of flexibility and structure, of independence and interdependence. But the reality is that most people get into real estate for a variety of reasons:
- Create your own hours / be your own boss
- Unlimited income potential
- It’s entertaining! Right?
With each of these, they did so because of the promises that real estate made to them. They were looking for more freedom in their life… professionally, financially, etc. They were looking for creative ways to pursue greater opportunities. They wanted to leverage something that has meant success to a lot of people for their own futures.
But let’s be real. For those who’ve been in real estate for some time now know that real estate hasn’t always kept those promises.
Why?
Maybe they’re working with a sucky team. Maybe they’re doing the wrong activities. Maybe they had an overbearing manager. Maybe they got burned by another “no-show client.” Maybe they’re tired of making cold calls. Or maybe they simply can’t eat any more leftover fruit after no one came to their big open house (we’ve all been there). Whatever it is, many agents find that they’re working too hard for something that’s not living up to the hype.
That’s where Rize Realty got its start. We knew that real estate could be more and do more, and so we decided to build something that could prove that.
It’s not a silver bullet, it’s not a magic trick.
It is, however, about being around the right people. It’s about getting the right support. And it’s about a financial structure that gives your business the rocket fuel it needs to get to where you want it to go.
If real estate isn’t what you thought it was going to be, don’t be too quick to blame real estate. Maybe you’re only missing a puzzle piece. And maybe, (just maybe) Rize Realty can help you find it so that you don’t have to break up with our industry like a soured high school boyfriend.