World Wide Property Sales
Negotiating Like a Pro
by Steve Cook
I know that one of the toughest things for a beginning investor is negotiating
deals. We are often our own worst enemy when it comes to this. For the most
part, I think that when we envision good negotiators, we see smooth talking
individuals with an answer for everything. For many of us, this is a horrifying
vision because smooth and slick does not come naturally to us and, if we’re
honest, we don’t want to come across that way. So how do we negotiate a good
deal when we don’t have the gift of “slick”, and we don’t want to become
“slick”?
I do not consider myself to be a smooth and slick negotiator, but believe that
I’m pretty good at what I do. Negotiating didn’t come naturally to me, but came
together over time and with practice. There were two things that made me a good
negotiator and can help you as well.
First, you must be willing to stop talking and listen. When dealing with someone
in this business, whether you are the buyer or the seller, you need to sell
yourself. You can not sell yourself without listening to the other party’s
needs. Listen for what is important to the other party and then show them that
you can address it. In my negotiating, I keep the other party talking as much as
possible. When they run out of things to say, I ask another question in hopes of
learning a hot button of theirs. When I hear it, I ask a question that
acknowledges I heard their needs. An example would be as follows:
Seller: “My house needs a ton of repairs, but I can’t afford to fix them
in order to put the house on the market. Plus, we can’t really live here anymore
because the water is coming in through the roof.”
Steve: “So basically you need someone like me who is willing to buy your
home as it sits right now to help you out. Is that true?”
My question to the seller acknowledges that I heard their need, provided them
with the benefits of dealing with me, and got them to acknowledge that dealing
with me would be good for them.
You Must Listen, It’s Very Important!
The second thing that will make you a good negotiator is knowing, without
hesitation, what the deal needs to look like to be a good deal. Other investors
often ask me how I get such good deals and I tell them that I’m not willing to
pay above a predetermined amount. When dealing with sellers, know what your top
dollar amount is. For example, if I walk into someone’s home and know I will
only spend $150,000, then I’m firm in my convictions and all of my questions are
leading the sellers toward selling me their home for $150,000. I don’t negotiate
up because the sellers say that they need more money. Once they acknowledge that
I’m the person to help them, we need to come to the price that I’m willing to
pay in order to help them. If the sellers tell me that they want $170,000, I
don’t give them $170,000 because they say that is what they need. I stick to my
guns and tell them the advantages of dealing with me. Price eventually becomes
secondary to the seller and dealing with me, the person who is guaranteed to
solve their problem, becomes most important.
Be firm in your conviction of what you need to pay. If you are only hoping to
get it for a certain amount, you will pay more every single time. I get good
deals because the price that I have in mind is all I’m willing to pay. As long
as the number keeps coming in my direction, I will negotiate until it reaches
the level where I need it to be.
To be a good negotiator, you need to learn just a couple of things. First,
listen to the other party, and second, know what it is you are trying to
accomplish before going in. If you don’t know, the other party will get their
way. As far as being smooth is concerned, your flow will get better in time.
Just focus on getting what you want and listening to the seller in order to lead
them where you want them to be.
Bio:
Since 1998 Steve Cook has flipped many hundreds of houses as an active
Baltimore-area real estate investor. Steve's unique specialty is the "flipping
homes 1-2 punch", a proven system of real estate investing that powerfully
combines wholesaling and rehabbing houses. Steve Cook is dedicated to helping
others succeed through understanding and aggressively applying his time-tested,
step-by-step approach to flipping real estate.