Throughout both my real estate career and my prior-to-real-estate-life in Corporate America, I’ve found there are two small phrases that are at the same time both the most powerful and the most difficult words you can say to a client…
“I don’t know”
and
“No”
Why are these so difficult?
In real estate, or any service-based business for that matter, we feel like we should be all-knowing. The ultimate source of information. “The Man”. The go-to guy. As such, it isn’t easy to say, “I don’t know.”
After all, aren’t you being paid to know?
Well sure. But let’s face it, no one knows everything. Oh, you may know a lot about real estate (or whatever). You may have incalculable hours of experience in the trenches. You may think you’ve seen everything and can fix anything and know it all.
But you don’t.
Check your ego at the door and realize that you don’t know everything. You can’t know everything. No one does and if they claim they do, they’re either lying or so full of themselves no one would want to work with them anyway.
It is OK to say, “I don’t know.” In fact, it is far (FAR) better to say that then spew some half-baked answer and either hope it is right or that your client won’t know any better.
Want to lose trust you’ve built with your client in an instant? Answer a question they you don’t really know and see what happens when they find out you fumbled your way through it.
And they will find out, sooner or later.
*POOF* there goes that trust. And there goes that client (and their friends, family and acquaintances too).
You will be much better served if you are up front and honest and just say, “I don’t know.”
And follow that up immediately with, “But I’ll find out.”
And do that — find out and follow up.
99% of the humans out there will respect you for that. As for the 1% that don’t, oh well. Part ways. They don’t want you representing them and you don’t need the headache.
Telling a client “No” isn’t easy either. It is pretty much engrained in us to be “yes men” (and I use “men” not to be sexist. It’s an all-encompassing term and being politically correct and saying “yes people” just sounds silly). Human nature being what it is, we tend to want to be positive in our relationships with clients, and saying no is not generally a very positive thing.
But you need to be telling clients the pure, unadulterated truth. Yes isn’t always the answer. Don’t just tell people what they want to hear, tell them what they need to hear.
Why are they so powerful?
Honesty.
Therein lies the power of admitting you don’t know something, and being able to say no.
While a client might not like being told no, or having to wait for an answer, ultimately they will appreciate your honesty.
Honesty is highly valued in our society. Just take a look at other words and traits typically associated with honesty: truth, ethical, thoughtful, caring, sincere, loyal, integrity.
Those are not bad words and traits to be known by…
Honesty antonyms? How about fraud, lying, cheating, deceit, artificial.
No, I’m not saying that if you never say “no” or “I don’t know” that you are a cheating and deceitful fraud. Similarly, just uttering these two phrases doesn’t ensure you a place next to Mother Teresa in the Honesty Hall of Fame.
In my life experience though (for what that’s worth) I’ve found many people that can not seem to ever say, “I don’t know” or tell someone “no” — especially when it comes to a client relationship where those utterances could well mean the loss of that client. They are not easy things to say.
But sometimes they are the right things to say.
And by saying these things you might just find you cement a positive perception of yourself in your clients eye, and wind up actually increasing your business.
Have the courage to say No. Have the courage to face the Truth. Do the right thing because it is right. These are the magic keys to living your life with integrity.
~ W. Clement Stone
Photo Credit: Your’s truly, on the streets of San Francisco
Damn… saw the headline and the first paragraph and i was getting ready to rip you for being so wrong… but you came around to it. I don’t know is a poor answer. I will find out is much better.
Yup. Took too long to come around to that…. “I will find out” is far better.
I would soo love to send this to a Realtor I
Am in a cross sale with right now. He has been caught in several lies because instead of saying “I don’t know “he answers yes to all the buyers questions. I hope he reads your column!
Hi Jay,
With trust and confidence are you a winner, that’s why over 70% of our sales come from word-of-mouth recommendations. Create trust and grab the 99%.
Agreed! And agree even more with “I’ll find out.” Nothing frustrates me more as a customer when a sales person or someone in the service industry answers with an “I don’t know” and then doesn’t find out the answer.
What better service could you hope to provide than actually finding information specific for a client? Knowing goes a long way, but so does not knowing, in some cases.
I’ve heard it said that the person who knows everything, actually has much to learn! I had a somewhat difficult, high-profile client tell me one time that he chose to work with me because I didn’t try to BS him with answers to his questions. It felt a little risky at the time, but honesty and direct follow-up when I had found the answer, paid off in the end.
yes I completely Agree with you Jay but through out my career I found out that we should always put the true picture in front of the clients.
Anyone with any experience in this business knows when to say “I’m not sure; let me check that and get back to you.” You won’t survive very long BS-ing your way through each transaction blissfully unaware of the consequences ”“ no one is that lucky.