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Phone Numbers:
Office:
(314) 862-5566 ext 18
My Markets
Metro Areas: Champaign & Springfield-Decatur,IL, St. Louis MO, Columbia-Jefferson City MO
Concentration Areas
Concentrations: Accounting, Acquisitions, Asset Management, Brokerage Office Management, Consultant, Consultant, Corporate Real Estate, Due Diligence, Facility Management, Investment Sales, Landlord Representation, Leasing, Marketing, Property Management, Receivership, Site Selection, Tenant Representation, Zoning
Property Types: MultiFamily Apartments, HOA Development, Student Housing , Executive/Shared Suites, Medical/Healthcare, Office Condominium, Multi Tenant Office, Single Tenant Office, Call Center, Other Office, Big Box Retail, Lifestyle Center, Neighborhood Center, Power Center, Regional Center, Super Regional Center, Restaurant, Single Tenant Retail (NNN), Mixed Use, Commercial Land Development, Padsites, Street Retail, Strip Center
Brief Profile
The SVN Difference!
50% - 50% Commission Split
Brings the highest reward for the customer and broker
Full Profile
COMPENSATED
COOPERATION
You didn’t get into the commercial real estate business to lose money. But did
you know that the existing business model for commercial real estate may
be costing you thousands of dollars in potential commission? Or that it takes
the focus away from providing the best possible result for clients—the kind of
results that yield referral and repeat business? It happens every day and the
brokerage community has accepted it as the way business is done. It doesn’t
have to be this way.
Real estate expert and blogger James Kimmons recently asked, “Is the
commission split model for the real estate brokerage business in danger of
extinction? With virtually every other facet of our business changing, from
marketing to delivery of services, can we really reasonably expect to maintain
the status quo for compensation structures?”
The Sperry Van Ness International Corporation (SVNIC) doesn’t believe so.
Founded in 1987 on the Compensated Cooperation concept, the Sperry Van
Ness® organization has been leading the charge toward change ever since.
We are determined to shift the way commercial real estate business is done
while also improving commissions across the board.
THE WAY IT IS:
As a businessperson, you understand how demand works. It’s Economics
101. When demand goes up, prices go up. The larger the market, the greater
the demand. So why would anyone want to actually decrease demand?
“The reality is that the market is one of the most segmented, fragmented,and dysfunctional markets in existence,” explains Sperry Van Ness President
and CEO Kevin Maggiacomo. “It operates in an environment where the listing
broker controls the flow of information to potential buyers, often causing
the property to sell for less than market value.” It’s true. In more than 80% of commercial real estate deals, listing brokers share their listings with just a portion of the brokers across the country. Often,
understandably, this is driven by a profit motive. “The more that a broker quietly markets an investment sales listing in an effort to identify a buyer on his or her own, the greater the chance that he or she will earn 6% instead of 3%,” says Maggiacomo.
Which sounds fine, until you realize what’s really happening: by limiting the
property’s exposure, the broker willingly reduces potential demand for the property.
“Do Real Estate Brokers Add Value When Listing Services Are Unbundled?”
asks a 2008 paper produced by the National Bureau of Economic Research.2
In this study, economists B. Douglas Bernheim of Stanford University and
Jonathan Meer of Texas A&M University looked at the housing market in
the vicinity of Stanford to measure the effect brokers had on pricing. They
note: “On one hand, brokers offer potentially useful knowledge and expertise.
On the other hand, because the relationship between the homeowner and
the broker resembles a classical principal agent problem, the broker may not deploy services in ways that promote the seller’s interests.” In their findings, listings that went through a broker reduced the selling price of the studied properties by 5.9 to 7.5 percent. In the paper, the authors cite a study by Steven D. Levitt and Chad Syverson, which emphasizes that an agent “has strong incentives to sell the house quickly, even at a substantially lower price.” In a Washington Post article from May 2013, real estate writer Kenneth R. Harney notes, “By restricting access to information...to relatively small Bernheim, B. D., & Meer, J. (2008, February). Do real estate brokers add value when listing services are unbundled?
Market distortions when agents are better informed: The value of information in real estate
transactions.