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Real estate company proves there’s strength in
numbers
by Heather
B. Hayes
for Virginia Business
May 2006
If
a big ego in business is akin to having an elephant in the boardroom, then
you would expect a stampede when the owners of six real estate agents decided
to merge. But the decision to park all egos at the door was high on the priority
list when Coldwell Banker franchisees Dorcas T. Helfant-Browning, John Wilson,
Rick West, William Shelton and Tim Gifford got together with Tommy T. Thompson,
owner of Harrison and Lear Residential. They formed a region-wide franchise
known as Coldwell Banker Professional, Realtors in 2001.
“There were a lot of folks in town betting that we would never make it
work,” says
Helfant-Browning, the firm’s acting CEO and general manager. “We
are all very strong-willed, and, at the time, none of us were younger than
50. But we are also consensus builders, and we very quickly began to function
as a board of directors.”
Clearly, the risk paid off. Coldwell Banker Professional, Realtors, which
handles residential and commercial real estate, has achieved rapid growth
in a short period. Sales rose 2,848 percent from 2001 to 2004, making the
real estate firm the service category winner in the Fantastic 50. Sales grew
another 53 percent last year.
Leadership is one of the biggest reasons
for the real estate company’s
growth, says Conway Sheild, a partner with Jones, Blechman, Woltz and Kelly,
a law firm that has counseled Coldwell Banker Professional, Realtors since
its beginning. “There are no weak sisters at the helm of this company,” he
says. “Everybody in the deal already had talent and experience and
drive, but then they were able to leverage on each other’s skills
to the point that they produced a product that was greater than the
sum of the
parts.”
The partners at Coldwell Banker Professional, Realtors, plan to continue
building on their recent growth. With 10 offices already serving the region
from Virginia Beach to Williamsburg, the company is set to open three more
sites this year, including one in New Kent County. The company is also in
negotiations that could result in two more locations before the end of the
year.
In a couple of cases, the owners of
competing real estate firms called the partners to invite
them to make an offer. “They feel comfortable with
how we run our business because we’re ethical and we take good care
of our agents, and they know we’ll take good care of theirs,” Helfant-Browning
says.
The partners plan to continue to expand
through acquisition. “The opportunity
to purchase existing companies is limited, so if someone knocks on our door,
we will consider it and grab it if the conditions are right,” Helfant-Browning
says. “Unlike a lot of large Realtors, we’ll move
on a small opportunity, because we have the recruiting ability
and
the training
ability to take a small sales corps and build on it.”
The goal of Coldwell Banker Professional, Realtors, is to double the size
of its sales force during the next 24 months. That effort will include recruiting
new real estate agents and focusing on retraining and career development
for existing agents. In doing this, Helfant-Browning says, the company will
be able to sustain strong growth even if the real estate market flattens.
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