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Professional Partners
Find out how
Financial, Insurance, Financial Planning, Taxation
or Legal Professionals increase their income through
lender relationships, and how many of these
professionals are losing money and clients by not
having these relationships in place.
As
a result of our Preferred partners and Clients for Life
Program, we currently have over $152,000,000 in Mortgages Under
Management. Those partners have given us their trust by
referring us their clients and they continue to benefit from
exposure in our Clients for Life Program. With the cost of
new client acquisition calculated at approximately 3 - 5 times
the cost of keeping a current client relationship, it's clear
that maintaining your hard-earned client base is a matter of
economic survival. Our Clients for Life Program
accomplishes this through the following steps:
1. We can help your clients restructure debt, through "equity
repositioning", that provides cash flow for the purchase of your
products and services.
Insurance:
I have an associate who
is a successful insurance sales person. He shared with me
that the higher commission dollars are in selling “whole life”
vs. “term” insurance.
He also
sells the insurance, not as insurance, but as a retirement
planning tool. He has sent to us referrals, from those
that needed to restructure their debt, for an "equity
repositioning" refinance to free up monthly cash flow to allow
investment into an insurance product that requires a monthly
contribution. In return, we now ask our clients at closing if
they have adequate protection in the event of an unforeseen
disaster, thereby returning the referral favor.
(Click here
to see the special form we created for this purpose; it
accompanies each and every loan application we send out or take
in person; requires Adobe Reader).
For more
information specific to Insurance Professionals,
Click Here.
Financial
Planning:
The same principle
applies. “I can’t afford it” is no longer an
acceptable excuse.
For more information
specific to Financial Planning Professionals,
Click Here.
Wills and
Trusts:
Without a will
or a trust, when the client passes, their property may end up in
PROBATE. What an ugly word. With every loan application a
mortgage professional should ask the client if they have this in
place. If not, (80% of them don’t) refer them to an
attorney that can do this for them.
In
conversations I have had with family planning attorneys, many of
them recommend to their client, “If you are thinking of
refinancing, do it now instead of waiting on this process
(establishing a new trust). It could cost you more in the
future to accurately reflect the trust.”
Attorneys:
David Ward a
well-respected marketing consultant for the legal profession
recently received numerous emails with a common theme.
What many attorneys wanted to know was “tips on how to
accelerate payment for services rendered, politely, while
retaining the client and in the process not turning into a bill
collector or pushing the client away.”
His
recommendation was to introduce a mortgage professional to the
client for a debt restructuring refinance and in the process of
the closing having the attorneys bill
PAID IN FULL!
Top
professionals use mortgage lenders as a tool for their practice.
Check out point number 4 below! Having this type of
relationship is not an option, it's a matter of economic
survival!
For more
information specific to Legal Professionals,
Click Here.
2. Add Real, Non-Self Serving
value while leveraging your referral potential.
What good is a
database if it’s not being marketed and communicated to?
By
networking with another professional and introducing the new
professional's products, services or solutions to the client
base, the referring professional has created another excuse to
market and “stay in the mind of” the client. Our Preferred
partners find this helps maintain their hard earned client
relationships. Additionally, for those clients referred to
us from our Preferred partners, we help strengthen the
Provider-Client relationship through our
Client Retention Contact Program,
which helps our partners increase their monthly business and
income. To see how our Client Retention Contact Program
helps our Preferred partners grow their businesses,
Click Here.
An example:
A mortgage professional was introduced to a client from an
Estate Planning Professional and the professional recommends
that the client refinance and in the process have the loan
documents accurately reflect “the new living trust” during the
creation of the trust.
This could save
the client time and money from needing to do this once the trust
is created. A financial planner may want to semi-annually
send out a joint marketing piece promoting a “debt evaluation
check up.” During a refinance market this is critical.
Please read item number 4 farther down this page.
3. Maximize the Profit potential
per client.
Most financial
planning professionals that sell mutual funds set up IRA’s or
other retirement vehicles to get paid a commission for services
rendered and continue to get paid as those accounts accumulate
wealth.
This does vary
from professional to professional. One financial planner I
work with shared with me that he is compensated 1 to 3% of the
total monthly deposits his customers make into their retirement
mutual fund account. “Replace consumer credit interest
debt by refinancing and rolling credit debt into your mortgage
(now a possible interest deduction) and deposit those monies
into your retirement account.”
Financial
planning professionals need to maximize their client’s
retirement planning potential!
4. Protect your relationships.
Recently a firm
tele-marketed over 100,000 Legal, Financial, Taxation and
Financial Planning firms across the country and one question
they asked was; “in conversation with your clients does the
topic of mortgage lending or refinancing ever come up” or “can
refinancing be used as a tool for any of your clients needs?”
Two out of three responded, “YES.”
They would then
follow up with a second question: “Do you have a strong referral
relationship with an existing lender or do you let the client
select his or her own professional?” NINE out of TEN
respond; “I pretty much let the customer select their own
lender.”
Hopefully, one
can understand that by not introducing the client to an
associate for their other professional needs, the client has the
opportunity to develop a relationship with a non-competing
professional that may have a strong referral relationship with
your competitor. The professional that does not provide
the referral solution for their client could be left behind or
their services challenged by a competitor. Having a
trusted mortgage professional to refer your clients to, and to
guard your relationship with them is not an option, it's a
matter of economic survival!
Small
Community Banks
Why are small
community banks anxious to establish relationships with local
mortgage brokers?
If the
community bank cannot provide a financial solution for their
customer due to a limited supply of mortgage lending products,
then that customer has to go to a competitor (another bank) for
their solution. If the customer goes to a Bank of America
or Washington Mutual, those companies will solicit all of their
checking and savings accounts to be moved.
A local
mortgage broker is a safe solution because they do not provide
checking and savings account services. From the smaller
banks point of view, establishing this referral relationship is
not an option, it’s a matter of survival and protecting their
existing relationships (deposits).
I have heard
stories of Financial Planners referring their customer to the
large nationwide lenders with a presence in their markets.
Do these planners realize what a business risk this is? Don’t
they know that Washington Mutual, Bank of America, Citibank and
the other major financial institutions have divisions that
provide the same financial services the referring professional
provides?
If you are a
non-lending professional reading this outline hopefully you can
see the value in creating this type of referral environment and
developing a strong professional relationship with a mortgage
professional.
How Do
You Select the Right Lender?
A common
question is “how does one select the right lender?”
To find the
answer we should look to the industry that works with lenders
the most, as they would have the most experience with a lending
professional. That would be a TOP Producing Realtor. I
didn’t say “any” Realtor, I said a TOP Producer. How do
these top producing Realtors select a lender?
First of
all, top producing Realtors do not switch lenders very often.
Why? Because good lenders are hard to find.
When we
think of a lender, most consumers automatically think of “lowest
rate.” The lowest rate for a lender can probably be found
on the Internet. Just like the lowest rate for a stock
trade or direct mutual fund investing can be found on the
Internet. Just like the lowest insurance premium can be
found on the Internet. Just like the family planning
“do-it-yourself” solutions can be found on the Internet.
Eliminating the middleman always seems to be the least expensive
route, but be careful what you wish for, don’t eliminate
yourself in the process.
The best loan for a client, believe it or not, many times is not
the lowest rate available. It’s always
about matching the proper loan with the client’s life style or
finding a loan that can accomplish a more important goal like
retirement planning investment, adequately providing insurance
protection for ones family, refinancing to make the IRS go away,
providing conclusion to a drawn out nasty divorce, avoiding
bankruptcy, etc. A successful mortgage professional doesn’t
provide loans, they provide integrated financial solutions.
The most
important elements in selecting a lender are:
* First,
can they do what they say? Most don’t.
* Second,
are they competent and professional? Most aren’t.
* Third,
is the lender you are working with out to earn a quick buck or
are they in the relationship for the long haul?
* Fourth,
the referred professional is an extension of the referring
sources of business...will they live up to the referral?
And last, from
the referring professional’s point of view, will the referred
lender have a referral mindset as well as protect the referring
professionals interests in the relationship?
As hard as it
is to find a good lender, the task of finding a good legal,
insurance, taxation or financial professional is equally as
tough. Just because a person passes the state bar exam,
insurance exam or receives professional licensing doesn’t mean
they are good.
We only
team up with proven professionals with the highest ethical standards who
have demonstrated a desire to work in their clients best interest. If
you feel you meet these standards, feel free to contact us to arrange
for an interview.
Click Here for phone and
e-mail information, or...
Apply Directly to Become a Preferred
Provider!
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