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The Eight New Rules of Real Estate: Doing Business in a Consumer-Centric, Techno-Savvy World

The Eight New Rules of Real Estate: Doing Business in a Consumer-Centric, Techno-Savvy World

List Price: $17.30
Your Price: $17.30
Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 1 stars
Summary: NOT for the young & lively!
Review: After reading [a very different] lively book with real-life stories, I found this book to be dry & slow-reading.

It would appear that Mr. Tuccillo has written this book to try and impress his aging peers--those 49 years+ whom says mostly comprise this industry, those who may be intimidated by our technological age. He throws around brand names, terms & cliches: Netscape, Microsoft, Ecommerce and "content providers"--to lead the non-tech savvy to believe that he may know something about technology (yet, he states that "no company can establish a brand through the Internet." p138). He then goes on to bore you with how technology should be applied to a people-oriented business.

I ran [and sold] a successful Internet technology business, and it expanded not just from our technological savvy, but from our people-centric approach--we grew largely by referral of satisfied clients. They were not just satisfied with our product, but with our PERSONAL service. (We answered our phone on weekends.)

Mr. Tuccillo DISCOURAGES ENTREPRENEURS with his graphs of corporate mergers and acquisitions of Real Estate agencies by the major multinationals: "The real estate industry is aging. Entrepreneur founders of many firms are often looking for an exit strategy..."

I ask the enthusiastic new agent: Is there any hope for YOUR future in this career--especially if you are just starting out now? This book won't have you feeling that way. I recommend Bob Boog's book (Selling Homes 1-2-3) for the livelier optimistic types--the new talent that Mr. Tuccillo says is not coming in anymore. ...Well, certainly not if they read his book first!!

I think that this author is ready for an exit strategy--leaving this "face-to-face people-intensive" business (which he no longer believes it is) to us newcomers & "middlemen"...those whom he says the Internet is causing to "disappear."

P.S. After impressing upon you that you must play by his "Eight New Rules," he ends the entire book with: "Playing by the new rules may well shorten your odds."

Rating: 1 stars
Summary: NOT for the young & lively!
Review: After reading [a very different] lively book with real-life stories, I found this book to be dry & slow-reading.

It would appear that Mr. Tuccillo has written this book to try and impress his aging peers--those 49 years+ whom says mostly comprise this industry, those who may be intimidated by our technological age. He throws around brand names, terms & cliches: Netscape, Microsoft, Ecommerce and "content providers"--to lead the non-tech savvy to believe that he may know something about technology (yet, he states that "no company can establish a brand through the Internet." p138). He then goes on to bore you with how technology should be applied to a people-oriented business.

I ran [and sold] a successful Internet technology business, and it expanded not just from our technological savvy, but from our people-centric approach--we grew largely by referral of satisfied clients. They were not just satisfied with our product, but with our PERSONAL service. (We answered our phone on weekends.)

Mr. Tuccillo DISCOURAGES ENTREPRENEURS with his graphs of corporate mergers and acquisitions of Real Estate agencies by the major multinationals: "The real estate industry is aging. Entrepreneur founders of many firms are often looking for an exit strategy..."

I ask the enthusiastic new agent: Is there any hope for YOUR future in this career--especially if you are just starting out now? This book won't have you feeling that way. I recommend Bob Boog's book (Selling Homes 1-2-3) for the livelier optimistic types--the new talent that Mr. Tuccillo says is not coming in anymore. ...Well, certainly not if they read his book first!!

I think that this author is ready for an exit strategy--leaving this "face-to-face people-intensive" business (which he no longer believes it is) to us newcomers & "middlemen"...those whom he says the Internet is causing to "disappear."

P.S. After impressing upon you that you must play by his "Eight New Rules," he ends the entire book with: "Playing by the new rules may well shorten your odds."

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: A must read if real estate is your profession beyond 2000
Review: Awesome book. John has the ability to deliver a strong and substantiated message to the Realtor community on survival and success in the new real estate world. Humanistic as well as hard hitting, Realtors, brokers and affiliates will prosper from absorbing the content. Worth reading at least twice!

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: A must read if real estate is your profession beyond 2000
Review: Awesome book. John has the ability to deliver a strong and substantiated message to the Realtor community on survival and success in the new real estate world. Humanistic as well as hard hitting, Realtors, brokers and affiliates will prosper from absorbing the content. Worth reading at least twice!

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: In a changing world, this can be your "Guiding Star"
Review: I found the book to be an very comprehensive and entertaining look into the future, based on an analysis of the past and the changes happening now. I really hope nobody else reads it because John Tuccillo gives great insight into what the future opportunities are going to be. With the obvious "flair" of an economist(if that's not an oxymoron), he contrasts what has "ruled" our world with what the changes indicate the new world rules will be. Very well done and very insightful. Each chapter also gives "how to's" and ways you can use his vision to make the best of the changes. I highly recommend taking the time to read this...and sharing it with those you want to be in business with in the year 2003. New rules and paradigm shifts go hand in hand. Kudos to Mr. Tuccillo.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Makes you think ....
Review: In reality, I am not a real fan of "rule" books, no matter how many "new" rules the author believes he has invented. Again, my theory that "new rule books" are just regurgitated old info in a new package has proven to be right.

Nevertheless, I was captured. I read the book in two days, and, not many books have induced me to think about my future and the future of my business (real estate) as much as this one has. Midway through the book, I actually started making notes and concocting a new business plan.

Rating: 0 stars
Summary: Think of your career as a multi-layered business.
Review: It was a genuine pleasure to work with an author who is at once brilliant and down-to-earth. Tuccillo's "8 New Rules of Real Estate" lays the ground work for re-thinking your career and/or business plan by identifying what the next "new" thing is for business success and applying it to the real estate industry.

John and his new co-author, Jim Sherry, are now hard at work on the next piece of the puzzle, titled "Click & Close: e-Nabeling the Real Estate Transaction". I predict this new title will be as ground-breaking as 8 New Rules has been.

Rating: 1 stars
Summary: Textbook of mindless gobbeldygook
Review: John Tuccillo makes it painfully clear that he has a Ph.D. in economics through this book. It reads like a textbook, and contains about as many relevent facts. He endlessy cites economic figures and studies, then continuously asserts that realtors need to change their business model, rarely giving specific advice - except for the moronic suggestion to sell your clients' financial information as a way to produce income (never mind your fiduciary resposibility, I guess). Don't waste your time with this one.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Must read for surviving/thriving in real estate
Review: Simply, "on target", unbiased, straight forward, clear and absolutely compelling. The real estate industry has been experiencing massive change over the past couple of years. And yet, most real estate professionals (60%+) have remained on the sidelines - waiting to see how these changes will impact there small business. "We do business differently here", "this market is different", "I don't need that stuff", "I'll wait to see what my compeition does first", etc, etc; If you have heard yourself saying these or similar things and you are not heeding the messages Tuccillo sets forth in this book, then you either don't have a business plan or your business plan is about to expire. Some will remain in denial and some will recognize the opportunity and take action. The question every agent and broker needs to ask themselves is whether they are willing to let their competition "get there first". Unless you are considering an exit strategy in the very near term, read John Tuccillo's book, then answer that question.

Rating: 1 stars
Summary: Textbook of mindless gobbeldygook
Review: Simply, "on target", unbiased, straight forward, clear and absolutely compelling. The real estate industry has been experiencing massive change over the past couple of years. And yet, most real estate professionals (60%+) have remained on the sidelines - waiting to see how these changes will impact there small business. "We do business differently here", "this market is different", "I don't need that stuff", "I'll wait to see what my compeition does first", etc, etc; If you have heard yourself saying these or similar things and you are not heeding the messages Tuccillo sets forth in this book, then you either don't have a business plan or your business plan is about to expire. Some will remain in denial and some will recognize the opportunity and take action. The question every agent and broker needs to ask themselves is whether they are willing to let their competition "get there first". Unless you are considering an exit strategy in the very near term, read John Tuccillo's book, then answer that question.


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