Estimated reading time: 5 minutes, 8 seconds

How the PIT System Can Boost Originators’ Sales

 By Brian Sacks

We work in a business that can often be quite frustrating for many different reasons. If your days are anything like mine, then you are constantly working on the following aspects of your business every day.

--Bringing in new deals.

--Closing the deals you have.

--Managing Staff: Even if you are a loan officer you still need to make sure your processor, closer and assistants are doing their jobs.

--Creating new relationships and protecting your existing ones from poachers.

None of this, of course, includes taking the applications, dealing with the day-to-day issues on files, and all the other issues with the people you are or have pre-qualified.

 Let’s compare this to what we would like:

--Consistent and predictable deal flow, not 5 deals one week and zero for the next 3.
--Agents that were loyal only to us.
--Staff that actually did what they needed to do and get paid to do.

It doesn’t matter whether you are a banker or a broker, we all have the same issues. I have had them all myself, and to be perfectly transparent, I still have challenges from time to time.

But many years ago, when I was struggling and at a crossroads, I made a decision to actually stay in this crazy business that allows me, a high school graduate with no college degree, to earn more money than I could doing anything else.

At that time, I was considering leaving and trying something else. Or once and for all committing to build my mortgage business.

You already know which one I chose but here’s how I made it work.

I created the acronym PIT for Plan, Implement, Track. It’s going to sound very simple to you, and it is, which is why most don’t practice it.If you are being honest with yourself, you know you don’t do this. Instead, you find some new tactic or guru and you decide to try what they are pushing and then you hope and pray like hell it works. And sometimes it actually does work but most of the time you just feel like you were suckered one more time.

Let me break down each part of PIT for you.

Let’s start with P for Plan.
Notice I didn’t say H for Hope because that is what most of us do each year.
--We hope rates will not skyrocket.
--We hope that past clients will refer us.
--We hope our agents will stay loyal.
--We hope for a good year but Hope will never allow you to achieve your goals.

But keep reading because I am going to give you the solution.Planning means that you have a firm figure that you want to earn. Not a good year, but rather I want to, or will, earn $120,000 in 2019. You pick your number. Now break it down, as follows:
--What is your average loan amount?
--How much do you earn per loan?

Now you have real figures and you actually know how many loans you need to do each month and week. For example, if you want to earn $120,000 for the year, with an average loan amount of $250,000 and earn 100 bps, you need 48 loans a year or four each month to reach the income goal.

But having a plan is not enough unless you Implement it. You need to have proven strategies that work now.
There are a couple of challenges with implementing PIT. The first issue is to know what to Implement. I am probably the most easily distracted you will run into, which is why I created this plan for myself and feel the need to share it.

We are bombarded daily with fake experts trying to sell their products. Most have never originated a loan and have no idea if it works or not. Others were loan originators many years ago and have no clue of our reality today.

Think of your marketing as a chair with four legs.
To be successful, you must always have multiple ways of generating new deals. But you must control it.
So like a chair, you need four ways to generate new business, and here are some examples:
--Past client referrals
--Realtor referrals
--Direct to consumer, such as renters or others in a niche.
--Public Relations, or become a celebrity by writing articles, through social media, or appearing on radio and television.
--Other professional referrals.

The other mistake many originators make is only using one strategy. If that strategy stops working or is no longer allowed, such as faxing, Google ads or email spams, you are in real trouble. So, going back to our example, you need four loans a month and you need to pick four strategies and get one loan per month from each strategy.

But we are still not done, and here comes the most important part of PIT. There is nothing worse than sitting at your desk waiting for the phone to ring or for an email to arrive in your inbox. No, you must be proactive and implement your plan. But you must also know what’s working and what isn’t. So, on the first day of every month, you need to go back and review, or Track, performance.

--Did you make your goal or didn’t you?
--Did what you planned generate new deals?
--What worked and what did not?

Now you must go back and either tweak the parts of the strategy that didn’t work or replace it with one that will work. Unfortunately most of us don’t do this at all. Some only do this at the end of each year. To be successful, you must do it monthly.

 Successful loan officers Plan. Implement. Track. Use the PIT system to grow your production now.

About the Author
Brian Sacks, a recognized mortgage expert with Homebridge Financial Services Inc., has closed more than $1 billion in loans and 5, 890 mortgage transactions. He is the author of   “48 Proven Ways to Close More Loans In Next 30 Days … Regardless of Rates and the Real-Estate Market.” You can learn more at http://48waysbook.com.

 

 

 

 

 

Read 1757 times
Rate this item
(0 votes)

FOLLOW US

PMG360 is committed to protecting the privacy of the personal data we collect from our subscribers/agents/customers/exhibitors and sponsors. On May 25th, the European's GDPR policy will be enforced. Nothing is changing about your current settings or how your information is processed, however, we have made a few changes. We have updated our Privacy Policy and Cookie Policy to make it easier for you to understand what information we collect, how and why we collect it.