Welcome to another episode of celebrating small family businesses.
Speaker:Today, we are celebrating Allen and Barbara Doeringer of Whippet
Speaker:Properties and maybe something else.
Speaker:So Hi guys.
Speaker:How are you?
Speaker:Good morning.
Speaker:Great.
Speaker:How are you doing?
Speaker:Wonderful.
Speaker:Wonderful.
Speaker:Well, I recall that we talked a little bit and you guys have
Speaker:actually been working in real estate together for something like 25 years.
Speaker:So.
Speaker:Tell us a little bit about your, you know, your, how you met and your, your
Speaker:history together and what it's like working with each other for that long.
Speaker:I, I don't know that I want Alan to tell his side of the story because,
Speaker:uh, it's, it starts with a phone call.
Speaker:I was still in Pennsylvania and, uh, I called down, there was a sales position
Speaker:open at a manufactured home community.
Speaker:I had never done real estate.
Speaker:I was working in banking for 17 years, but I was trying to move down to Florida.
Speaker:My son and daughter had already moved here.
Speaker:Do you want to tell your story about the phone
Speaker:No, you go ahead.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:I'll, I'll add my two cents worth if I need to.
Speaker:anyway, um, I did take the position.
Speaker:Our house in Pennsylvania hadn't sold yet.
Speaker:So my late husband at the time, he, uh, he stayed behind for about six weeks
Speaker:till we finally did get our home sold.
Speaker:But the very first day that I set foot in this sales office, I met
Speaker:Alan and he was assigned to train me.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:And she's been training me ever since.
Speaker:And has she, has she accomplished anything?
Speaker:Not much.
Speaker:Now I'm, I'm a slow learner.
Speaker:Sounds about right.
Speaker:Sounds about normal.
Speaker:Yeah, exactly.
Speaker:Me too.
Speaker:Anyway, he says I was not very.
Speaker:Nice on the phone call.
Speaker:And I find that hard to believe because, you know, I'm always
Speaker:nice when I talk on the phone.
Speaker:But, uh, the story is I had called the manager at least three times
Speaker:and she had never returned my call.
Speaker:So what did I say, Ellen, according to you
Speaker:Well, you just told her that, um, or you told me to tell her that, uh, if she's
Speaker:not interested, just forget about it.
Speaker:And you kind of, you just hung up.
Speaker:So I thought, well, that was kind of rude, but.
Speaker:As it turned out, she's not rude at all.
Speaker:She's very nice lady,
Speaker:as
Speaker:some boundaries.
Speaker:as he was trained.
Speaker:All right.
Speaker:So that was, uh, you said a manufactured home.
Speaker:So here in Florida, that was, um, I 90s, right?
Speaker:So
Speaker:it was 1999 and you didn't need a real estate license because
Speaker:the homes were on leased land.
Speaker:So we both worked together as a team there, um, until the owner sold out
Speaker:of new manufactured homes and then he.
Speaker:Paid to have all of us get our real estate licenses so that we
Speaker:could all stay together as a team.
Speaker:He formed a small real estate company at the time.
Speaker:Now, during all of this, um, my husband was diagnosed with, uh, terminal
Speaker:cancer and Alan was going through a terrible divorce, so we were kind of
Speaker:leaning on each other going through traumatic experiences at the same time.
Speaker:So we became the best of friends.
Speaker:And as, uh, the story goes, my husband passed away not too long after that.
Speaker:And Alan got his divorce.
Speaker:And then we ended up starting to date a while later.
Speaker:What a great way to start a relationship as
Speaker:good friends.
Speaker:That's, uh,
Speaker:Yeah, we were
Speaker:really good
Speaker:make me wait a year.
Speaker:She made me wait a year before, before she accepted my proposal to marriage.
Speaker:Well, I had to check them out a little further.
Speaker:See how much more trainable you are there.
Speaker:Yeah,
Speaker:Exactly.
Speaker:Exactly.
Speaker:I thought you were going to say,
Speaker:go ahead, John.
Speaker:Allen, I thought you were going to say she made you wait a year
Speaker:before she'd go out on a date.
Speaker:And I remember, I can't remember what the, the name of the
Speaker:doctor, somebody, she was a radio personality, but she was, she had a
Speaker:show about dating and that was one of her, Right.
Speaker:Primary rules.
Speaker:If you're, especially if you're leaving a difficult relationship or whatever,
Speaker:and you know, wait a year before you get into another relationship.
Speaker:Because so many times people jump, you know, they rebound right into, you
Speaker:know, from, from one situation into a mirrored situation that they just don't
Speaker:recognize the familiarity, the similarity.
Speaker:Right.
Speaker:Mm-Hmm.
Speaker:Well, it helps when you work together and you're, you're friends
Speaker:for a couple of years before that.
Speaker:So you pretty much get to know each other well.
Speaker:I would think so.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:And you've seen each other in this case, you've seen each other under all sorts of
Speaker:stress and which a lot of relationships don't, they don't have that experience.
Speaker:They don't have that to draw on.
Speaker:You know, they're everybody's got their happy face on and
Speaker:they're putting for the best foot
Speaker:forward.
Speaker:And then, And then, all of a sudden they get the, Oh, I didn't realize,
Speaker:And
Speaker:the ironic part was, uh, both of us were married, uh, to our
Speaker:other spouses exactly 32 years,
Speaker:Wow.
Speaker:Ah, also very, very supportive of moving forward together because
Speaker:you had a very similar amount of experience with those relationships.
Speaker:right
Speaker:So now we've been married together 22 years,
Speaker:um, this
Speaker:week.
Speaker:And so we always tell people that we've been married 54 years.
Speaker:You
Speaker:have
Speaker:not to each other.
Speaker:There you go.
Speaker:That's a great conversation starter right there.
Speaker:Yeah, we decided to celebrate 50 years of marriage four years ago on a
Speaker:cruise because we said well We're not gonna live long enough to hit 50 years
Speaker:together, but we've been married that long just not to each other So we did it.
Speaker:Who cares?
Speaker:What a great reframing too.
Speaker:Awesome.
Speaker:So, um, what was the transition, I guess, when, you know, you, you're
Speaker:currently in a, you, you have your own brokerage, you have your own business.
Speaker:So when did, when did that start?
Speaker:Well not not soon enough Actually, we we lived in Davenport.
Speaker:We worked for a builder after we left the of the community
Speaker:that had the manufactured homes.
Speaker:His, uh, real estate company really didn't take off, but we ended up
Speaker:working as a team, uh, for a builder in Davenport, which is near Disney.
Speaker:And, um, we actually built our own home.
Speaker:There in the same community.
Speaker:So once they were sold out, then Alan took off with all the resales.
Speaker:Cause we knew all of our neighbors.
Speaker:We know most, most of the people in there.
Speaker:And, uh, he shifted me off.
Speaker:We were, we were married now.
Speaker:So he shifted me off to work.
Speaker:Back with a real estate company as a transaction coordinator, so that
Speaker:we had a stable income coming in.
Speaker:Because of course, when you're working in construction, you know,
Speaker:or resales, you know, you don't get any money until that closes.
Speaker:So there were months that might go by that we weren't, no income was coming in.
Speaker:So I, I went and got a stable income while, um, he, his, um, Line up of
Speaker:homes were getting ready to close,
Speaker:I see.
Speaker:Okay.
Speaker:So the transaction coordinator is, was more of a salaried
Speaker:position than I, than depending on
Speaker:those commissions.
Speaker:Okay.
Speaker:But anyway, do you remember what happened Allen as to why I got my broker's license?
Speaker:no, but I'm sure you'll remind me.
Speaker:Well, we were working for this small company, the small real estate
Speaker:company, um, a husband and wife.
Speaker:They were both British.
Speaker:And um, we had one instance where we were on vacation and there was going
Speaker:to be a closing and our broker only had to get a couple of papers signed.
Speaker:Well, I mean, we had done.
Speaker:Everything, you know, for the transaction, but she decided that she was going to
Speaker:take half of my commission simply because she had to get a couple of papers signed.
Speaker:And it really, really upset us.
Speaker:And I said to Ellen, I said, you know what?
Speaker:It's time for me to go get my broker's license.
Speaker:So that this never happens again.
Speaker:But unfortunately we lived in a 55 plus community where you could not
Speaker:have a business out of your own home.
Speaker:There was a lot of restrictions through the HOA.
Speaker:So I did get my broker's license, but I stayed with the company
Speaker:because I got that, we kind of came to a better agreement because
Speaker:she knew I could leave at any time
Speaker:and, uh, so she was a lot more fair with commissions after that.
Speaker:But I didn't want to go out and have to spend all this money, you know, with, uh,
Speaker:an office and, you know, all the overhead and everything I really didn't need.
Speaker:So I stayed as a broker associate, uh, from 2009 until we moved to Florida, or
Speaker:I'm sorry, not Florida, but Tampa in 2020.
Speaker:okay.
Speaker:So the strategy of getting your broker's license and setting yourself
Speaker:up to open a business was enough to accomplish your task without
Speaker:actually opening the business.
Speaker:Right.
Speaker:Pretty cool.
Speaker:Pretty cool.
Speaker:But then we moved to Tampa and, um, decided that, uh, now's the
Speaker:time to start our own business or Barbara's own business.
Speaker:And, and we did.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:But what happened when we moved to Tampa?
Speaker:Oh, COVID hit and
Speaker:everything shut down.
Speaker:Yeah, it was within a week.
Speaker:Um, we had this new real estate company.
Speaker:Nobody was looking at homes.
Speaker:Nobody was going out of their home.
Speaker:No one was going to restaurants to eat.
Speaker:Nothing, nothing was happening.
Speaker:So it was very stagnant for the first
Speaker:year.
Speaker:The first couple of years, it was very slow.
Speaker:It's really only now starting to pick up for us.
Speaker:Okay.
Speaker:And so how did you manage through COVID if it's alright to ask?
Speaker:Well, it wasn't easy.
Speaker:I mean, we did a lot of networking with people that we knew from
Speaker:over in the Davenport area because we were there 20 years.
Speaker:Now, what you didn't ask me was why we named our company Whippet
Speaker:Properties, which a lot of
Speaker:people, that's the first thing they ask.
Speaker:that's
Speaker:I was supposed to be the broker of record for a friend over in Davenport who
Speaker:was from England and all of her niche.
Speaker:Were British buyers and sellers, and she was going to form her own company and
Speaker:just have me as the broker to help run it.
Speaker:And then COVID hit and I was actually all the paperwork was
Speaker:done with the state of Florida.
Speaker:Everything was handled.
Speaker:Everything was ready to go.
Speaker:And we were, um, you know, on our way 4 weeks in, she, she closed.
Speaker:She resolved after just 4 weeks because of COVID because nobody
Speaker:could come over from England.
Speaker:Nobody could go over there, you know, to England.
Speaker:I mean, everything was shut down and she knew she couldn't make it because
Speaker:that was her only, you know, niche.
Speaker:That was her only sales area.
Speaker:So there I was again, you know, well, I either go back to another franchise,
Speaker:which I was with or start my own.
Speaker:And, uh, this friend was well known to another friend of mine
Speaker:who owned two Webbett dogs.
Speaker:And we sat in her living room, uh, Alan and I and, and she and her
Speaker:husband and the two Whippet dogs.
Speaker:And we were trying to figure out, okay, now do, cause she was
Speaker:going to be one of my agents.
Speaker:Do we go back or do I form whatever?
Speaker:We were trying to come up with a name.
Speaker:And Alan says, well, here's the dogs.
Speaker:He says, what about Whippet properties?
Speaker:And I loved it because I thought, okay, I can do a lot with that.
Speaker:That's catchy.
Speaker:You know, we can use Devo's theme song and whip it good.
Speaker:And, you know, come up with all kinds of cute taglines and, um,
Speaker:giveaways and marketing materials.
Speaker:So that's how it came about.
Speaker:I
Speaker:see.
Speaker:Very cool.
Speaker:Well, yeah, that's, and that's a, like you say, it's a much catchier name
Speaker:than say, you know, A and B properties.
Speaker:I think a lot of people, you know, Alan and Barbara would just go right
Speaker:to A and B because the old, uh, yellow pages, you know, you want to
Speaker:be in the, in the AAA and the, so you get the first listing and all that.
Speaker:But, but,
Speaker:Right.
Speaker:And who's going to remember a Doeringer Realty, you know,
Speaker:nobody cares, but everywhere I go, they go, Oh, you're whip it.
Speaker:There you go.
Speaker:So
Speaker:we used to go to chamber of commerce meetings and they would always call us Mr.
Speaker:and Mrs., Mr.
Speaker:and Mrs.
Speaker:Whippet.
Speaker:Great branding.
Speaker:I mean, you
Speaker:couldn't pay for that.
Speaker:I know.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Wow.
Speaker:No.
Speaker:And the logo that I had created, you know, I, I wanted them to have, you
Speaker:know, just a tiny little piece of a Whippet dog on the end of a home.
Speaker:And, and, uh, they did a great job and yeah, we've had a lot of fun with it.
Speaker:We really have.
Speaker:Oh,
Speaker:In some of her marketing brochures, she has herself cracking a whip.
Speaker:So
Speaker:And that goes back to the training, you know, trying to train you for 25 years.
Speaker:Yeah, You beat me to saying that.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:That's what
Speaker:I
Speaker:need.
Speaker:Well, what do you, what do you find most gratifying or most enjoyable
Speaker:about working together as, you know, as, as family, as spouses?
Speaker:you want to answer that Ellen?
Speaker:Well, yeah, the one thing I've always said about working from
Speaker:home is that you're always working.
Speaker:Which is kind of true because, you know, at the drop of a hat, you can get
Speaker:a phone call and have to do something.
Speaker:But when there's two of you together working, um, you can share tasks.
Speaker:Um, actually recently I've put my real estate license as inactive
Speaker:and I'm now handling more.
Speaker:of the marketing and administrative tasks for Barbara.
Speaker:So that gives her more time to concentrate on, on sales and grooming customers.
Speaker:So that's worked out very well for us, but it's good to have your right hand man,
Speaker:more or less, and she's my right hand man.
Speaker:I'm her right hand man.
Speaker:So
Speaker:Yeah,
Speaker:We've always worked together great as a team.
Speaker:Um, and I know some husband and wives, you know, they go, they love being out at work
Speaker:because they get away from each other, you know, but I have my little office set
Speaker:up downstairs, you know, off the kitchen.
Speaker:He's got his office upstairs in our den.
Speaker:And so it works out because we're, we're separated that way, but we have, uh,
Speaker:each other to lean on, you know, if, if I've got paperwork that needs done, or
Speaker:I need photos that put in a listing or, you know, I need marketing materials.
Speaker:Print it out, whatever it is, you know, Alan's right there to help me do it.
Speaker:So it's worked out so well because i'm the organized person.
Speaker:He's really good, you know with handling stressful situations Um, i've never
Speaker:met anybody that has more patience than alan does and me, you know, i'm like You
Speaker:know, and he's like, oh, it's it's okay, you know So So he's always handled, um,
Speaker:customers well that way too, if we have a volatile situation with a customer.
Speaker:So our personalities, um, that are so different have really,
Speaker:um, made this teamwork work.
Speaker:Cool.
Speaker:Excellent.
Speaker:That, that just leads right into the next question.
Speaker:I pretty well answered it actually, because it was about like, how do
Speaker:you guys defy, divide the, the work?
Speaker:How do you, you know, did you identify your individual strengths early on
Speaker:and, and, and, you know, work to those strengths and, and separate,
Speaker:like I'm, you know, I'm a tech geek.
Speaker:You know, I do all the tech and Connie computer, Connie and computers,
Speaker:they have a very uneasy piece.
Speaker:So we, you know, it kind of naturally falls that way.
Speaker:But for you guys, it sounds sort of similar.
Speaker:Um,
Speaker:yeah,
Speaker:sounds, sounds like If I heard right, Alan, you're, you're the, not only
Speaker:the, the calm, uh, anchor, I guess there, but a calming force, but also it
Speaker:sounds like maybe on the creative side or, or, or do you share that equally?
Speaker:I kind of tend to think that Barbara is a little bit more creative than me,
Speaker:but I can take her creative creativity and, and put it into practice.
Speaker:Okay.
Speaker:Okay.
Speaker:something physical.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:And he's better with the technology than I am.
Speaker:Okay.
Speaker:Okay.
Speaker:When I have a computer problem, it's, uh, I'm calling that one.
Speaker:yeah,
Speaker:Speed dial
Speaker:or speed yell.
Speaker:yeah,
Speaker:Yes.
Speaker:I can really relate to what you said about having the, you know, the separate spaces.
Speaker:And, you know, we, even when we had a physical office, we were at opposite
Speaker:ends of a building that had once housed many more people than just the two of us.
Speaker:So we were, uh, you know, we, we get together for lunch and
Speaker:say, well, how's your morning?
Speaker:But now we're right there.
Speaker:Yeah, now we're six
Speaker:feet apart.
Speaker:If we're in the same office, I don't think it's six feet.
Speaker:Not even
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:And I know there's, there's a lot of, um, you know, family teams or husband
Speaker:and wife teams that, that don't work out.
Speaker:So you, you really have to have that right personality combination
Speaker:or, you know, different skills and strengths that compliment each other.
Speaker:And, and that's what is with us.
Speaker:You know, I'm very, very organized, not so much Alan, but he knows where
Speaker:everything is and he can get it done.
Speaker:I make a list of things that need done.
Speaker:Um, so we, we know how to, to work well together.
Speaker:I mean, it's, uh, it's pretty much been a blessing.
Speaker:Outstanding.
Speaker:worked well for 20 plus years.
Speaker:go.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:We're going on 20, 22 years married, but we're going on 25 years.
Speaker:We've actually worked together.
Speaker:Right.
Speaker:And those years that where you were, I think you said 2009 to 2020 where you
Speaker:were, you know, you were the broker working with the other lady and Alan,
Speaker:you were working in the construction.
Speaker:Was there any overlap between your work at that point?
Speaker:Were you like working together separately or really just
Speaker:Well, we had, we worked in the same building, the sales office.
Speaker:Um, we had separate offices.
Speaker:Um, my, my office was much nicer.
Speaker:Because I gave it to him.
Speaker:As you gave it to me.
Speaker:Yes.
Speaker:Oh, um, but anyway, yes, we had separate offices.
Speaker:We were two separate employees for, for this company.
Speaker:And, um, but we still bounce things off of each other and, and helped each other.
Speaker:When the situation called for it.
Speaker:Um, but I think he meant when I went to work for the other company.
Speaker:Um, and as a transaction coordinator, but we still worked
Speaker:well together then as well, because,
Speaker:you know, he would be busy maybe with a new construction home and need
Speaker:help with, you know, Something on that, as far as paperwork and things
Speaker:of sort, which I'm really good at.
Speaker:Um, I would have, you know, a full time job and I ended up
Speaker:training new agents as well.
Speaker:I got my certification to do that when I was a transaction coordinator.
Speaker:So he would come up with ideas, you know, that I could help
Speaker:in training programs as well.
Speaker:So we, yeah, we still kind of ran ideas by each other and, and, uh, pretty
Speaker:much worked together that way too.
Speaker:And I was actually only there.
Speaker:Uh, a couple of years because once all of the new construction ended up paying
Speaker:out and now we were just on resales, I actually went out into the resale market
Speaker:too, and, uh, worked with people from, uh, the England, the United Kingdom, because
Speaker:that was a very hot market at the time.
Speaker:So Alan stayed in our community and sold a lot of resales there while
Speaker:I was out working in, uh, outside communities that had a lot of
Speaker:British buyers coming over to buy.
Speaker:Okay.
Speaker:two different niches going on at the same time.
Speaker:So we had a different British invasion.
Speaker:I remember a friend, uh, , this was back in the early 2000s, I think, but
Speaker:he was, he came over a couple of times and, and he was looking at property
Speaker:and he said he knew several people who owned property in the Davenport area.
Speaker:And I always wondered what it was about Davenport that just became this
Speaker:little, you know, collection point, but,
Speaker:uh, I never, it
Speaker:was Disney.
Speaker:it was a bedroom community for Disney World.
Speaker:And for, uh, most of the British buyers who were buying homes for
Speaker:investment, uh, they would buy them, maybe use them as a home.
Speaker:themselves for a couple of weeks a year, but the rest of the time they
Speaker:were being rented out to other Brits that were coming over to visit.
Speaker:And, um, it was quite lucrative for them.
Speaker:Uh, but then it became oversaturated and, and I think it still is today.
Speaker:But one, one nice thing that happened from that and me having the British
Speaker:market niche was that in 2008 when the market totally crashed and
Speaker:mortgages, you know, went belly up and it was a really bad time.
Speaker:Um, I contacted a lot of my British.
Speaker:Owners, homeowners, and they were doing short term rentals,
Speaker:you know, in the Disney area.
Speaker:And I said, you know, I said, they're not, they weren't going to get many people
Speaker:renting their homes because of the market.
Speaker:And people had lost so much money.
Speaker:So I said, how about if we turn those into long term rentals and that way, you know,
Speaker:you will have a solid, uh, steady income.
Speaker:The renters will pay for all the utilities and, you know, you'll have,
Speaker:uh, you know, something to work with.
Speaker:with until the market turns around again, which would probably be a couple of years.
Speaker:So that was when, you know, I had the creative idea to pivot, you
Speaker:know, to keep ourselves in business.
Speaker:And at one time I actually had 30 long term rental listings.
Speaker:Wow.
Speaker:And it wasn't the same, you know, amount of commission income you get from a
Speaker:sale, but it was still money coming in that we wouldn't have had otherwise.
Speaker:So Allen and I were always good that way too.
Speaker:And you know, when a, when a situation would come about, we would, you
Speaker:know, figure out, you know, together.
Speaker:How do we change this?
Speaker:You know, how do we pivot to make it work?
Speaker:So,
Speaker:That's so important to business.
Speaker:And, and, you know, even though, Well, yeah, you own your own brokerage,
Speaker:but whether you're working for somebody else or a combination, it's
Speaker:Being able to adjust quickly and so what you did you got curious and
Speaker:that's you know, that's so powerful.
Speaker:I really respect that
Speaker:yeah.
Speaker:And, uh, he really helped me on that as well, you know, because there were things
Speaker:that would come up with tenants, you know, that the owners were in England.
Speaker:So if they needed something immediately, you know, they didn't really have property
Speaker:managers looking after a lot of their homes, but Alan would drop everything
Speaker:and run and look, you know, if a water pipe, you know, was leaking or whatever.
Speaker:So, um, you know, there, there was a lot of things we did
Speaker:together, even on the rentals.
Speaker:Cool
Speaker:Mr.
Speaker:Fix it.
Speaker:It's just that simple.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:yeah Value added.
Speaker:Wonderful.
Speaker:Is there a particular, I would say challenge, you know, you guys have
Speaker:got a kind of a unique perspective and being together so long and working,
Speaker:you know, together and separately.
Speaker:Is there a challenge as a, as a, you know, couple in business
Speaker:that you've overcome that, that others could learn a lesson from?
Speaker:Oh, boy.
Speaker:Um, the only challenge that I can think of is, uh, being able
Speaker:to diversify your strengths.
Speaker:Um, you know, of course, we all have strengths.
Speaker:We all have weaknesses.
Speaker:And when we were working in the same community, you know, with seniors,
Speaker:um, The challenge for me was my lack of patience because, uh, you know,
Speaker:a lot of people that are, you know, elderly and have specific situations
Speaker:come up where they're, they can be very testy is a good word to put it.
Speaker:And, uh, and Ellen always had the most.
Speaker:patience for that.
Speaker:As far as challenges for each other, I really can't think of any because
Speaker:we've always worked so well together.
Speaker:But I will say that when you are a couple or a family, you have to figure
Speaker:out those strengths and weaknesses and try and pass on whatever you're weak at.
Speaker:To another person so that, you know, you all work together to make it happen and to
Speaker:And the job gets done.
Speaker:right,
Speaker:Okay.
Speaker:Okay.
Speaker:So,
Speaker:there were certain people that I just could not work with, you know,
Speaker:like I, I just, Oh man, I've had enough, you know, but he would take
Speaker:over and make it work because he had the patience and the personality.
Speaker:That he could, you know, smooth everything over and get the job done.
Speaker:And by focusing on those strengths, did you find that in each working to their
Speaker:strengths, did that make it better for the relationship, stronger, strengthening
Speaker:the relationship by doing that?
Speaker:I believe so.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Yeah, I think so because I think we really, um, admire
Speaker:each other and understand what each of us can or can't do.
Speaker:And, you know, I think when you give each other credit, you know,
Speaker:cause I would admit, Hey, you know, I, I can't handle this person.
Speaker:I can't do this, you know, but I knew he could.
Speaker:So I think if you give each other the credit, For what you are good at,
Speaker:you know, that that's a bonus because you, you can't, you don't working as
Speaker:a family or a couple, you don't have the time to be jealous, you know,
Speaker:because they can do something you can't, or, you know, to be wishing
Speaker:you were more like them or whatever.
Speaker:You just have to understand everybody's different and everybody has a different
Speaker:way of working with challenges and you, you just toss it over to the person
Speaker:that's going to get it done the best.
Speaker:And flexibility.
Speaker:Right.
Speaker:And you, both of you have shown a lot of flexibility with pivoting.
Speaker:I mean, you've pivoted how many times now?
Speaker:Oh yeah.
Speaker:Quite a few,
Speaker:And that's admirable!
Speaker:Because especially as we get a little older, we don't like to do that as much.
Speaker:But we actually have to do it more, I think, older than what
Speaker:we did when we were younger.
Speaker:I agree.
Speaker:and even now, you know, even now with the market, the way it
Speaker:is, it's been very difficult.
Speaker:I mean, we know how difficult real estate is right now.
Speaker:Um, it's just been, uh, especially at, since moving to Tampa, which we did
Speaker:for our daughter and granddaughters, you know, that was the main reason.
Speaker:And family is everything to us as it should be.
Speaker:But it's been an uphill battle because, you know, you come into a new area, a new
Speaker:market, you know, that is saturated with realtors that have been here for decades.
Speaker:And so naturally, you know, you're an unknown, you know, you're in a
Speaker:new place and you're unknown and you've started a new company and
Speaker:people don't know your experience.
Speaker:Um, and some don't care, but.
Speaker:But, um, we've, we've really been fortunate and blessed to have picked
Speaker:up business over here now too.
Speaker:In fact, I'm on my way over to Davenport this afternoon because we
Speaker:still get occasional listings over there, which we have an agent over
Speaker:there who handles everything for us.
Speaker:And, uh, you know, she gets a good split for doing that.
Speaker:Um, but I've just picked up, um, a listing in Lutes this year and I'm
Speaker:getting another one in the Tampa area.
Speaker:And we just traveled all the way to Bonita Springs to help out a friend,
Speaker:uh, with her parents home.
Speaker:So you never know where you're going to end up, but.
Speaker:Um, we're starting to be more known, and I think networking for that, because
Speaker:unless you're out there networking, and that's how I met the two of you,
Speaker:um, people really don't know you,
Speaker:and they don't know your personality, and they don't know if they can trust you.
Speaker:Um, and, and, you know, it's the old saying, Pete, whoever,
Speaker:you know, like, and trust.
Speaker:So that's starting to finally come back to us where we're getting referral business.
Speaker:And, uh, it's, it's enough, you know, I didn't come over here to try and be,
Speaker:you know, a six figure income realtor.
Speaker:I just wanted to have enough business to see us through for a few more years.
Speaker:And it's, it's happening.
Speaker:and to pay for those cruises.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Which of course, Alan is wanting another one for his birthday in July.
Speaker:So
Speaker:that's booked.
Speaker:Have you been a good boy?
Speaker:So that's what's next.
Speaker:I think I have.
Speaker:Good.
Speaker:Well if it's booked, I
Speaker:whip, that whip works good.
Speaker:it does.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:That
Speaker:Oh goodness, so much wisdom in all of this.
Speaker:I think the lesson I want to tease out of that last little part you were
Speaker:talking about is that it does take time.
Speaker:We live in these times of, of, you know, fame and instant fame and appear,
Speaker:appearance of instant fame and then social media and big splashes and, you
Speaker:know, hey, look at me kind of stuff.
Speaker:But, but the real, The real guts of it is it takes time to get to know people
Speaker:and, and, and they become familiar and that trust is built over time.
Speaker:It doesn't, it doesn't, it has to be earned.
Speaker:It's
Speaker:It's absolutely right.
Speaker:Because I'm, I'm just into my fourth year as my own company.
Speaker:And the first year we lost because of COVID.
Speaker:So you're talking maybe three years, but, uh, going into this year, I'm just now
Speaker:seeing, I mean, we had a little bit of business, but not, not enough, but this
Speaker:year I'm just now seeing a turnaround.
Speaker:So yes, it does take time.
Speaker:Wonderful.
Speaker:Wonderful.
Speaker:And the other thing I really wanted to come back to and call
Speaker:out was the, uh, you were talking about, you know, giving credit.
Speaker:I think especially in families There's a tendency in families to, to
Speaker:take each other for granted, right?
Speaker:They've, they've always been there and they always will be.
Speaker:And, And, and we don't always give our families our best, right?
Speaker:We, we save our best for the outside world and the people we're trying to impress.
Speaker:And we feel like we don't have to impress our families
Speaker:because they're stuck with us.
Speaker:And so there's a tendency not to do those things that say thank you
Speaker:and, and give credit and, and edify each other and, and really, you
Speaker:know, And credit or recognition.
Speaker:I learned in my short corporate career that recognition matters, and
Speaker:it goes so far, just a little bit.
Speaker:And it's really important.
Speaker:So kudos for that.
Speaker:It absolutely does.
Speaker:And, and, and I know Alan is.
Speaker:to.
Speaker:I mean, we always tell each other, you know, thank you.
Speaker:Thank you for helping me with this.
Speaker:Thank you for doing that for me.
Speaker:Um, you know, and always support each other, you know, and what
Speaker:we're trying to do, you know, I'm proud of you, you know, good job.
Speaker:Um, so even if it's family, those things need to be said,
Speaker:I'm proud of you is something I don't think we could ever hear enough.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:That's just a perfect place to wrap.
Speaker:Thank you so much for spending this time with us and sharing
Speaker:your story and your journey.
Speaker:And we, , we wish you the very best.
Speaker:I want to make sure I get, , connection points in the, , show
Speaker:notes to how to reach you.
Speaker:So I know, , you have a website.
Speaker:What is the website?
Speaker:That is whippetproperties.
Speaker:com.
Speaker:No, it's whippet properties florida dot com.
Speaker:There's no of in there, but it's whippet properties florida dot com.
Speaker:Excellent.
Speaker:We'll get that in there and any social media links that you want to put in
Speaker:there, we'll put those in as well.
Speaker:Okay.
Speaker:It was great.
Speaker:Absolutely.
Speaker:And tell Polk County hello for us.
Speaker:Thank you for having us.
Speaker:We will see you soon.
Speaker:Thank
Speaker:Thank you.
Speaker:Enjoyed it.