You may think it looks like a glamorous job. However, there are dangers in being a realtor. These dangers are particularly worrisome to female realtors.
Here are six dangerous situations that realtors might not even consider:
Entering Foreclosed Properties
Foreclosures can attract the uninvited: trespassers, squatters, wildlife, former home owners or anyone else who knows the property is supposed to be vacant. Often foreclosed homes get damaged. They are poorly lit; this causes potentially deadly personal safety hazards.
Meeting Potential Clients
Every new client meeting has the potential to be the worst blind date in history. You don’t know these people. You have no idea about their background or motivation. You could be meeting with a criminal, a stalker, a thief, or a serial killer.
Those Famous Open Houses
Photo courtesy of pixabay.com
Almost always realtors host open houses alone. Strangers wander in. What could go wrong? You can’t keep track of everyone. One of them could squirrel himself away in a closet, the basement, or a bathroom and wait for the right moment to attack.
Branding
Realty marketing materials always contain photos of the realtor. Some may see this as a come-on. They don’t even have to look far. They are in the newspaper, on the realty website, plastered on billboards, bus shelters and park benches. And how many photo business cards—including cell phone numbers—do realtors pass out in a day?
Chauffeuring Clients
Remember when your mother told you never to hitchhike and never to pick up strangers? Realtors showing houses to potential buyers chauffeur them from house to house. Realtors put themselves alone with a strangers in their car all of the time. There’s a risk of being robbed. The car could be hijacked stolen. The realtor could be thrown to the side of the road and left to die.
Photo courtesy of pixabay.com
While a realtor’s life may seem glamorous, there are a lot of dangers they need to consider!
If any of these scenarios make you nervous, even if you have a plan –
Opt-in to our security email series for business that enter others’ homes.