At Connect Now earlier this month, top agents from across the country got candid about what’s happening now in their markets and how they’re adapting for a successful 2021. Learn their tips and tricks for motivating buyers, generating new inventory, and much more.
Hear from:
Anne Jones, Owner/Designated Broker, Windermere Abode
Terrence Murphy Sr., Owner & Founder, Terrence Murphy Team Brokered by eXp Realty
Amy Somerville, Owner and Founder, Moment of Clarity, LLC
Check out the clip above. Want to see the rest? Scoop up a replay ticket here for 50% off! You’ll have access to this full discussion plus all of the engaging, insightful content from the April 20th event.
Inman Connect
Today’s the day: Join us for Inman Connect Now today to dig into key topics like finding success despite low inventory, preventing burnout, utilizing the Clubhouse audio app to increase leads, and much more. Register now to watch the rest of the day live, and catch up on what you missed on-demand.
The pandemic has turned that single-family home in the suburbs into a highly desirable object. But sellers are scarce, and builders are having trouble swinging their hammers fast enough to catch up with demand.
If you’re a real estate agent, Brad Inman just summed up the inventory shortage nicely: “Twenty people were invited but you only have one 12-inch pizza. What do you do?”
Book World: Talib Kweli s Vibrate Higher is a plain-spoken striver s tale
Allison Stewart, The Washington Post
Feb. 16, 2021
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By Talib Kweli
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Talib Kweli was an up-and-comer when fellow New York rapper Jay-Z, just a few years older than him but already a god, gave him a co-sign on Moment of Clarity, a track from his legendary 2003 release, The Black Album : If skills sold, truth be told/I d probably be lyrically Talib Kweli.
It wasn t entirely a compliment. (Jay-Z, avatar of hip-hop excess, was suggesting that he could rap as thoughtfully as the socially conscious Kweli but that he would rather make money.) But Kweli took it as one. The mere mention of my name in a Jay-Z song gave me industry credibility that years of making great hip-hop had not, Kweli writes in his new memoir, Vibrate Higher: A Rap Story.