As printed in the Sacramento Bee
by Robert A. Mansullo, Bee Times and Money Writer

Return to "Active Adults"
 

For four years early in his adult life, Tim Corliss was a Franciscan brother. For the last 40 years, he has been a real estate agent specializing in the concerns of senior citizens.

"Those occupations are not as different as they might seem," the 62-year-old Corliss said from his office in Murphys in Calaveras County. "There is a common thread, a desire to help people, in both of them."

Back in the early '90s when the California real estate market was at a low point and most other agents were tightening their belts, Corliss' business -- then centered in the Los Angeles area -- was booming. His secret? His client base of senior citizens.

Cathie Eason, helped Judy and Dick Waters sell their home and move to a mobile-home park.
Bee/Owen Brewer

 

"Older people are not driven by the market," he said. "They're driven by circumstances, by their needs. A physical impairment, the death of a spouse, the need to be closer to a child -- those are the kinds of things that make them want to sell. They really don't care about 'moving up' or making a killing in a hot market. Most of them have lived in their homes a long time and are not selling because they want to but because circumstances make it desirable or necessary."

Along with 33 colleagues who also had many senior clients, Corliss created the Senior Advantage Real Estate Council in 1997 and established a new designation -- senior real estate specialist -- for real estate agents. It is an important niche, he notes, because 25 percent of the the real estate market now involves people over age 55, "and with the boomers coming into that demographic, it is going to become a larger share still."

To get the senior specialist designation, an agent must complete a two-day, 14-hour training course that includes generational marketing skills, tax reforms benefiting seniors and financing plans aimed at older homeowners.

Cathie Eason of Professional Edge Realty in Carmichael, one of 21 agents in the Sacramento area and 5,000 nationally who have received the designation, finds working with seniors emotionally as well as financially rewarding. More than 50 percent of her clients are seniors.

"I love older people," she said. "They treat me like a member of the family, something I really appreciate since I was a foster child and never had parents or grandparents. I feel I really am doing good for them, help them in many ways, and they do a lot of good for me."

What a senior specialist does involves a lot of listening. Notes Eason: "You try to find out their situation, learn what their needs are and give them advice accordingly. You don't pressure them. To a considerable extent, you become a counselor."

Recent clients agree and give her high marks for her counseling skills.

"She has an amazing ability to empathize," said Dick Waters, 62, whose Carmichael home Eason helped sell four years ago. Dick and his wife, Judy, 61, were about to retire at the time.

"She asked us a lot of questions about our plans. When we told her we were moving to a mobile park that didn't allow pets and were concerned about what to do with our dog, she offered to adopt it. She still sends us pictures of the dog.

"Cathie is an incredibly pleasant person, but at the same time, she's all business, a real professional."

Senior specialists provide clients with many services. If the clients have questions about a point of law, they'll arrange for them to meet with lawyers who specialize in their area of concern. If the clients are too old to drive and need to get somewhere important, the specialist will drive them.

Often, specialists find, seniors are "just thinking" about selling. That means, according to Corliss, "that they're anticipating something." It may involve an ailing spouse. If the spouse is put in a nursing home or dies, then the survivor would sell. But when that event may happen is uncertain.

"Then you just wait," said Corliss. "Maybe years. You'll make the sale but not right away."

During the senior specialist course, Corliss says, the most important thing agents are taught "is to shift their thinking -- from quick sales to sales that develop slowly but surely."

"So often, I find, seniors are just not aware of what they possibly can do," said Corliss.

"So we help them draw up a plan. A list of 'what ifs,' really. Seniors have a lot of options nowadays, but unless they consider them ahead of time, they can get frozen with fear when the time comes to make a decision."

 

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