Skip to main content

Leadership Lens: Tiffany McQuaid on ‘real estate to the Mth degree’

Inman is exploring what the future of real estate leadership should look like through a series of articles, Q&As with industry pros, and an upcoming five-part series called Leadership Week. Please send your feedback to leadership@inman.com. If you’re a leader who wants to join us for our exclusive Disconnect in The Desert event on March 26-28, or want to recommend a colleague, send a note to brad@inman.com explaining why.

Tiffany McQuaid, president of McQuaid & Company, is not only a broker, but has a marketing and promotions background, which explains her unique approach when it comes to running her business.

An Ohio native, she has particular expertise in capitalization and commercialism. Four short years after opening her doors, Tiffany has continued to grow the company and is now recognized globally as a rising top producer and innovator in the real estate world. Tiffany has a true gift for maintaining her boutique style real estate Firm, which focuses solely on the client’s needs, adding value to the experience. And she has hand-picked every Realtor.

We recently had the opportunity to sit down with Tiffany and ask her thoughts on where real estate leadership is headed.

As a leader, what keeps you up at night?

Redefining the role of “our” Realtors to meet or exceed the customer expectation. As a boutique style brokerage, “my” expectation for every aspect of what we do is very high, but I believe that plays a large role in our growth and community support of our team.

As a leader, I have no desire to become the largest brokerage in town, but I do strive to be known as the best at what we do. We tend to take the core of the industry and figure out how to push each element higher and make it more memorable and pleasurable than the norm.

Stop giving money to your competition

Tom Ferry’s 7 tips for turning leads into commissions READ MORE

Ultimately creating moments and powerhouse marketing that allows for “top of mind” recognition of both our company and our Realtors. We call this “Real Estate to the Mth Degree” which translates nicely to “No sleep for me …”

Tiffany McQuaid

If you could change one thing in real estate, what would it be?

The perception, period. It has always bothered me that the perception is that “anyone can sell real estate!”

This industry is a craft that needs to be perfected daily and requires constant self-education, more education and even more real world education in order to truly offer a fantastic service/experience to the customer.

I have always believed that in order to be successful in real estate you have to have that fire in your belly, the excitement of waking up early because you cannot wait to see what the day is going to bring. Our value begins at “home,” and that simple word can mean so much:

It can mean providing an atmosphere of culture and excellence within the brokerage, which encourages and embraces Realtor growth — their “home” base.

It can mean a safe zone for the customer to exhale and know that they are in great hands with their Realtor of choice — their “home” team.

But most importantly, adding value to the experience, performing above expectations and going that extra mile — a true industry “home” run!

How have your expectations of your management team changed over the past two years?

I believe my core management team and I are ready for “Dancing with the Stars” as a result of all the pivoting and tap dancing we have done over the last few years.

The huge asset that comes from being a smaller company is that we can react quickly and use our creativity to corner the market. While the larger companies may have the edge on financial backing, making major changes or adjustments to a larger operation may present more logistics issues and challenges.

Although we have a growth strategy and plan, we remain flexible and open-minded to risk so we can react quickly and jump on voids that we may see or find in our marketplace.

How do you keep your team competitive?

Our office culture is not competitive in nature, but more supportive of one another. With that culture, the dynamic of the team reflects the idea that we are more powerful together — as a unit — than we are individually.

We have learned to work hard to outdo ourselves and use our own standards as a guide to push forward. In addition, we have learned to block out the noise of naysayers or other competitors in the marketplace, we recognize that anything innovative or fresh can be met with resistance and we want to stay true to our marketing sense.

We let them “do” them, and we “do” us, and plan to win the hearts (and business) of the customers.

With so much disruption in real estate, what’s your best advice for managing change?

“Never doubt that a small group of thoughtful, committed citizens can change the world. Indeed, it is the only thing that ever has.” – Margaret Mead

I recognize that my team and I may not be the ones responsible for changing the course of real estate as we know it, but we will use the changes that happen as a guide; a simple way to catapult new thoughts, ideas or risks necessary for my company to put our innovative twist; to stand out; and, most importantly, to make a difference in this industry that ultimately results in raising the bar and redefining the expectation.

Change is always good for business, and my company will continue looking for our own shiny pennies amid all this change!

Want to connect with Tiffany? You can find her on Facebook, Twitter and LinkedIn.

Email Matthew Shadbolt


Leadership Lens: Tiffany McQuaid on ‘real estate to the Mth degree’ curated from Inman

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Vacation rental company Vacasa buys Sterling Resorts

Vacation rental management tech startup  Vacasa  isn’t slowing down its ambitions to conquer the market: this week, it announced that it has purchased Sterling Resorts, a vacation management company on Florida’s Gulf Coast. Sterling has changed hands before: it was  bought by Pacifica Companies in 2015 and currently manages 450 homes. Now it will become a part of Vacasa’s effort to expand its presence in vacation destinations such as northern Florida, where Sterling is based. At the time of this latest purchase, Sterling’s home inventory was  down from 585 properties in 2015. Vacasa has raised more than $200 million since its launch ten years ago. Founder Eric Breon said he was motivated to start the company after struggling to find a satisfactory management solution for a cabin belonging to his wife’s family on the Washington coast. Now Vacasa seeks to provide rental property owners with “a seamless experience…through innovative technology and local staf...

In An Era Of WeWork, Co-Working Space NeueHouse Sits Above The Fray

NeueHouse CEO Josh Wyatt Seuss Moments In today’s cluttered co-working landscape, it can be hard for companies to makes themselves heard over the din. Elevated co-working space  NeueHouse  wants to create an unparalleled experience for creatives through elevated programming and outstanding design. NeueHouse describes itself as “ a private cultural and collaborative space for prominent creatives, artists and entrepreneurs,” with current locations in Los Angeles and New York. In November, following an announcement of $30 million in funding , the company announced Josh Wyatt as its new CEO. Wyatt is a veteran of the hospitality industry, having co-founded Generator  in 2007, a chain of culture-focused hostels targeted at millennials, before moving on to Equinox to head the fitness brand’s hotel developments in New York City. Forbes interviewed Wyatt to talk about creativity, design, the gun threat incident at NeueHouse New York, and why he i...

Could Ken Griffin's Penthouse Purchase Cost NYC Real Estate Buyers Millions?

'The Billionaire's Bunker' at 220 Central Park South is pictured on January 24, 2019, in New York - Hedge fund billionaire Ken Griffin has completed the purchase of a four-story penthouse in the building for $238 millionm- the most ever paid for a home in the US. The building is a residential skyscraper that is currently under construction. (Photo credit: TIMOTHY A. CLARY/AFP/Getty Images) Getty A 2014 bill that aims to impose an additional tax on part-time New York residents—dubbed the “pied-a-terre tax”—has risen from the dead, largely in thanks to the recent record-breaking Central Park penthouse purchase by billionaire Ken Griffin. Griffin, worth an estimated $11.7 billion and No. 45 on the Forbes 400 , reportedly bought the $238 million-dollar apartment “as a place to stay when he’s in town,” according to his representatives. The purchase drew widespread attention to the financial losses that part-time and foreign property owners can cause the city. Bec...