top of page

Invitation to a Special Luxury Home Open House Event

Workshop and Presentation Schedule
JANUARY TRAINING
Transparent Student (2).png
Steve Kodad and Lisa Alban (the Yang & Yin Partners of Feng Shui)
Luxury Homes on the Sun Coast  
a.png
l2.jpg

Four 90-Minute

Online Presentations
For Real Estate Professionals

with Steve Kodad
 

l10.jpg
Let's manifest the business and the clients you've always wanted!

You are unique.  Your business should be also!
You should SHOW the difference in your real estate business and stand out in your area.   

​

Achieve more success by attending four 90-minute presentations online over a month.  They are recorded and sent to you the day after.

​

Each presentation will be different giving you material on using buyer psychology, Feng Shui, luxury design, social media prospecting, home staging, and other tips I used in my 2 decades as a Realtor/Broker/Owner. 

​

It is inexpensive and is convenient.  If you miss a session, it is not a problem.  Watch the recording!

Two Options for Training


I Over Deliver in Each of the Four Sessions

Join me for 4 consecutive Wednesdays beginning July 15.​

​

Each session will be 90-minutes and begin at 7:30 PM (Eastern). A recording is sent the day after​

​​

The Agenda for each Session: 

July 15

* Working with Luxury Real

   Estate Buyers and Sellers

July 22

* Using LinkedIn to Prospect for
   Luxury Clients (any type)

July 29

* Creation of the FEELING
   using Buyer Psychology

   and Feng Shui (Part 1)

August 5

* Creation of the FEELING        

   using Buyer Psychology

   and Feng Shui (Part 2)

Buy with PayPal

Just Session 1

Buy with PayPal

Just Session 3

Buy with PayPal

Just Session 2

Buy with PayPal

Just Session 4

Buy with PayPal

ALL  4 Sessions for $60

Ongoing Coaching is Available
 
White Structure


For All Agents Especially Luxury!
 

Luxury real estate is often discussed as if it operates by the same rules as the rest of the market—just with more zeros attached. Price per square foot is analyzed. Comparable sales are dissected. Features are listed, ranked, and justified. Yet anyone who has spent meaningful time around high-end buyers knows a quiet truth that is rarely acknowledged out loud: luxury buyers do not decide logically.

​

​​It happens below the surface.

This distinction matters because misunderstanding it is one of the primary reasons luxury homes sit unsold, listings expire, and price reductions quietly erode value. When agents and homeowners treat luxury buyers as rational actors who can be persuaded with data alone, they overlook the invisible forces that actually determine outcomes.

​

The Myth of the Rational Luxury Buyer

In theory, a luxury buyer should be the most rational buyer of all. They are educated. Successful. Experienced decision-makers. Many have built companies, managed portfolios, or navigated complex negotiations. Surely, they would approach a home purchase analytically.

​

In practice, the opposite is often true.

The more sophisticated the buyer, the more attuned they are to subtle signals — signals they may never articulate but instinctively trust. These buyers are not impulsive, but they are SENSITIVE. They read rooms the way others read spreadsheets. They feel shifts in atmosphere. They notice when something is slightly off, even if they cannot immediately name it.

​

​​​Buyers begin evaluating a property the moment they arrive. The approach to the home, the ease of parking, the path to the entrance, the way the door opens, the quality of light in the first few steps inside. These elements register immediately, without conscious analysis.

​​

​​If the space feels calm, intentional, and effortless, the buyer relaxes. When the buyer relaxes, they become receptive.

​

If the space feels awkward, chaotic, or subtly stressful, the buyer may not consciously object—but their body tightens. Their attention narrows. Their willingness to stretch diminishes. Price NOW may become a problem.

​

Nothing dramatic needs to be wrong. A slightly constricted entry. An abrupt transition between rooms. Lighting that feels harsh rather than welcoming. These are small things, but luxury buyers are not looking for perfection; they are looking for alignment.

​

They are asking a quiet question the entire time: "Does this environment support the way I want to live and think?"

​​

​​​​

bottom of page