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Tim Ferriss · 2024-03-06 · 1h 17m

How Barbara Corcoran Turned $1,000 into a $5B+ Empire (Plus: PR Stunts, Sales Techniques, and More)

Barbara Corcoran tells Tim Ferriss how shock-value PR, sales systems, and refusing to feel sorry for herself built a real estate empire.

How Barbara Corcoran Turned $1,000 into a $5B+ Empire (Plus: PR Stunts, Sales Techniques, and More)
The guest

Barbara Corcoran — Founder of The Corcoran Group real estate brokerage and Shark Tank investor, known for turning a $1,000 loan into a major New York firm through aggressive PR and sales tactics.

The gist

Barbara Corcoran walks Tim Ferriss through her unconventional path from a dyslexic kid and waitress with 22 jobs to building The Corcoran Group against New York's old-boy real estate network. She credits her competitive drive, storytelling ability, and refusal to take a victim perspective for her success, tracing many traits back to her fun-loving father and organized mother. She details signature PR stunts and sales innovations, the painful founding story involving partner Ramone Simone, and her philosophy on fighting (including suing Donald Trump). The conversation also covers her exercise routine, her beloved Los Angeles trailer-park home, and her current Patreon venture mentoring entrepreneurs.

Big reveals

  • For her 70th birthday, Barbara staged a fake funeral with 85 guests, lay in a coffin to hear what people said about her, then hopped out and danced the Tango in a red gown.
  • Her first big PR stunt sold a penthouse by dividing maintenance costs into a headline: 'It will only cost you $8,000 a night to put your head on the pillow.'
  • Her business began when Ramone Simone, who took 51% as founding partner, gave her $1,000 to start; he later left her for his secretary Tina, which broke her confidence but spurred her to launch The Corcoran Group.
  • Her 'homes on tape' / one-price sale, copied from a Jack Russell puppy sale, sold 88 apartments at $599-flat in under three hours, netting $2.25 million in one day.
  • She hired her invaluable right-hand woman Esther Kaplan only after noticing the organized file-cabinet partitions inside Esther's purse.
  • After accusing Donald Trump of withholding commissions, she sued and won; it cost $500,000 but she had just made her first real profit (over $1 million) and refused to back down on principle.
  • When Trump paid her commission in installments over five years, she sent him flowers with each check; he returned every bouquet stamped 'rejected' in thick ink.
  • Her single biggest hiring lesson: only hire happy people, because complainers 'suck the life out of you' and are essentially thieves.

Things worth remembering

  • Barbara attributes her love of fun and PR to her father, 'the king of fun,' who would shove his 10 kids down the side yard on a wooden ladder into oncoming traffic.
  • To sell the unsellable Guggenheim Mansion, she invited the Today Show to film the opening of a mysterious basement safe; it was empty, but the suspense sold the house within a week.
  • She had salespeople bring 500 dogs to Central Park to 'shake hands' for the press, mocking stuffy co-op boards that interviewed dogs; it didn't sell apartments but built her brand.
  • At age 11 as a playground supervisor, she got 'Breakfast with Barbara' covered in the Bergen Record, drawing nearly 40 kids and teaching her the power of the press.
  • Being dyslexic, she ran her company with no numbers or words, color-coding everything: file cabinets, listing cards, and even congratulatory memos made of pictures.
  • Her 'golden question' in sales was always urgency: 'When do you need it for?' She rated customers A (immediate), B (sort of), C (forget about it).
  • Her best closing technique was the 'reverse close': making customers promise not to buy anything that day, which left them calling her at night begging to buy.
  • She paid $800,000 for a Los Angeles trailer (deliberately overpaying by $100,000), secured it via a 'life estate' letting the prior owner visit two weeks a year, and it is now worth roughly $1.9 million.
  • She learned to always overpay for what she wants from developer Harry Helmsley, who said you overpay because 'the many own it' and you forget the price once you do.
  • Her Patreon, 'Barbara in Your Pocket,' is the top business channel on the platform and was only about a month old at the time of the interview.

Recommended in this episode

Books, products and media the guest or host genuinely endorsed here — with the buy link.

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Guest’s ownMedia

Barbara in Your Pocket

Barbara Corcoran (inferred)

“Barbara in your pocket is the top business channel on patreon why did you start this” — Barbara Corcoran 01:11:15
Find it on Amazon
RecommendedMedia

Diary of a CEO

Steven Bartlett (inferred)

“I was listening to Diary of a CEO your interview on that show which was excellent” — Tim Ferriss 00:22:56
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