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Important Note: The course links below default to providing only Missouri credit. When registering for one of the courses below, ensure you choose "Add certificates for other states" during the checkout process to add "Kansas" as an additional credit. This is the only way to receive credit in both states via The CE Shop.
Instructions:
Select the course by choosing "Register" below
Click "Add to Cart" once on The CE Shop's site
Select "Add certificates for other states" once in your cart
Choose the appropriate Kansas license, either Salesperson or Broker
Browse the available courses below and click the down arrow to see a full course description. The "Register" button brings you to the course details page on The CE Shop's website so you can add the course to your cart and checkout. Always keep an eye out for available discount codes found on The CE Shop's website before checking out.
With more than 20 million veterans living in the U.S. today, real estate professionals can provide a valuable service to a strong client base by walking in their eligibility shoes.
If the answer to “Did You Serve?” is yes, this can open the doors of homeownership for Veterans and service members who may not qualify to purchase a home through conventional financing.
Course highlights include:
A glimpse into the military lifestyle, what it means to serve, and how best to communicate with those who served
Tools and techniques for informing veterans on the benefits available to them
VA home loan program benefits, qualifications, and process
Strategies for identifying appropriate home options for Veterans
Myths and misconceptions about VA loans
Activities and scenarios to reinforce key concepts
Technology is a tool. Used wisely, it can free up time usually spent on mundane tasks to allow licensees to work at a higher (and higher touch) level of client service. Used poorly, it can waste a lot of time better spent elsewhere and worse—alienate clients, and even put them and the licensee’s reputation at risk.
Clients and prospective clients want their real estate professional to be accessible and tech-savvy on their behalf. According to a National Association of REALTORS® real estate report, staying up to date on new platforms and systems will remain one of the biggest challenges for brokerages in the coming years. The industry is constantly changing, and technology is a big driver of that change.
This course helps real estate professionals work with technology and reinforces putting client relationships first in the push to provide cutting edge tools and services.
Unlike most owner-occupied homebuyers, real estate investors enter the market to make money. By learning about investor motivators and criteria, you’ll be in a better position to help your clients navigate this asset strategy.
Working with Real Estate Investors examines investor goals and strategies, different investment property types, key financial considerations, and your role in locating, negotiating for, and marketing investment properties.
Attacks on real estate professionals have made headlines at an alarmingly more frequent rate in recent years. After an incident where a licensee is harmed, everyone vows to do better, and the topic of safety is pushed to the front of training schedules. Then complacency sets in.
Criminals count on complacency.
This course reviews studies and statistics of safety issues in the real estate industry, and best practices for personal safety.
Course highlights include:
Crime statistics and studies that challenge preconceived notions
Risk factors and vulnerabilities that unique to real estate professionals
Case studies to illustrate how criminals target their victims
How to develop a personal warning system and trust your instincts when something feels “off”
Activities and scenarios to provide real-world context for course content
Whether you want to develop a niche business working with first-time homebuyers or simply increaseyour overall knowledge so you can better help inexperienced first-time homebuyers, this course willprovide you with the necessary foundation to serve this unique population.First-time homebuyers often rely heavily on agents’ expertise, and many feel overwhelmed, intimidated,and fearful of the prospect of buying a home. Your knowledge and calm influence can lead them towardtheir goal of homeownership, step by step.In this three-hour course we’ll explore the key characteristics of this niche market, how to cultivaterelationships with these buyers, and how to prepare them for the transaction ahead.
Course highlights include:
First-time homebuyer market stats
Pros and cons unique to working with this market
Housing affordability’s impact on new buyers
Targeted marketing approaches and conveying homeowner benefits
Providing value to first-time homebuyer clients
Walking clients through each step of the transaction
Financing, loans, offers, negotiations, and closing
Whether for a buyer or seller, the comparative market analysis, properly done, can mean several thousands extra dollars in their pockets, and can determine whether a deal can be struck at all. But because it’s such a well-worn tool, it’s tempting for a licensee to get complacent with the CMA, and “phone it in.”
Don’t be that licensee!
This course covers the how-tos of a professionally researched comparative market analysis.
Course Highlights:
The three-step approach to market analyses: the market, the property, the numbers
Sources for subject property data and market data
Using expired and active listings to inform pricing strategy
How to prioritize criteria when selecting comparables
How to adjust and homogenize selected comparables
How to weight selected comparables when selecting a list price range
Proper document management provides proof that a licensee did what was required, when it was required. It serves to protect the consumer and it reduces the licensee's risk of litigation.
Get ready to become more comfortable with selecting and using transactional documents.
Course highlights include:
Common documents used in real estate transactions
Common contract clauses, addenda, and contingencies
Avoiding the unauthorized practice of law
Multiple offer management
Document signatures, notarizations, and identification
Transaction management methods and best practices
Document management and retention methods and best practices
Technology and security for document management
Legalities of electronic communication
Activities and scenarios to reinforce key concepts
You aren't a tax advisor for your clients or customers, but having a solid understanding of property tax-related issues helps you provide a better quality of service. The U.S. tax code is ever evolving and recent changes to mortgage interest deductions, SALT caps, and tax brackets impact every level of the industry.
This course provides an overview of property-related tax issues and tax implications of buying, owning, and selling property.
Thanks in part to movements such as #MeToo and Time’s Up, sexual harassment and discrimination have moved to the forefront of the national conversation. Responsible agents not only reject sexually predatory behavior but also actively dismantle toxic workplace environments to ensure a safe place for all. It’s up to agents to reject behaviors or ideologies that could damage neighbors, clients, and each other.
In this course, we’ll take a closer look at how sexual harassment is defined and the impact such behavior can have on your clients, your brokerage, and your reputation. Additionally, we’ll discuss actions you can take to ensure that your office is inclusive and welcoming to all, and that your clients’ best interests are always protected. This includes tips for putting together a comprehensive office policy that thoroughly addresses sexual harassment and discrimination.
Did you know that a report issued by Census.gov, An Aging Nation: The Older Population in the United States, notes that “In 2050, the population aged 65 and over is projected to be 83.7 million”? That’s almost double what that population numbered in 2012. This population group’s numbers are rising fast, and that adds up to opportunities for licensees.
Chances are good that, if it hasn't happened yet, you will one day work on a transaction involves a property that’s part of a tax-deferred exchange. When this happens, will you be ready to guide your client through the process and ensure they meet the critical deadlines?
With an appropriately formed exchange, an investor can defer paying taxes on the profit from one investment and instead use all of the profits to fund another investment.
This course helps licensees become more comfortable with guiding clients through a 1031 tax-deferred exchange transaction and ensuring critical deadlines are understood and met.
Course highlights include:
Section 1031 tax-deferred exchange definitions
Starker’s Exchange background and application
U.S. Internal Revenue Code requirements
IRS Safe Harbor Guidelines
Investor taxes advantages
Setting up an exchange
Selecting a Qualified Intermediary
Licensee role in a Section 1031 tax-deferred exchange
The non-exchanger's role in a Section 1031 transaction
“Delaware” Statutory Trusts
Reverse exchanges
Rare exemptions to exchange deadlines
Real estate professionals wear many hats: expert communicator, attentive listener, trustworthy confidant, obedient servant, loyal advocate, and knowledgeable educator, to name just a few. To juggle these roles effectively—and within the lines of the law—licensees must remain informed. Real estate professionals are in a position to provide an invaluable level of consumer protection as they support consumers through their real estate transactions.
This course explores licensees' role as advocate and educator, and how they can protect consumers and their business from the threats of antitrust and fair housing violations and predatory lending. We'll start by looking at what federal protections are in place to combat these unfair practices. We'll also provide the steps you can proactively take to protect the consumers you work with day in and day out and the business you've worked so hard to create.
Course highlights include:
Federal antitrust laws and violations
Avoiding antitrust violations and protecting consumers from them
Antitrust complaint process and penalties
Federal fair housing laws and violations
Redlining, blockbusting, and steering
Buyer love letters
Fair housing complaint process and penalties
Predatory lending
Truth in Lending Act
Home Ownership and Equity Protection Act
Protecting consumers from predatory lending
Reporting predatory lending
Real estate is a dynamic industry, and that’s one of the reasons it’s an enjoyable, challenging, and interesting career. The industry is ever-changing to adapt to a transforming marketplace, and staying in step with those changes takes determination and a willingness to pivot. Current Issues: Cooperation, Negotiation, iBuyers, and Disaster Preparedness will help keep you on your toes. The course looks closely at four trending issues:
MLS Statement 8.0, more commonly known as the Clear Cooperation policy
iBuying, a 21st-century home buying and selling system
Negotiating nuances
Natural disasters and disaster planning
With an emphasis on how best to support your clients and customers, this three-hour course will update you on recent changes and current trends that impact your real estate practice and the way you serve your clients and customers. Clear Cooperation and iBuying have a direct impact on the way you do business, and a fresh look at today’s negotiating strategies will strengthen your finesse in this critical skill. Finally, the rise in the number and severity of natural disasters across the country has led to new recommendations that help protect consumers and your own real estate business.
Course highlights include:
The new NAR policy, MLS Statement 8.0, more commonly known as the Clear Cooperation policy
Transparent cooperation and what that means for licensees
New MLS requirements related to the Clear Cooperation policy
Issues with limited exposure marketing practices
Basic methods of the iBuying transaction system
How licensees can make iBuying work for their clients
Methods to plan and prepare for successful negotiations
Strategies for conducting win-win negotiations
Best practices for buying and selling in natural disaster risk zones
Disaster planning to protect licensees’ businesses
Did you know that a report issued by Census.gov, An Aging Nation: The Older Population in the United States, notes that “In 2050, the population aged 65 and over is projected to be 83.7 million”? That’s almost double what that population numbered in 2012. This population group’s numbers are rising fast, and that adds up to opportunities for licensees.
The senior market needs the services of real estate professionals who understand its unique real estate needs. Working with seniors comes with some of its own challenges, concerns, and rewards. A comprehensive understanding of the particulars and practicalities of this market segment will equip licensees to serve older adult clients with the respect and honor they deserve.
In this course we’ll explore best practices in addressing the distinctive considerations in the senior marketplace. Course highlights include:
Senior market stats in the U.S.
Important financial and lifestyle considerations for older clients
Seniors and legal competence
Senior seller and property preparation for listing
Four significant considerations for older adult buyers
Potential snags and how to overcome them
Options in senior adult communities, both traditional and noteworthy
Housing programs for low-income seniors in Arizona
The senior market as a niche
*Courses offered by The CE Shop are endorsed but not facilitated or managed by Better Homes and Gardens® Real Estate Kansas City Homes. Agents are encouraged to research all state-approved education providers to allow them to make an informed decision about which continuing education program is right for them. Agents can choose whichever education provider they decide best fits their needs and are not required to use The CE Shop now or anytime in the future. Agents should rely on the appropriate licensing entities to determine the full requirements of renewing their license. Online continuing education courses require passing a final exam before state credit is provided.