Booms and busts are a natural part of real estate – and life: Tim Mansfield
I first worked in the property business selling villa plots on the island of Menorca in the Spanish Balearic Islands. I was 18 years old then and full of teenage enthusiasm. It didn’t work out. The company went bust, and I lost my job. I was devastated. I had worked so hard.
Not long after I met the owner of a big real estate agency in England and he said, “Come and join us.” He gave me a one-way airline ticket from Menorca to London to start my new employment. They collapsed within a year, and I lost my job again.
When I was 20 years old I got another job with a company in London named Marcus Leaver, which wanted to start a business in Spain. It was very cold winter that year in England and I spoke Spanish, so I grabbed it.
The year was 1974 and General Franco was still the dictator in those days. The Australian Embassy in Madrid at the time needed a new office and engaged me to find one. I never did, but became great friends with the ambassador at the time.
Marcus Leaver went bust in Spain; so I joined the British Army for a while, did my bit and left for the lucky country in 1982.
In the late 1980s I was sales manager at Andrew Gibbons Real Estate in Sydney’s Double Bay. Our crowning glory in those days was the sale of the famous Point Piper waterfront home Paradis Sur Mer (also known as Toison d’Or) for $19.2 million. I later worked for Colliers International and set up their Prestige Homes & Holdings Division. Here is a quote from an article written then: "Tim Mansfield, of Colliers, is confident that come September, when the spring flowers bloom, people will put their property on the market again. Trouble is they have to buy somewhere else."
Years later I worked in Dubai as sales director of a well-known property development company. What happened? It went bust after the bubble burst there in late 2008.
I have failed many times in my life, but I am not a failure. We all fail at one time or another along our path in life. We all make mistakes, and that is part of being human.
My own failures are where I went wrong in life, like stepping stones along the way. You can fail on your own, or you can fail with the help of others when you go through life.
If you are blessed by having a family – a partner and children you love and they love you – hold onto them forever.
You can go bankrupt; you can nearly starve to death and live on cold and windy streets under lamplights. Even then you can retain your dignity.
Life is not all about money. It is about your kindness to others without judgement. It is about words of encouragement to keep them going. It is about holding another person’s hand in yours, and a hug or a kiss that makes you feel that special bond that holds us all together.
At the end of the day who can judge better if I failed or not? Those that helped or those that put me down along the way?
It is only me who can be the final judge. I am the one who knows the real things that I did to help others in life and never said.
There are three things you can do. Nothing else really matters:
- Help others
- Never give up on your dreams
- Don’t let people put you down
Tim Mansfield is a 30-year global veteran in the real estate industry and Founder and CEO of Sydney-based buyers’ agents PrimePropertyBuyer. You can follow Tim on Twitter by clicking here.