Hyderabad Realtors Association training for realtors

Hyderabad Realtors Association training for realtors
x
Highlights

The Hyderabad Realtors Association (HRA), an affiliate of the National Association of Realtors-India (NAR-India) on Tuesday organised day-long Certified Property Specialist (CPS) training session for real estate consultants and agents in the city.

Hyderabad: The Hyderabad Realtors Association (HRA), an affiliate of the National Association of Realtors-India (NAR-India) on Tuesday organised day-long Certified Property Specialist (CPS) training session for real estate consultants and agents in the city.

About 300 people took part in the intensive training session which sought to imbibe professionalism into the large community base of brokers and agents in the city. P S Anand, Chairman-Education Committee, HRA, conducted the training session. Former chairman-Education of NAR, Anand successfully trained thousands of realtors on various real estate modules across the country.

A comprehensively-packed and meticulously-refined training session, the programme covered right from basics to the ways of mastering the realtors’ profession. “In this programme, every real estate consultants’ day-to-day concept or working is systematically arranged, coded and framed in such a way that it becomes very easy for the participants to understand nuances of the real estate business. It equipped the participants with skills and motivation to achieve better results,” said A Sumanth Reddy, President, HRA.

According to him, nearly 300 people attended the programme. “Response is overwhelming. Taking inspiration from the success of this training programme, we are now planning to conduct full-scale training programme for realtors soon,” Reddy said.

Realtor is a patented terminology exclusively used to refer to a real estate broker or consultant who is a member of the National Association of Realtors, USA. NAR-USA has over 1.1 million members globally. NAR-India is the Indian chapter of NAR-USA and has chapters across more than 40 cities.

Show Full Article
Print Article
Next Story
More Stories
ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENTS