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MReport_April2015

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Th e M Rep o RT | 39 O r i g i nat i O n s e r v i c i n g a na ly t i c s s e c O n da r y m a r k e t ORIGINATION the latest survey Finds low satisfaction, High Hopes among Originators More than half of loan originators find their job less rewarding now than in the past. a s stricter regulation and declining business continue to challenge the mortgage industry, a recently released survey finds nearly two in three originators don't find their careers as rewarding as they used to be. In its fifth annual survey of loan originators, national recruiting firm Hammerhouse, LLC, found out of more than 800 respondents, 56 percent said while they still consider their jobs rewarding— both personally and financially— they are less so now than in the past. Another 8 percent said their careers are no longer sufficiently rewarding at all. "Mortgage loan originators have been operating in a very difficult environment over the past several years, and it should not come as a surprise that their level of satisfaction with their choice of careers has declined," said Drew Waterhouse, manag- ing director of Hammerhouse. Given the current mortgage environment, only 40 percent of originators said they came close to their production goals for 2014 (within 25 percent), while another 7 percent exceeded their goals. A combined 53 percent missed their production goals by 25 percent or more. Asked about the biggest chal- lenges facing the mortgage in- dustry in 2015, more than half of respondents—56 percent—pointed to regulatory issues as their top concern. Twenty percent said product availability is a worry. Despite those concerns—and the number of lenders who fell short of their 2014 goals—the vast majority of those surveyed anticipate a better year ahead of them. Nearly three-quarters of respondents said they expect higher production in 2015 than they achieved last year, and an- other 21 percent expect produc- tion to be about the same as the goal they set for 2014. To meet those goals, most originators said they plan to take advantage of their relation- ships. Thirty-five percent told Hammerhouse they expect to fo- cus in 2015 on co-marketing rela- tionships, campaigns, and events with referral partners, while another 30 percent will focus on structured email or direct-mail marketing to past customers and partners. When asked about people who have contributed to their development in the mort- gage industry, the largest share of originators pointed to referral partners at 33 percent. On the topic of what they expect from their local managers, the biggest portion of respon- dents (41 percent) said they ex- pect help to escalate operational issues. However, a similarly large share (38 percent) would be happy just to have management "get out of [their] way." "As the 2015 survey showed, originators have raised the bar for their own performance by reaching beyond previous goals, strategies, and tactics," Waterhouse said. "They also make it clear that they expect the same from their employer."

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