Next Bank of Canada Meeting
June 5th, 2012
Special conditions apply
Mortgage Rates subject to change.
Special conditions apply
Mortgage Rates subject to change.
May
2

I would like to take this time and state that the Best Customer Service award is only possible because of our amazing Account Manager Traci Merkel. We are honoured to have been nominated for one award, led alone four. Thank you Canada for noticing our efforts!
CMP nominates Jessi Johnson and his team for four national mortgage awards in 2011 !!!

Canada’s national mortgage broker magazine and national awards have nominated Jessi Johnson and his team for four awards in 2011.
I would like to take this time and state that the Best Customer Service award is only possible because of our amazing Account Manager Traci Merkel. We are honoured to have been nominated for one award, led alone four. Thank you Canada for noticing our efforts!
Best regards,
Jessi Johnson and team
Mar
18
VANCOUVER (NEWS1130) – Starting today, it’s going to be tougher to take out a mortgage in Canada.
Mortgage broker Jessi Johnson says under the old rules, a family with zero debt and an income of $75,000 a year would qualify for a mortgage on a home worth half a million.
He says that family now needs to make $85,000 if the interest rates hit 5%, and if interest rates go up to six per cent, they’ll have to make even more. “That family would have to make over $100,000 to buy a one bedroom condo in Vancouver with zero debt taking into account a 10% equity increase. And I haven’t seen a client in a long time with zero debt.”
The maximum length of a mortgage has been lowered from 35 to 30 years.
CLICK HERE to view the article on News1130′s website.
Feb
17
New lending rules scheduled to take effect next month are stimulating housing sales, according to local mortgage brokers. Jessi Johnson, president and CEO of the Jessi Johnson Mortgage Team, told the Georgia Straight by phone that his business has seen a “definite jump”, with many first-time home buyers trying to arrange financing for 35-year mortgages.
He attributed this to the federal government’s decision to reduce the maximum amortization period for government-insured mortgages from 35 to 30 years, effective March 18. According to Johnson, this lower amortization period will reduce affordability, particularly for first-time buyers, because monthly payments increase when the lending period shrinks.
“We have a lot of new applications coming in,” he said. “I don’t blame them.”
He pointed out that the average person earns around $50,000 per year. With a five-percent down payment, they can generally afford a $280,000 home at a four-percent interest rate and with a 35-year amortization period.
Johnson noted that if the mortgage is reduced to 30 years, the same buyer can only afford a $260,000 home. And he said if interest rates rise, as many observers predict, they’ll put an even greater squeeze on first-time buyers. At 30 years with a five-percent rate, this buyer would only be able to buy a home worth $230,000. “You can’t even buy a closet for that [price] in Vancouver,” Johnson said.
Joanne Vickery, president of the Mortgage Brokers Association of B.C., told the Straight by phone that brokers’ clients are rushing to get pre-approved before the deadline. She added that this is the second reduction in the amortization period announced by Finance Minister Jim Flaherty. In 2008, he prohibited government insurance on 40-year housing loans, capping the maximum at 35 years. “I’m not sure if the government strategized to deliver it that way,” she said of the step-by-step decrease. “It’s less of a hit to the consumer.”
Johnson and Vickery stated that it was unnecessary for the government to further reduce the amortization period to 30 years. However, Vickery emphasized that she’s happy the government didn’t raise the minimum down payment from its current level of five percent. “That would have really hurt our market,” she said.
Johnson mentioned that he recently met with officials of the Canada Mortgage and Housing Corporation, which insures mortgages, to get clarity on the new rule. He discovered that a buyer can still negotiate a 35-year amortization period, even if the deal hasn’t closed by the March 18 deadline. “You just have to have a binding contract,” Johnson said. “As long as your subjects-to are removed and you’ve paid your deposit, you can close whenever you like.”
He added that the new amortization rule will have a disproportionately negative impact on the Vancouver market, where prices are higher, as well as on first-time buyers, who tend to borrow more money up front. “A lot of our investor people, they’re putting 20 percent down anyway,” Johnson revealed. “If you put 20 percent or greater down, none of these rules apply to you.”
He also claimed that if the federal government was serious about addressing consumer debt, it would be focusing on credit cards, not on 35-year mortgages. “I think 35-year amortizations should still be available for those who deserve it—for people who choose not to max themselves out,” he said.
The Canadian Real Estate Association reported this month that in January, housing resales across the country reached their highest level since April 2010. Vancouver posted the highest monthly increase—14.2 percent on a seasonally adjusted basis. This far exceeded the national monthly gain of 4.5 percent.
In a news release, CREA chief economist Gregory Klump attributed the increase in sales activity in the first quarter of 2011 to Flaherty’s January announcement that mortgage regulations will be tightened. In addition to reducing the amortization period, the federal government has also mandated a lower limit (85 percent, down from 90 percent) in borrowing against home equity, and the removal of government insurance on home-equity lines of credit.
Jan
15
CMP National Mortgage Broker Awards
Voting for the CMP National Mortgage Broker Awards for 2011 is now open until January 21st, 2011.
Please give your support with a quick vote!
This year I am in the running for a number of national awards and need your help. Please take a few minutes and go to http://www.canadianmortgageawards.com/nominations and complete the quick 2 step process. If you don’t want to give your address, just type the city in the address and postal code section.
Award nominations are for the following:
Best Customer Service from an Individual Office
Best Newcomer (Mortgage Brokerage)
Best Branding
Best Internet Presence
Please select which categories you feel would best fit for our impression on you. Your support is appreciated, thank you!
CLICK HERE to vote and please do before January 21st, 2011.
Best regards,
Jessi and team
Sep
23
Jessi Johnson, President of VERICO Jessi Johnson Mortgage Team, has one of the strongest social media presences in the mortgage brokerage industry. Mr. Johnson takes some time to talk to JAC News about the role of social media in this industry and his unique experience thus far in his career.
JAC: Tell us about your company?
JJ: I started my life as a mortgage broker in early 2006 with a small independent company called Global Mortgage Corp. I had no experience in the financial industry what so ever. It certainly wasn’t the easiest of beginnings but I learned a lot in 3.5 years. After I left Global Mortgage Corp in 2009, I launch my own brokerage.
Starting your own firm certainly isn’t easy, especially since the nature of our work is complicated. But I couldn’t be happier where I am and am very excited about my future plans.
JAC: What business goals will Jessi Johnson Mortgage Team achieve in the next few years?
JJ: Within the next year I plan to build a team of highly successful brokers under the company and help them expand their business. We have some pretty crazy marketing ideas planned that we will be launching in the next few years. My background is in concert promotions so I’m a marketing nerd and have some very exciting ideas.
JAC: You have a huge online presence, describe your personal brand?
JJ: I am a firm believer in branding yourself and not what you do. I like to educate clients instead of directly marketing to them. The internet is a wonderful tool to do just that. Without internet presence these days your business will never expand and will slowly die. When’s the last time you used a Yellow Pages book? Do they still print those?
JAC: Why is it important for businesses to incorporate Social Media into their marketing plans?
JJ: Social Media is excellent for – my favorite term – “staying on the radar”. What a perfect tool for live updates on what your contacts and clients are thinking and doing. Whether you like it or not, you can’t avoid it.
JAC: What percentage of your day do you spend on SM?
JJ: At least an hour a day, or more. It really depends on what’s going on and what I need to accomplish.
JAC: How many SM platforms do you participate in? Which platform do you believe generates that most business for you?
JJ: I use tons of different platforms. I find social media overwhelming at times because there is so much to stay on top of. I use Twitter and Facebook the most but there are others as well. Facebook likely generates the most business but Twitter is great for live updates and for listening to what others are saying.
JAC: For a mortgage broker that is brand new to social media, what are the first 3 things that you suggest he/ she should do to start building their online profile?
JJ: Don’t sell your product all day long. Use social media to remind people of what you do and nothing more. Add personal touch to everything and remember that what you post can be seen by anyone.
JAC: What do you enjoy about the mortgage industry?
JJ: Everything. This is an ever-changing industry where you must keep on your toes. We have the opportunity to control our destinies and I love it. If I want to work 15 hours a day and put everything I have into my company, I can.
JAC: What professional achievement are you most proud of?
JJ: I have been very lucky to receive various award nominations and media coverage since I started. This is a very tough business to get into. By no means has it been smooth sailing but persistence is key and I am very proud of myself for not giving up.
JAC: Where are we likely to find you on weekends?
JJ: I usually work half days on the weekends, eventually my weekends will be work free. In my spare time I produce house music and love to keep active. Each week I play squash, do Muay-Thai kickboxing and workout as much as I can.
Aug
24
CMP magazine interview Vancouver Mortgage Broker Jessi Johnson
A Brave New World: How technology is changing the industry
Many mortgage brokers seemingly try to keep on top of a million things at once. Whether it’s answering their BlackBerry, visiting clients, checking emails, processing applications or setting up new marketing campaigns, brokers always have to be ready to attend to whatever may come their way in order to keep up with all the demands of the industry. However, as brokerages continue to take on more business and competition in the industry grows even fiercer, many are beginning to find the profession that much more challenging, especially those neglecting technology.
Those who use technology at their brokerages, however, generally have been able to cope with the current demands, and actually exceed them. While paper piles up in the offices of brokers who are unable or unwilling to take advantage of current innovations, mortgage agents who are well-versed in today’s technology have been able to free up more time, make their businesses run more efficiently and, most importantly, they’ve been able to attract and retain a large clientele base. As more brokers catch on to this trend, the industry as a whole continues to move closer to becoming almost completely electronic, leaving the old days of paper applications and fax machines to fade into oblivion.
Ten years ago, mortgage brokers could still get away with overlooking technological advancements and doing business the old way, says Jim Black, mortgage expert and owner of Dominion Lending Centres Mortgage Excellence in Lethbridge, Alta. But in an industry in which nearly all mortgage applications are submitted online by using web-based mortgage-origination software platforms, Black says individual brokers are finding that they need to catch up to today’s innovations. “If you’re missing the computer or technology train, you’re missing out,” he says. “But if you get up to speed on some of the basic technologies … it’s proven it’s only going to help you.”
Having a company with an effective website and database, or a Customer Relationship Management (CRM) tool, integrated with either Filogix Expert or Marlborough Stirling Canada’s MorWEB, is just the standard for any new brokerage to get started nowadays, he says. All of these tools free up time in a variety of different ways. For example, when consumers fill out applications directly on Black’s website, which is integrated with Expert, he’ll automatically receive an e-mail on his BlackBerry alerting him that an application has been started. He then reviews the forms and if all the information needed is included, he e-mails his client a PDF file to get their signature for the application, which they can then print out, sign, scan and e-mail back to him. Finally, he can go to his Expert account, where the application created on his website was automatically sent, approve it and send it directly to a lender. Before Expert was around and he had a website, he said he would have had to do that whole process by fax, which more than doubles the time.
Jessi Johnson, chief executive officer and president of Jessi Johnson Mortgage Team based in Langley B.C., says when he started his company a year ago, he was intent on using technology in a way that would maximize his business. Today, 95 per cent of all of his clients’ mortgage applications are filled out online and nearly all of his files are stored electronically. “I can probably do two to three times the volume than someone using paper applications and standard fax machines,” he explains. “This isn’t bragging, but simple numbers. It takes our office zero seconds to collect an application and only a few minutes to have it ready for submission. You can’t beat that,” Johnson adds.
Mortgage-origination software
Mortgage-origination software is another area where Johnson has seen a big development. After using Filogix Expert for more than three years, Johnson says he switched to MorWEB, because it is a client-based system, whereas Expert is a deal-based system. Brokers using Expert must resubmit their clients’ information if they need a new mortgage, since the application does not keep client records. To manage that data, brokers should find a CRM that can be integrated with Expert, such as inContact’s CRM NEXA.
Johnson says this area of technology in the industry is one that needs more competition in order to spur further innovations and developments to make doing business even more convenient for brokers. “The Filogix versus MorWEB situation reminds me of Microsoft versus Mac. If Morweb keeps its head up, it will be very interesting to see how much market share they will have in five years.”
But there is another player emerging in the market for mortgage-origination software: Axcess Canada. Malcolm Collett, director of marketing at The Mortgage Group Canada Inc. in B.C., says Axcess Canada could really end up giving the other companies in this sector “a run for their money.”
The two-year-old company, partnered with Axcess Consulting Pty Ltd. in Australia, and Axcess Americas in the U.S., offers a web-based CRM called the Axcess Relationship Manager (ARM) that takes care of mortgages from origination through to completion, says Tim Shkolnik, vice-president of solutions and development at Axcess Canada Inc. Ontario. “We don’t hand off the mortgage after it’s been originated. We’re managing arrears, collection, monthly interest accrual, payment management, collection and servicing – everything right through to discharge,” Shkolnik adds.
What makes Axcess Canada stand out from the competition, he says, is the amount of control brokers have to customize their ARM account. “We do business in the way the company wants to, rather than telling them here’s how you’re going to work ,and here’s the screen you’re going to use, and here’s the process you’re going to follow. We go the opposite way by asking the company how they want to do things.”
Do you need a CRM
While using one of these service providers to connect to lenders is pretty much a necessity in today’s industry, brokers that use Expert and MorWEB still have the option of choosing to use a CRM. Some brokers, however, just prefer to make their own database. Black, for instance, made his by using Microsoft Access. To those who may think that creating database would be extremely taxing, Black says that’s not the case. “It’s simple enough for people to go to Chapters and buy Access for Dummies and they could do a really basic database on their own … I’ll never say it’s simple, but anyone could do it, given a little time and effort.” To do his mail-outs, he then imports his client lists from his database into Sendoutcards.com to forward thank-you cards, birthday cards and other notifications to clients.
For those who don’t necessarily want to create their own database, there are a number of different companies that offer CRMs. Software Developer Shane Lemon, owner of Shane Lemon Software Consulting Inc., for instance provides a CRM called Coconut that allows brokers to track their brokerage’s and their own commissions, as well as client information, whether it’s by deal and contact details. The system can be integrated with Filogix Expert and when users send a newsletter through Coconut, the system can distinguish between referral sources and clients, sending different messages to different groups.
Lemon says he got into the business because he wanted to give brokers a better way to manage their clients’ information and track their commissions, rather than relying on a simple spreadsheet. “I realize it’s hard to change something that you think is working, but Coconut is a much more effective tool then stand-alone spreadsheets and whiteboards. Coconut replaces your whiteboard with an online dashboard, complete with all your current clients and automated reminders based on your current and past deal life cycle and spreadsheets are replaced by easy-to-use forms and comprehensive reporting.”
While CRMs are great for brokerages that are just starting out, they’re not necessarily the best bet for companies that have the capital to create their own, says Albert Collu, CEO and president of Argentum Mortgage and Finance Group, and vice-president of the Independent Mortgage Brokers Association of Ontario. “In my opinion, I think we have far too much technology out there,” he says. “I think all these pieces of technology and software platforms do a good job in themselves, but they’re all over the map. The irony is they were supposed to create efficiencies and help you with your business, but many of them have become so bloody cumbersome that no one actually uses them anymore.”
When he started his company a year ago he knew right from the start that he would need a CRM that could be used as a central point to store and manage data. So he produced his own software application called The Stream. “I knew if we opened the doors and created an organization that was just like every other brokerage we would have been dead in the water before we even started,” adds Collu, who’s been a mortgage broker for more than 10 years.
Argentum uses The Stream to create mortgage applications, interact with clients and manage documents for compliance and record-keeping. The CRM is fully integrated with his website, document management systems and is connected to an online mortgage-origination software platform for application submission. “You’re just taking the data and dropping it in a central portal and pushing it out to all the relevant areas. It puts everything on autopilot so to speak.”
The Stream has given his agents a greater ability to understand the company database, develop relationships with clients and find new business. But most importantly, it’s allowed Argentum to gain more business. “Most agents spend almost half their time on administrative functions rather than developing their business, whereas our system has diminished that to maybe five or 10 per cent.”
Jessi Johnson is another broker who hasn’t found a CRM he’s totally comfortable with. Until he finds something that can work for his business, he’ll continue using Microsoft Excel to manage his client data. “Don’t get me wrong, I am sure they work for a basic broker, but unfortunately I have a very complicated setup.”
Online marketing
Johnson’s focus, however, is less on what application he uses for client-data management and more on how he markets his company. Johnson, who teaches marketing at seminars hosted by the Mortgage Brokers Association of British Columbia, built his business by using technology. His colleague Mike Averbach, president of TMG Averbach Mortgages Ltd., says he can remember when other people in the industry would say that “mortgage brokers shouldn’t try re-inventing the wheel without learning the fundamentals first, but Jessi came in and re-invented the wheel.”
Johnson admits when he first started out he was only focused on clients who understood current technology. After a short while of working with that in mind, he realized he could build a successful business targeting only those consumers. “I don’t really want a client who doesn’t use e-mail or the Internet. Those files take 10 times as long to complete and those clients are literally a dying breed. We prefer to focus on the younger clientele and teach them cool new tricks to be more financially savvy.”
He says he’s used social media websites not to sell his products but to educate people with quality information. By doing that he was able to increase his business’s exposure and give consumers an incentive to call him when they need a mortgage. By using Twitter.com, he says he’s been able to give his business a “personal touch,” which seems to be harder to establish these days, since brokers have less face-to-face interaction with their clients.” Johnson currently has more than 10,000 followers on his twitter account, giving him a reach into a market that others cannot access.
However, before brokers even worry themselves with social media, they need to develop and maintain a decent website, Collu says. “There is going to be more and more demand for brokers to have robust websites that have ample information that capture audiences or visitors and entice further interaction,”
And even though there’s a growing demand for well-developed websites, he’s seen a lot of reluctance among brokers to fill what he calls “a very big void” in the industry. “It doesn’t matter what you want as a broker or agent, the only thing that matters is what the consumer demands. Over 80 per cent of consumers right now will visit the Internet for mortgage and home advice before even contacting a human being. If that’s not a kick in the rear-end to change habits, I don’t what is!”
Even though having a superior website with great information and tools is crucial for success, it’s all for nothing if no one sees it, says Averbach. So the next step brokers should take, if they have the budget for it, is to hire a search-engine-optimization specialist to make their websites rank higher on search engines. Averbach says this is particularly important because most people looking for a mortgage, between the ages of 25 and 45, start by using search engines, and they usually end up selecting with what’s closest to the top.
CLICK HERE for the interview posted on CMP magazine
Aug
22
HST does not apply to resale homes
Georgia Straight, August 18, 2010
A Vancouver mortgage broker says some real-estate agents are unaware that the harmonized sales tax does not apply to resale homes. In a phone interview with the Straight, Jessi Johnson said that even though the 12-percent HST has been part of public discussion for quite a while, there are a number of people in the industry who still aren’t clear on where it applies.
“There are a lot of false fears about HST,” Johnson said. “HST only affects new construction.”
He declined to identify the agents who were ignorant about this issue.
Johnson noted that the HST took effect on July 1, just as the housing market was undergoing a transition from a seller’s to a buyer’s market. “Anytime you transition in that period, you have a dead zone,” he claimed. “The problem is that in that dead zone, the false fears around HST came right around that same time. I don’t know if that was circumstantial, coincidental, or whatever, but it caused a really dead point in the market for me.”
He mentioned that during a two-week period in July, he had approximately one mortgage application, whereas his company normally processes 10 applications a week. “That was shocking,” Johnson said.
He emphasized that since then, the housing market has picked up.
Aug
5
Riaz from Breakfast Television interviews Jessi on the raising interest rates. For more information, listen in….
Mar
26
