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Catskills - Sullivan County - Ulster County Real Estate -- Catskill Farms Journal

Old School Real estate blog in the Catskills. Journeys, trial, tribulations, observations and projects of Catskill Farms Founder Chuck Petersheim. Since 2002, Catskill Farms has designed, built, and sold over 250 homes in the Hills, investing over $100m and introducing thousands to the areas we serve. Farms, Barns, Moderns, Cottages and Minis - a design portfolio which has something for everyone.

November 1, 2013

Moving On - (and Why We Are In Business)

3:13am Friday.

Well, if any of you know the Josh Rouse song Moving On, you could hum it now.

Although it's been fun (not really actually), I know a lot of our clients read this damn blog and that's why it's pretty strategic in what I cover - though it may seem like I'm shooting wildly from the hip, that would belie the fact this blog medium has served as my one-two punch of Catskill Farms' envied marketing effort, the other being the website.  This blog was started almost exactly 5 years ago, with nearly 700 posts, I believe.  It has consistently covered the good the bad and the not so good and the really good.  So obviously, it's content and subject matter is thought out to a degree.

I guess what I'm trying to say is that its time to refocus on the art of building homes and leave my legal drama behind because the last thing I want is for the 7 homes we are currently building (and their respective future homeowners) to be overshadowed by my drama, since this is about them, not about me.  I just happen to be one the players, as well as the writer of this blog, so I have some editorial sway.

And that gets to my point (at least one of them) - this company was started in 2003 because I saw an opportunity - clear and simple - to provide a better, easier, less stressful process and product for families, partners and individuals wanting to move upstate, or buy a home up here.  Before Catskill Farms, the high expectations and high demands that our clients used to achieve the success in their lives had to be discarded, put aside, dumbed down in order to do something upstate.  After Catskill Farms, those attributes that attributed to their success could be used with us to collaborate on something great.  No more torture, no more life-changing lessons in upstate casualness that really doesn't seem that cute when you have a couple of hundred grand on the line.

Our business model was about maximizing the upside, and minimizing the downside, -for our clients. And by minimizing the downside, I mean having us here at Catskill Farms fight all the battles with the subcontractors, the vendors, the realtors - we pitch the battle, we filter the pain.  And the whole idea was to provide a good experience.  It was that simple - we wanted to provide a good experience.  Granted, it took several years before our business goal and our real life efforts married up, but it happened, and now it's commonplace.

People always wonder why Catskill Farms succeeds so wildly, when it's owner is commonly often described as an ass.  To my business mind, it's because we are focused on the client, to a degree that is actually unfathomable to most of our competitors - I don't mean focused in a lovey dovey huggy type of way (although when it is that way its always nice) - I mean focused in a 'we are going to get you in this awesome home as fast a humanly possible and nothing is going to get in our way and we are going to live up to our word precisely".


The sustained seriousness of our approach is uncommon.  And people pay good money to be part of it. And we respect that respect.

All for now.  Off to Miami Beach.

(this caterpillars long row to hoe here at the Ashokan Reservoir reminded me of my business journey - what a long way we've come.)



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