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Phishing scams: Don’t let your clients get caught on the hook

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Phishing and wire fraud continue to present the biggest threats real estate agents and their clients will face in 2017. 

Hackers have discovered a soft spot for committing financial fraud, and agents and our transactions are the bull’s-eye. As professionals, we need to do everything in our power to stop and prevent a single loss of our client’s purchase or sale proceeds.

As a reminder, the scam involves the following process:

  1. Hackers gain access to your email and begin to track your transactions.
  2. When the time is right, they send a message to your client that looks like you sent it.
  3. Generally, this message contains fraudulent wire transfer instructions that ultimately result in your client losing his or her transferred money.

It only takes the simplest of steps to save our clients’ money. Although adding these security steps requires some extra work and diligence, the effort pales in comparison to the pain of telling a client his or her money has been lost to fraud.

Every real estate practitioner should implement the following steps:

These methods combine technology and good, old-fashioned common sense. Even as the hackers evolve their techniques, refusing to accept wire transfer wire transfer instructions via email without calling to verify them will usually save the day — and your client!

Christian J. Kelly is the Chief Administrative & Legal Officer at ReeceNichols Real Estate in Kansas City. You can follow him on LinkedIn or at his blog, Practically Legal.