Star realtor Sally
Forster Jones values solid foundations
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[April 12, 2017]
By Cheryl Lu-Lien Tan
NEW
YORK (Reuters) - Sally Forster Jones has sold about $4 billion of luxury
real estate in Southern California in her nearly 40-year career, but she
credits her success to hard work and thrift rather than an opulent
lifestyle.
The president of Aaroe International Luxury Properties in Beverly Hills
said her parents, Polish Holocaust survivors, always instilled in her
the importance of saving and investing in real estate. The family
immigrated to the United States from Germany, where Forster Jones had
been born in a displaced persons camp.
In 2011, she helped broker the $85 million sale of a 123-room house in
Los Angeles that had been built by the late TV producer Aaron Spelling.
The initial listing of $150 million set a record at the time.
Forster Jones recently shared some of the lessons she has learned and is
passing on to her six children and 12 grandchildren.
Q: What did you learn about money from your parents?
A: My parents came to the United States as immigrants, and they taught
me to save and invest. They worked very hard and saved every dollar that
wasn’t spent on food or rent. They invested in multifamily properties,
and we would live in one unit and rent out the rest.
I moved around a lot growing up, as my parents bought and sold various
properties. I was 12 when I ate out at a restaurant for the first time.
We didn’t have much, but I never felt deprived, and I was motivated to
work hard and strive for something greater.

Q: What has running your own group and business taught you about
finances?
A: It is so easy to spend and get carried away. It is important to have
budgets and stick to them. Know your bottom line, and create a solid
business plan.
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Q: How
did you get the right team in place to help achieve your financial goals?
A: I have a knack for understanding people. Residential real estate is a
people-oriented business, so my ability to read and understand people has
ultimately helped me to hire and pull together the best team possible.
You have to surround yourself with the smartest and most talented people. Having
a great team and being able to delegate really allowed me to grow my business
and ultimately achieve my financial goals.

Q:
Have there been mistakes that you’ve learned from?
A: I passed on purchasing a home once, and for years I avoided driving down the
street because I was still upset about the missed opportunity. But you have to
be willing to let go of those regrets and move on to new and better
opportunities.
Q: How do you give back?
A: It is so important to give back to the community, with both money and time. I
give to charities and causes ... but I also think it’s incredibly important to
give back by sharing your experience and mentoring others who are new to the
business or just starting out.
Q: What lessons do you try to pass down to your children and grandchildren?
A: It was very important to me that my kids understood the value of money. They
grew up with a lot more than I did, but I always made them work for their
allowances, budget, and save for special purchases.
I taught them to have a good work ethic and to not take anything, including
money, for granted. I’m proud of all of my kids because they all really do have
good values and strong work ethics, and I see that they are passing that on to
their families as well.
(Editing by Beth Pinsker and Lisa Von Ahn)
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