Westside DIGS | Digital Edition Online

February 25, 2022

DIGS is the premiere luxury real estate lifestyle magazine serving the most affluent neighborhoods in the South Bay and Westside of Los Angeles, California.

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2.25.22 | DIGS.NET 35 M A R K E T e skill and art of doing both of these—solving prob- lems and skillfully relating to others—was on display daily to her while growing up in Michigan. e child of a successful public relations entrepreneur who handled programs for Ford Motor Company, Bell started stuffing envelopes and doing other administrative tasks around the office at age 14. "I loved being in the mix," she recounts, "and always found the idea of being an entrepreneur and a business owner exciting." And her parent was a strong mentor, particularly when it came to delivering more than what was expected to clients. "My dad always had really good relationships with people," says Bell. "He was open and honest, and instilled that in me from a young age." Soon the enterprising Bell was working as an actress, and by age 16 she was spending summers in New York City, navigating the subway system to travel to auditions and commercial shoots. After graduation she moved to the city full-time, then Hollywood beckoned. "I was an actor for a long time before I was a real estate agent," she says of her earlier career success, where she was a cast member of a network series, and enjoyed roles on hits like Seinfeld and Baywatch. "It's a business similar to real estate. As much time and effort you want to put into it, is what you'll get in results. You cultivate what you create." ere were more parallels, ranging from creativity—Bell regularly applies her design talents to client proper- ties as well as her own development projects—to trust. "Everybody takes a little leap of faith," she describes. "When someone hires you to sell their house, they trust in your experience and knowledge and reputation." Being entrusted to sell a client's jewel of a property is a responsibility she takes seriously; but not one she finds daunting. "It's about walking through the points of the transaction authentically," she says pragmatically, "and taking it step by step." To that end, Bell is fastidious about disclosures and details, and leans on a keen ability to discern her clients' needs, as well as their desired level of involvement in the process. "I always want to go above and beyond to deliver information, or possibilities," she says. "What a client wouldn't know to ask for—that's what you deliver to them, because that's what you would want from someone working for you." Guiding and teaching her clients in this way is merely another aspect of entrepreneurship, like forging one's own destiny, that Bell finds exhilarating and ultimately, uncomplicated, provided one keeps a sharp focus on the fundamentals. Even when selling a 15-million-dollar house, she points out that while her clients might be "people that have a lot, and have done really well in life—they have the same need for infor- mation, and transparency, and hard work as anyone else." "It comes down to simple things," she says with char- acteristic good-natured calm. "It's nothing too crazy." Sold by Heather Bell, clockwise from top left. A backyard oasis, welcoming entrance, and bright modern kitchen at 280 S. Canyon View Drive in Brentwood (9,450 square feet; price not available). 604 El Cerco Place in Pacific Palisades (8,144 square feet; $11,700,000). 1633 Amalfi Drive in Pacific Palisades (8,500 square feet; $13,700,000).

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