Women in Real Estate: Ashoo Sharma
When Atlanta’s iconic real estate company looked to hire its first in-house lawyer, it hired a woman of South-Asian descent, making Ashoo Sharma the Vice President and General Counsel of Harry Norman, REALTORS®.
When Atlanta’s iconic real estate company looked to hire its first in-house lawyer, it hired a woman of South-Asian descent, making Ashoo Sharma the Vice President and General Counsel of Harry Norman, REALTORS®.
Merely 20 years after the first female member was accepted into the National Association of REALTORS® (NAR) in 1910, Mrs. Emmaline Harrison Norman entered the real estate business out of her sincere desire to see customers receive better service.
Learn more about our panel discussion with top industry leaders covering home prices, mortgage rates and the second home and luxury markets, as well as potential solutions to housing affordability.
Our partnership with the Atlanta Ronald McDonald House Charities created 1,185 care kits for the underprivileged!
Atlanta Magazine and Atlanta Magazine’s HOME commissioned their closely held research company, Professional Research Services (PRS), to conduct a survey of metro Atlanta brokers and agents to determine the top-selling real estate agents and teams by sales volume for the full 2021 year. This list represents the top 5-10 percent of metro Atlanta real estate …
Harry Norman, REALTORS® and ADAC joined together to host more than 150 Harry Norman agents and their clients for an exclusive preview of ADAC’s annual Fall Sample Sale before it opened to the public.
Throughout Atlanta and North Georgia, Harry Norman agents are volunteering, donating, advocating, fundraising, supporting, and raising awareness for causes that benefit society as whole.
People are moving around the world more than ever. This has given rise to the Global Real Estate Professional, a real estate agent that has the expertise and connections to move you across town, or across the globe.
The strengths and skills of women shine in the real estate industry.
Every year for the past 52 years, the month of February has been dedicated to celebrating the monumental impact that Black men and women have had on our society.