Archive for the ‘Selling’ Category

Exactly How to Sell Your Own Home Yourself (FSBO — For Sale By Owner)! No Kidding! Part 1

I’m going to give you the playbook. Take it and save thousands.

Now before we even get into this explanation and plan, I know 99% of people will not do this. Or if they do, it will only be a half-baked attempt, and then they will most likely hire a half-baked real estate agent and no sale will occur. That seller will say, “See, I should have never even listed with “XYZ Realty” or “Agent ABC.” They did nothing that I couldn’t or didn’t do myself. So, here is the advice you won’t listen to anyway. If you want to sell your home but you’re not going to take this approach seriously and don’t do it just as I describe, then DON’T TRY TO SELL YOURSELF. It is only going to cost you money and time and hurt your potential home sale. Just hire a top-producing real estate agent who gets results and nothing but. DO NOT hire the co-worker or relative who just got his license last month and is “trying real estate.” That will lead to even more frustration and expense. Believe me, I talk with those sellers and it’s the same story repeatedly, with both the FSBO who isn’t totally hardcore serious and the real estate agent who has no clue. It is useless. Honestly, it’s a waste.

OK HERE WE GO (I hope you have your seatbelt on)!

Let’s start from the beginning — the very beginning. Your home has to look good, and I’m not talking about just running the vacuum and doing some dusting. Here’s the deal. If it has been more then 3 years since the interior has been painted, REPAINT your entire home. Only use neutral colors and colors that work well together (creams, tans, beiges, whites, etc.). Please do not paint your home bright blue and orange saying: “I did what you said and painted it bright blue. I think it looks great, but no sale occurred. Michael, you’re an idiot for making me do that.” NO. What I am telling you to do is only use neutral colors, period. I don’t care if you don’t like them or think they are “not vibrant enough for your home.” One more thing: if you are not a skillful painter, you need to hire a professional. No halfway decent job is going to cut it here. Enough said about paint, but it is extremely important. Again, you must be serious about selling or you’re just wasting your time. It’s really up to you. I can almost guarantee a well-done neutral paint job will get you all your money back in the sale and make your home sell much faster.

Differences in Real Estate Brokerages and What it Means to You, the Seller

You may not be aware that the real estate business structure has changed significantly over the past thirty years, and particularly over the last ten. In the past, brokerages would front the majority of the costs of marketing the properties and concentrated on selling their own listings first and foremost. Real estate agents could only sell the listings that their company offered. If you decided to employ a Re/Max agent you would only be able to purchase Re/Max listed homes, making the selection much smaller. The real estate agent just acted as a bystander and assisted in completing the brokerage’s function with no real input regarding the marketing/advertising of the property. The reputation of the real estate brokerage hinged upon the quantity of its listings, the selling price of its listings, and how quickly that particular brokerage was selling the homes they had listed.

How Do You Know if your Real Estate Agent is Doing a Good Job?

Many home sellers hire a real estate agent either from a referral from a friend or relative or from a piece of the real estate agent’s advertising. Once the seller interviews the agent, many times he or she is hired on the spot. After hiring, how do you know if your home is getting the exposure that it deserves or know if your agent is doing a good job on your home sale? Many times this is hard to determine, especially when you have many other concerns and other items to worry about, i.e., work, imminent move, and other normal things. There’s little time to think about your real estate agent and the job he or she is doing for you.

Tucson’s Pent-up Demand

Will it start to show soon? I have been talking with many buyers who are starting to think about purchasing but are still very concerned about what the market is doing and only want to buy “at the bottom”. Don’t we all? But, here’s the point. There are a great many potential buyers in the current marketplace. In normal market conditions, they would buy a home due to real needs: larger family size, relocation to Tucson, or care of a loved one requiring additional room or a different configuration of home. These buyers would be in the marketplace and buying homes, but due to the very unknown state of the Tucson real estate market, these buyers are trying to delay the purchase and wait for what they perceive as a bottom of the market. Now all these people cannot or will not wait that long. If you live in a 1100 sq ft home that you bought 4 years ago when you got married and now you have a couple of kids and another on the way, its difficult to wait around for the market to bottom (assuming you can afford a larger home). This is what is called “pent-up demand”. It’s essentially people who have a need or a real desire to make a purchase but are putting it off for as long as possible. These people are still going to buy but as time goes on, the pressure mounts for them to take action. What I feel will happen is that as soon as there is a hint that our real estate market has the worst behind it, this pent-up demand will show itself, and I imagine we in the industry will see a rally in the Tucson market.

Internet Marketing: What it Is and What it Isn’t

Real estate marketing has changed very little in the past 50 years. Imagine this: you hire a Realtor to sell your home in Tucson and he/she comes in and says, “Great! I’ll feature your home in the newspaper’s real estate for sale section, place it in the homes magazine, and do some open houses.” Which year is it –1957 or 2007? Well, surprisingly, the overwhelming majority of real estate agents are still doing the same thing today as they did in 1957, and it does work. But every day, the traditional marketing method loses a little more of its dominance. Just look at newspaper circulation numbers over the past 20 years and it’s easy to see the newspaper isn’t nearly as important in helping you get your home sold as it used to be. What other options should you and/or the Realtor you hire consider?

Short Sales: why they will be here for some time

“Short sales” are sales where the borrower has to sell their property and owes much more on the property then the current value of the home (otherwise known as being upside down). These sales are becoming much more “normal” and buyers and sellers alike have very little information as to why/how they work, so I thought for this post I would explain the general idea of the “Short Sale”.

Staging your property to sell

When deciding to sell your home, one aspect of getting the highest price the market will bear is making it have a sparkle to it none of the other homes in the market for sale have. As a seller, you can get that sparkle through hiring a home stager to completely transform your property into a model property for sale. Think about this: just about every home builder in America uses model homes to help them sell homes. They typically upgrade the homes heavily to show every option and then some to make the home have that sparkle that gets buyers to decide this is the one for them. Getting to the emotion of buyers sells properties many times. (It goes without saying that the home must be priced within reason to get anyone to want to look inside it.) Home staging gets your home in its best possible condition and presentation. The home is “staged” to enhance positives and also “staged” to distract from negatives. For instance, if the bedrooms are a little smaller then the average home in the neighborhood, a great stager will get furniture that will “fit the room” — not the other way around — making the bedrooms feel bigger. Great stagers also will make sure there is a general theme to the home that will get to buyers’ emotions. If, for example, the neighborhood is very close to schools and parks, a great stager will incorporate these into the home staging. They might decorate with small furniture (or children’s furniture) and puzzles and games on display to get children excited about the home when they go to see it with parents. On the other side of the coin, maybe your home is situated in a world class golf resort. A smart home stager would use golf themes throughout the home, playing the percentages that a golfer may be looking in that specific area. It’s all about getting potential buyers to imagine and “take ownership” of the property when viewing it. When doing all this, the benefit to the sellers — even if they happen to not have children (as in the first example, or don’t golf in the second example) — is that when it comes to the offer and the negotiations, the buyers will be much more hesitant and less likely to “lowball the offer”. If you counter, they will much more scared of losing the home. This should all result in the home selling for a higher price and also selling more quickly. From all the research I have done, I cannot find a set average that staging a property in Tucson AZ will add to the sales price, but from experience and general research, 1-5% is a very reasonable figure to use as a guide. A lot depends how well your home shows without staging and how much work the stager has to do to the home. Rates for staging in Tucson AZ vary from $250 for just a general consultation with the stager to $10,000 or more for an entire house of furniture, painting, and other home upgrades to get your home in showcase condition. If you are in need of a stager, or would like additional information about staging and getting your home in showcase condition feel free to contact me.

Selling in Tucson’s current marketplace

Selling a home in Tucson’s current marketplace can be difficult without the right action plan. First and foremost, the property must be priced right and when I say priced right thats not to say within $10,000 of the other homes so that there’s some “negotiation room.” I’m talking priced right on, if not a couple thousand less, to really bring in the buyers since Tucson’s marketplace has been in decline for over 18 months. Each month homes sell for less — not more. I run into people selling their own home all the time and they say, “The home is priced right — 2 years ago my home would have sold for this price in a day.” What they are saying is true, but it’s also not 2 years ago. It’s hard to be precise, but in most areas the Tucson real estate market is down at least 5%-10% from 2005 levels. Now, there is no doubt in my mind that home prices are headed up and this past 18 months will only seem like a small bump in the road, but the fact is that prices are well off their highs of two years ago. To get properties sold in today’s market, you need a right-on price and a marketing plan that shoots your home out in front of the other 9000 homes currently on the market. The latter is a very difficult feat for the power real estate agent, and much more difficult for an average or even “FSBO” owner. I see “motivated seller” and “below appraised value” on just about every listing. It’s more the norm than the exception it used to be.