Are Realtors Actually Zombies?
I hear they actually eat your brains!!
I mean it makes sense. Why else would people spend half of their annual salary to advertise their home on the internet and toss an ad in the paper?
Who among us hasn't thought "Maybe I will be better off..."? It boils down to the fact that for you to be better off you would have to put a value on the service provided. 5% of the value of your home, or 20% of your equity, is tough to justify.
It is amazing how deep this penetration of their fear mongering goes. They have spent thousands of your commission dollars to help scare the bejezus out of you and your neighbours.
This video should help you get through it...
Leave your brains to be eaten by more important people. What else will the politicians be sustained on?
M
Qualifications...
I know which one I would pick!
I love looking through the paper to see the different ads and ideas people have when placing a classified ad for their house. I came across one this week that included the street name and the phone number but not the house number. As I drive to the area I find the deep caverns of water main repair. Dare I cross? I am glad to report I survived the treacherous trip across the chasm.
When I talked to the gentleman at the property I suggested he may want to ad the house number to his ad. His response surprised me a bit. "That was done with purpose. If people are interested they are forced to either call us or drive by if they so choose."
In today's world of information overload people not only want, but expect information at their fingertips on their schedule, not yours. As a buyer I would not want to jump through hoops when I have plenty of options available to me. I can search through hundreds of homes on the internet, including photos and virtual tours. Why am I going to play your game to call you to get your address? NEXT!
In this instance it seems very much a control issue. The home seller wants to control each and every buyer and when and what information they get. A strategy that could work but is very labour intensive. This takes away a key benefit of selling privately. The ability to talk to qualified buyers and work within your schedule. You actually spend your time qualifying them instead of letting them qualify themselves!
Qualified buyers are something real estate agents claim as their own. They proclaim to spend hours with all the perspective buyers getting to know their wants, likes, desires. Maybe so, but it is on your time schedule. In speaking to many people frustrated with the traditional system one complaint often heard is that agents will bring just about anybody through a home. They use the homes as part of the process of narrowing down what a client might like, meanwhile forcing you to leave while they show an uninterested, unqualified, tire kicker through your home.
Having the control of the sale by selling privately allows this to stop. You show the home when it is convenient for you. When they have made the decision to pick up the phone and book an appointment, they have already looked online and ogled your photos. They know that your basement is not finished. They know that you have a large backyard and a new deck. It's what they are looking for, they have self qualified.
Your duty as the home seller is to verify two things on initial phone calls. Have they viewed your property on PropertyGuys.com and are they pre-qualified for a mortgage in the amount of your home. When they pass this test they are invited across the bridge.
M
The Market
Farmers are smart people.
My grandfather was a farmer. He raised cattle and grew grapes in the lushness that we know as the "banana belt" sandwiched between Grimsby and St Catharines. It's not easy being a farmer. Early chores 7 days a week, sick animals, too hot and no crop, too wet and no crop yet they always seem to be one step ahead. Next time you see that your local Farmer's Market is open, pop in and have a walk around. You will see plenty of beans and tomatoes and lettuce and potatoes. There will be plenty of smiles and earthy hand shakes. The term "salt of the earth" must have been coined about a farmer.
While you are there at the market you will notice something peculiar. People all around you are buying fresh vegetables, meats and cheeses, preserves and honey, fresh cut flowers and hummus. Maybe even a fresh baked pie (apple with some old cheddar is my favorite). Know what you won't find? Check out counters, pharmacy sections, a pop & chip aisle. Look long and hard but these are not grocery stores, just simple little markets with people selling their goods to people that want to buy them.
I know exactly what you are thinking. How is this possible? I mean these are farmers. How do they know how much to sell their beans for? They never went to some fancy university like Queens to get their MBA. My lord how do they know the value of that cucumber???
You see the farmers have a little secret. I was blessed in my travels to have a few local farmers bestow their secret on me. I am going to share it with you under the expectation that you TELL NO ONE! I will deny it was me. Do you think I want to be black-balled by the farmers?
OK, here it is. It has a few basic steps but the concept is sound (It has been handed down for generations). Are you ready?
The market will dictate your pricingHere is how they do it.
- See what other people are selling similar products for.
ie. green beans and yellow beans could probably sell for the same price but watermelons and strawberries not so much. - Price yours in a similar fashion and display them where buyers might find them.
ie a farmer's market - If the farmer at the next table is selling beans like they are going out of style while yours sit and wilt in the heat of the sun, check to see how he is priced.
ie. his are $2.00 a basket and yours are $5.00 - Adjust accordingly.
ie. lower your price or get a bigger basket
Maybe my next post I will get back to talking about something that a home seller could use to help them. Something about the economy, because we all know you can't sell a house in an economy. Right?
M
Culling The Herd IV
With this heat even the cows are melting!
News out of Saint John NB is that the 4th largest brokerage in town closed it's doors this week. 50 agents left to scramble and find themselves a place to hang their Porsche keys.
Interesting comment from a researcher at UNB.
"The traditional real estate business model is under pressure," said Dan Doiron, whose research interests at the University of New Brunswick include industry-wide innovation patterns.
Doiron said the Internet is creating avenues for a person to advertise and sell their home cheaper online, forcing real estate agents to add value any way they can.
"A friend of mine just sold his house over Twitter," he said.
More and more people are realizing that giving away $15,000, when they could simply pay themselves, just doesn't make sense.
If you are a realtor and wondering how you can avoid the cull, maybe this cow abduction video can assist you.
M
Bad Cover Songs?
Imitation is the most sincere form of flattery.
The cover song has long been an individual interpretation of what the covering artist thought the song meant to them. Sometimes adding in parts, taking parts out, or rearranging the song front to back.
We often see real estate covers. Problem is they are taking a bad song and trying to do it the exact same. Heck open up a paper in any city across the country and you are going to see the same thing. You've seen them.
"Your house sold in 90 days, guaranteed."
"We'll sell your house or we'll buy it."
"The best team in the industry."
"Get sold with the top agent in the region." (amazing how many their are per region)
Hearing the same ol' song and dance day after day get's you longing for something new, something completely different
Sure does beat hearing something that just should never have happened!!!
To help cleanse your pallet...
M
Knowledge IS Power
The question now is "Where to get the knowledge?"
As a Private Sale Professional I meet many people with the desire to do things their way. Peopl that are not interested in paying the high cost of commission to some real estate agent and looking for the best way to avoid it. This is generally why they get in touch with PropertyGuys.com.
They are in search of knowledge and expertise to help guide them through a process. Not a difficult process, just one that is some what foreign to them. It is not everyday one sells a house so why would you know the process in which you go about the deed?
I had a couple that called me a few years back in a bit of a panic. They had gone down to Canadian Tire and purchased a black and orange "For Sale By Owner" sign, stuck it to a 2" x 2" stake and hammered it in the lawn. They went in side, sat down with the pride of accomplishment. Before long the hearts started pounding. They looked at each other and said "Now what?". That's when they called me.
With a little guidance and the transfer of knowledge they were prepared for what came next. They learned the proper way to show their home, what it takes to ensure they have the home staged properly, how to compliment your home with photography, how to deal with buyers, how to deal with buyers that have signed a buyers agency with an agent, how the offer process works, what it means to "close", what a suitable deposit amount is, when to do an open house, how to price your home effectively, how to judge the market based on your traffic, when to involve a lawyer, how the different conditions work, what to expect in the negotiation process, and on and on.
The point here is anyone can sell their own property. All you need is the knowledge of the process. It's not rocket science!
So what is "rocket science"? I'll let her explain....
M
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