Sellers Beware! These Costly Mistakes
Can Cause Your House To Sit On The Market!
You put your house on the
market, ran an add in the newspaper classifieds, and sat by and watched as the
phone didn’t ring. To make matters worse, few, if any people came by the house.
This happens frequently, and the problems in all cases are usually the same.
The Dangers of Pricing Too
High
You probably have lots of
emotion “built in” to your house. Maybe you fixed it up, or you raised your
children there. Your home is your “special” place. However, when it’s time to
sell, don’t let emotion play a roll in your pricing decision!
Many sellers don’t understand
that overpricing can actually result in your getting LESS for your house than if
you had priced it correctly in the first place.
Knowledgeable agents and buyers
often won’t bid on an overpriced home. By the time you “wise up” and reduce the
price to where it should have been priced in the first place, many of your best
prospects will have bought other houses. This decreases demand for your now
properly priced home! The problem is exacerbated if you placed your home on the
market in the spring, it sat on the market “overpriced” throughout the summer,
and now that you’ve reduced your price, the market has slowed.
Also, consider that agents tend
to steer buyers away from homes that have been in the Multiple Listing Service
for long periods of time. Agents and buyers become suspicious that something is
wrong with your property if it didn’t sell relatively soon after it went on the
market. It’s important to price it right the day you put it on the market!
Also, consider what you could
have done with the profits from the sale of your home if you had priced it
right. Suppose you priced it right and sold relatively quickly, and invested
that money in a rising stock or bond market. On the other hand, suppose you
overpriced your home, and after several months, had to reduce it to where it
should have been priced in the first place. Even worse, the house still isn’t
sold! You get the picture.
The Dangers of a Lack of Exposure
It’s a fact that most real
estate transactions occur between buyer’s and seller’s agents. Buyer’s agents
typically find properties for their clients through the Multiple Listing
Service. Not being in the MLS makes it extremely difficult to get buyers through
your door. If your home is not in the MLS, you’re off the radar! Hire a good
real estate agent, and get into the MLS!
Also, make sure your real estate
agent uses aggressive marketing strategies to make sure your home sells. In a
red-hot market, the MLS is probably the only exposure your home will need.
However, if the market is anything less than red-hot, your agent will need to
print flyers and introduce your home to other agents in his or her office, as
well as other local sales offices. Also, exposure in home magazine ads,
classified ads, and the Internet will help generate demand for your home. Make
sure your agent uses a powerful marketing program!
The Dangers of not “packaging your home” for sale!
Curb appeal is everything! You
can take two identical homes next door to each other, both for sale. The first
home has a cluttered yard with tall grass and weeds. The shutters on the house
are chipping. There are toys in the yard. When you open the screen door, it’s
half way off the hinges. The inside is fairly cluttered as well, and the wall
could use a coat of paint. On the other hand, the owners of the home next door
paid $300 for a landscaper to mow the lawn trim the shrubs and clear the
gutters. Inside, they added a fresh coat of paint and cleared up all the
clutter. Again, the two homes are identical. Both owners paid the same amount
for the same model. Guess which home is going to fetch more money?
Don’t be lazy. A few days of
labor and minimal investment can make the difference between your house sitting
on the market and selling the day you put it on the market. Cosmetic appeal is
essential!
Finally, don’t negotiate foolishly!
Don’t appear overly eager when
you negotiate with buyers. If you appear too eager or too anxious to make a
deal, buyers may become suspicious. Worse, they may lower the offer because they
think you’re desperate to sell your home. Stay cool! Also, don’t appear too
tough. A good deal can fall apart if buyers find you to rigid to work with.
You probably have a lot of
emotion invested in the house, which can certainly get in the way of effective
negotiations. The best thing you can do is let your real estate agent handle
your negotiations. She or he is emotionally detached from the home and has
strong negotiating skills.