| Each year, in our
area, many home sellers make the same mistakes over and over
again. When you add up these mistakes, they total more than a
million dollars each year!
It pains me to watch these same common
mistakes made over and over again, so I finally decided to do
something about it — and thus this Special Report outlining
the nine most common (and most expensive) mistakes made by
home sellers each year.
Deadly Mistake #l:
"Hard Selling" During Showings
People buy homes on emotion, not logic.
Buying a home is always an emotional decision. People like to
get a feel for a house to see if it is comfortable for them.
It's difficult for them to get comfortable in a home if you
follow them around, telling them all of the things that you've
done to the house and pointing out every improvement that
you've made. It may even have the opposite effect that you
want to accomplish by making the prospective buyer feel that
they are intruding into your private space.
Resist the temptation to talk to the buyer
the entire time that they are in your home. Let them discover
the home on their own. I recommend tasteful signs to point out
hidden features that they might miss. Another good idea is to
have a photo album on the kitchen counter with photos of the
home during other seasons.
Deadly Mistake #2: Mistaking
"Lookers" For Buyers
If you're selling your home yourself, you'll
always get more activity than if your home is listed with a
real estate broker. If you open your front door to everyone
who walks down the street and sees your sign, you may be
spinning your wheels. I recommend that you ask buyers a few
questions first to make sure they are qualified before wasting
a lot of time with them.
A qualified buyer is one who is ready,
willing and able to purchase your home if it fits his needs.
Over the years, I've found that many people who look at For
Sale By Owners are curiosity seekers, nosy neighbors, and
people with poor credit hoping to get you to help them with
the financing.
Other buyers may be qualified, but they're
six months to two years away from being ready. They don't want
to bother a real estate agent yet, so they call and look at
For Sale By Owner homes to get a feel for what's available.
Many of these folks have a home to sell first, or they need to
save money for the down payment, or they may need to work on
their credit rating. When everything else is finally in place,
that's when they seriously begin their search for homes
working with a real estate agent.
I always "screen" buyers to make
sure they are qualified before showing them homes. I won't
show a buyer a home unless I know he can afford the house, how
much he has to put down, how good his credit is, how much he
can pay each month, and how much money he will realistically
walk away with when he sells his present home. Those are just
a few of the questions that I recommend that you ask prospects
before you show them your home. I've learned the hard way to
ask questions before you waste a lot of time working with a
buyer who may be unqualified or just looking for decorating
ideas.
Deadly Mistake #3: Pricing
Your Home Incorrectly
As a seller, you want to sell your home for
the most money possible. Putting too high of a price on your
home will often get you less money than you could have
realized by putting a fair market value price on your home.
Keep this statistic in mind: On the average,
buyers are comparing your home to fifteen to twenty other
homes. If your house is not priced competitively, people
looking at your home may reject your home in favor of superior
homes priced very comparably.
Overpricing your home usually increases the
time on the market, and many buyers are aware of how long
homes have been for sale. The longer your home is for sale,
the more buyers are inclined to feel that there's something
"wrong" with it, and the lower the offers will be.
Deadly Mistake #4: Failing
To Prepare Your Home For The Buyer's Eye
Buyers look for homes, not houses. Buying a
home is an emotional decision and they end up buying the home
that makes them most comfortable. It's what I call the
"Ah-ha" effect. I've watched dozens of times as
buyers have walked in through the front door and gasped
"Ah-ha," and immediately fall in love with the
house.
Owners who fail to make necessary repairs,
who don't spruce up the house inside and out, who don't do all
the little things that make a house show like a million bucks
will suffer from lower offers and longer market time.
Think about it this way: if you were selling
a car, wouldn't you wash it and maybe even give it an extra
good cleaning inside and out to get the highest possible
price? That's because a buyer looking at your used car is
purchasing on emotion, just like someone looking at your home.
Deadly Mistake #5: Signing A
Long-Term Listing Without A Written, Specific, Performance
Guaranty
Important: Also read "Avoid Tying Yourself Up With 6 Month Listing"
Many times, an agent has good intentions
about marketing your house, but circumstances can change.
Other real estate agents are taught by their brokers to take
any listing for any price, in an effort to begin to
"control the inventory." These agents seem genuine
at first, but you never hear from them again.
Always protect yourself by making sure that
you receive a written promise stating that you can cancel the
listing, without charge, if specific written performance
details are not adhered to by the broker.
Sellers who don't heed this advice sometimes
wind up tying their home up for months on end, with absolutely
no activity. Always protect yourself by getting a guaranty of
specific performance with the right to cancel.
Deadly Mistake #6: Making It
Hard For Qualified Buyers To Obtain Information
The two marketing tools that consumers think
REALTORS¨ use to sell homes (open houses and classified ads)
are actually not very effective at all. Surprisingly, less
than one percent of all homes are sold at an open house. As a
matter of fact, real estate agents use open houses to attract
potential prospects, and very seldom actually sell the home
itself.
Furthermore, dozens of advertising studies
show that less than three percent of people purchase their
home as a result of calling on a classified ad. The few people
who do call on classified ads and don't obtain the information
on the first call (perhaps they get an answering machine or a
child) never bother to return the call.
I recommend that you use a 24-hour real
estate hotline dedicated specifically to your house, so that
buyers can obtain information on your house 24-hours a day.
When marketing your home, don't just think
that a classified ad will find the right buyer. It takes
effort and persistence, but effort and persistence usually do
pay off in the long run.
Deadly Mistake's #7: Not
Using A Written Purchase Agreement
Many sellers think their home is sold, only
to find out weeks or even months later that the buyer was not
able to obtain a home loan. Other sellers find out too late
that dozens of items such as surveys, title insurance
contingencies, assessments, tax prorations, pest inspections,
structural inspections, and a host of other details can come
back to haunt them if not properly addressed right at the very
beginning. It's not uncommon to see a buyer willing to
terminate a transaction only to have a seller cave in and
capitulate and absorb the expense of an item that
realistically should have been a buyer's expense to begin
with, had it been written into the purchase agreement.
I have several forms of purchase agreements
in my office, and would be happy to provide you with copies of
any or all of them. They're free just for the asking.
Deadly Mistake #8: Not
Obtaining Written Pre-Approval For A New Home Loan For Your
Next Home
Nothing is more heartbreaking than to sell
your home and find your new dream home, only to find out that
you can't obtain financing for the dream home.
A written pre-approval is a formal written
promise by a home lender to make you a new home loan. Do not
confuse a verbal pre-qualification with a formal written
pre-approval. Verbal pre-qualifications are just that –
verbal. They are not binding on the home lender. Many home
buyers have received verbal pre-qualifications, only to later
be denied a home loan and have their dream shattered.
I'd be more than happy to give you the name
of several highly competent, well-respected home lenders, who
may provide you with a formal, written pre-approval at no
charge, as a result of my recommendation. Please feel free to
give me a call for their names.
The above recommendations come from years of
experience in the real estate industry during buyers' markets,
sellers' markets, high interest rates and low interest rates.
In any economy, however, the listed recommendations apply in
all situations. Follow these guidelines and you will
substantially reduce the often stressful and sometimes
expensive mistakes made by hundred of home sellers in our area
each year.
|