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Bunch of years back was looking for new houses.
Quickly learned to ignore FSBO's for several reasons. Number 1 reason is most of the sellers were annoying. Far too emotionally attached to the house. Follow you around pointing out things that matter to them when you are thinking to yourself "that's the first thing I'm ripping out". Had one guy spend 5 minutes on the merits of light switches at both ends of a long hallway. A lot of them were cheapskates, houses needed updating/repair/maintenance and that was the visible stuff. They are going FSBO to keep the commission and don't want to negotiate on anything and were usually overpriced. As far as brokers, some suck, some don't. Some don't deserve a dime and some earn every penny. Trick is to find the good ones. Selling the last house we were originally going to go with broker #1. She was a train wreck, suit always wrinkled and disheveled like she'd been at the bar all night and slept it off in her car then came straight to the listing. But she could sell houses. We tried to negotiate her commission and she said no way, in fact with the way things were going in the market she was just about to raise her rate. We said no to her. She listed and sold the closest comp to ours (in a less desirable location) in two weeks for asking price. We went with another broker that my wife knew who did cut her rate but did not do **** for 6 months other than bug us to drop the price. Then Katie, broker #3 knocked on my door. Opened the door to tell her to get lost and she said, "I have a question, why have you not sold this house yet and why are you selling it so cheap?" Katie raised the asking price by $50k, marketed the **** out of it, pictures, videos, catered open houses for other brokers, brought more people the first weekend than the last broker brought the whole 6 months. She literally "stole" a buyer from an open house around the corner and we had our first offer. That buyer turned out to be a nightmare and we cancelled his deal. The next day she brought us another buyer and we sold to him for $10k more than the previous guy. She earned every penny and then some. |
In my area there is a FSBO listing service that will get you on the FMLS for about $800 and a commission of .5%. I'm thinking of trying it out as almost ready to sell and I tend to price things to get them sold quickly with minimal haggling.
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used home salesmen are very like used car salesmen best avoided by sellers and buyers
but they have a closed shop much like unions with their MLS scam AND WILL NOT DO BIZ WITH AN OWNER SALE I fsboed my first house with constant agents falsely claiming to have buyers I said fine you get the standard 3% split for being the buyers agent NOT ONE EVER BROUGHT A BUYER TO LOOK THEY ALL WANT AN EXCLUSIVE LISTING FOR MONTHS [3-6] NO WAY i WOULD DO THAT |
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Ahwatukee home swap? Are you looking to downsize? We need more space! I did sell our house in Atlanta. I put out a sign, had a couple of open house days, and it was gone. The closing price was the highest any house in our neighborhood had ever sold for at the time. Our problem is timing. Our house is at the lower end of the price spectrum for our part of town. Agents I've talked to say if priced reasonably, it will be sold in a matter of days. There are few single level, 3 car garage, hillside lots under $400K. Hillside lots were usually reserved for larger, more expensive homes. We have to find our new house before we can put ours on the market. Then, once we do, we'll want ours to sell quickly. May look into HelpUSell or a similar company. |
I have done FSBO, 2% transaction, 6% transaction. The FSBO was a annoying because the market was tight and two buyers fell out in the 11th hr prolonging the process 6 months. We did eventually get our price and get it done.
The $2% deal I brought the buyer and our RE handled the paperwork and closed the deal. The market was hot and the transaction was easy. Our last sale was in 2005 when the market was just stoopid with crazy offers coming out of the woodwork. We paid a full service 6% realtor and got our money's worth by getting the deal done at full pop price. The buyers got a shady loan and lost the house 2 years later. How much of the preparation, showing, closing, hand holding, and paperwork you are willing to do determines your need for a realtor. |
We sold all three of our previous houses ourselves, BUT:
1. All three were turn of the century homes, so a niche market. 2. I knew what the houses would appraise for. 3. I had in my possession a good real estate contract. 4. We live in a smaller town where a good newspaper ad gets noticed. If you live is a city where the real estate market is heating up, or you fit into a niche like our houses, give it a try. But nothing is harder to sell than a house that has been on the market a while and is perceived as "stale." |
Sold our house in Colorado (Lakewood) ourselves. We had a sign made up that looked like a higher end realtor sign; made up flyers and kept them stocked in the box; hosted open houses on Sundays.... We sold it in three weeks to a real-estate broker for their personal house. It was a good time to sell but we did our homework and worked it like a job...saved 24k.
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houses on my end of my street are often sold privately to friends - the key is to buy a house with a high level of amenities that will attract buyers, then you don't need to worry about comprehensive listings
BUT... it can be risky to sell it yourself - if someone asks you a question and you fail to tell the truth there could be trouble; OTOH a 3rd party can say "I don't know" - this works for anything not required to be disclosed I agree that the RE biz is full of lobbyists and a nasty bastion of monopolistic power as per a couple of the above posts |
I'm sorry to hear that several of you have a distaste. For sales people. I believe that just like in any trade there's good ones and bad. I interviewed over twenty when it was time to sell my old house and buy my new one. One agent under valued my house $100k another 80k on a 700k house
Please don't paint us all with the same brush. I've worked hard in sales all of my life and there's only 2 big sales that I was paid well on that I was spoon fed. I've stopped several customers from walking away from a company. |
Just like any sale, there will be a lot a scavengers out there looking for a quick buck.
You have to get rid of the emotion, and present it every single time like it will be gone tomorow. You have to know your legal RE proceedures by heart. Take a class or three at night, memorize the redbook, and have good title companies and financing references lined up. You now have 3 more careers. You have to be able to hustle at a moments notice, present a good personal image even if your exhausted, and be prepared for paying months of taxes on an empty home which still needs maintenance. You must have to know your local market and your competition: Search the web weekly and look at trends in recent sales (asking vs. close) and current comparitables(comps). How is your property different, or better, or worse? Price accordingly. Good Realtors can sell s***-on-a-stick for top dollar if the market is right. I know. My parents rebuilt house on a lake went to a doctor couple who wanted a $700K(cough) summer cottage for their new family. It still had i$$ues, but the presentation was excellent and there were attractive features to the area for the long run. Remember this: Many people sign for a 30-year financial obligation on emotion alone. They want the feeling of 'being in charge'. Of 'being home'. They are tired of driving around, but exited and anxious to claim something for their own. They are willing to overlook blemishes if the feeling is right. You make that happen. Because you have the solutions available and are fully prepared. You can list on the MLS for $400: Flat Fee MLS Listing - For Sale By Owner - Save Thousands | Owners.com If willing to go through all that, then all power to you. |
One question about agents avoiding showing a discounted listing.
Don't most buyers now either have direct access to the MLS or receive an e-mail feed that shows homes from the MLS? How would an agent keep a house with a lower commission from appearing on a buyer's feed of MLS data? |
Realtor companies use special instantaneous software with extensive background data: realtors mls software - Google Search
Not sure what the major names are, but I'll gander the bargins are snatched up minutes after hitting a hot market. |
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Like anything else I think their willingness to show a house / accept a lower commission is relative to how much time they have invested in the client. |
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i have friends who are realtors, but the system is set up as a monopoly |
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A Savvy buyer will seek out other avenues to search rather than solely relying on an agent's MLS emails. However, a large percentage of buyers will only see what an agent puts in front of them. The flip side to that coin is that a good agent can sometimes put properties in front of them that aren't (readily) available to the general public like pocket or exclusive listings, etc. |
I recently purchased my house (closed on the 31st) FSBO, but I had been renting it for 18 months and knew I wanted to stay in the same area, and was able to get the house for $30K less than it appraised for, and $50K less than the exact same house sold for one street over. Since it has been a rental it needs a little TLC.....
Since the owner was not in Colorado, I drove the entire process. I ended up retaining a Real Estate Attorny and the whol process was pretty painless. I do not have a problem with realators and would not hesitate to use one if the situation warranted it. Bill |
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