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Diane Beekler
RE/MAX on the
River
50 Water
Street,
The Tannery Mill #3
Newburyport, MA 01950
(978) 499-8808
– office
(978)
992-4028 – VM
(978) 992-4028
– fax







Luxury Home Search








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Seven Common Mistakes Sellers Make
1. Pricing
Incorrectly.
Every seller wants to realize as much money as
possible when he sells his home. But a listing price that is too high often
gets the seller less than a price that is at market value. If your house is not
priced competitively, people looking in your price range will reject your home
in favor of other, larger homes for the same price. At the same time, the
people who should be looking at your home will not see it because it is priced
over their heads! Overpricing usually increases time on the market, and that
adds to the carrying costs. Ultimately, many overpriced properties sell below
market value.
To help avoid this, we can prepare an extensive
Market Evaluation of your home.
2.
Failing to ´´Show Case´´ the home.
Buyers
look for homes, not houses, and they buy the home in which they would like to
live. This is why we stage our listings. We assess a home starting right at
the front door and recommend the necessary changes needed to get you top
dollar!
3. Using
the ´´Hard Sell´´ during showings.
Buying a
house is an emotional decision. People like to ´´try on´´ a house and see if it
is comfortable for them. It´s difficult for them to do that if you follow them
around pointing out every improvement that you made. It may even have the
opposite effect you want, by making them feel they are intruding on your private
space. Resist the temptation to talk the entire time a buyer is there, and let
them discover things on their own. Try a tasteful sign to point out some hidden
amenity that they might miss.
4.
Mistaking lookers for buyers.
For Sale by
Owners
always get more activity than homes with an agent. No questions about it.
Realtors will only bring qualified buyers, and these will be fewer than if you
open your front door to every one who walks down the street. A qualified buyer
is one who is ready, willing, and able to buy your home. We find that most
people who go looking at For sale By Owners are just starting to think
about moving. They may be good buyers, but they’re just 6-9 months away from
being ready. They don’t want to bother an agent yet, so they call the ´´By
Owner´´ ads to get a feel for what’s available. They may have a home to sell
first, or may need to save some more, or may have credit that needs fixing.
When everything is in place, that’s when they go out looking with a Realtor. An
agent will ask a buyer how much he can really spend for a house, how much he has
to put down, how good his credit is, how much he can pay each month, how much he
will realize (realistically) when he sells his present home and about a dozen
other questions. But unless your Realtor finds all the facts first, you must
ask all these questions before the buyer crosses your threshold, otherwise, you
may have a parade of Sunday afternoon shoppers with a dream of owning a home
someday.
5. Not
knowing your rights and obligations.
Selling
Real estate is extensive and complex; the contract for sale and purchase is a
legally binding document. An improperly written contract can cause the sale to
fall through, or could cost you thousands for repairs, inspections, and remedies
for title defects. You must know whether the property can legally be sold ´´as
is´´, and how deed restrictions and local zoning will affect the transaction.
If there are defects in your title, or if your property is in conflict with
local restrictions, you must remedy them before you can sell your home.
6. Limiting
the marketing and exposure of the property.
The two most obvious
marketing tools (open houses and classified ads) are only moderately effective.
Surprisingly, less than 1% of homes are sold at an open house. Agents use them
to attract future clients, not to sell the house!
Advertising
studies show that less than 3% of people purchased their home because they
called on an ad. And if a machine answers, most callers just hang up without
leaving a message. The right Realtor will employ a broad spectrum of marketing
activities, emphasizing the ones he believes will work best for you and your
particular property. There are dozens of more effective ways to find buyers
than just open houses and advertising.
7.
Choosing the wrong Realtor, or choosing him/or her for the wrong reasons.
It’s
likely that you don’t interview people very often. And yet in order to find the
Realtor who is right for you, you may interview several. The quality of your
home selling experience is dependent upon your skill at selecting the person
best qualified.
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