If you have a home on the market or are thinking of putting your home on the market you want it to show in it's best light. One thing you want to emphasize, and sometimes with furniture placement make look larger, is the space in your home. An article I read today mentioned that the average home is getting smaller. People are starting to realize bigger is not necessarily better. With this transformation comes utilization of space. We still have furniture and belongings we need to have room for.
When a prospective buyer walks into your home one of the things they are doing mentally is measuring the home for their furniture. Will it all fit in this house? Is the living room large enough? Is the dining area going to accomadate their table and chairs? Are the bedrooms spacious enough?
As they ask themselves these questions and look aound your home; you want to ensure the home has that spacious feeling in it. Ideally you want little to no furniture in a house. But, everyone knows that is not reasonable. So, what do you do? De-clutter the house. The less things you have out the better.
For one it will make the rooms look larger than they are with all your things in there. It will also allow the buyer to envison their belongings in the room without any distractions. They also will not be tripping over things as they walk through the house. Imagine how it felt to walk through two identical homes. One had minimal furniture in it and he rooms looked large and spacious. The other had children's toys scattered throughout it and felt it was like walking through a maze in the house. Which one would you be more enticed to consider? Which one would you tend to forget?
The point is that in this market you need to do everything you can to help your home sell. Sometimes that includes putting things in the garage you do not use everyday or boxing and hiding things when you have a showing. You need to make sure your home is open and has the look of spaciousness when someone enters it.
Dave diCecco
Realtor/Broker
www.davedicecco.com
Friday, August 27, 2010
Thursday, August 26, 2010
Selling Your Home...De-perosnalize It
You have your home on the market to sell. The home is priced compettitvely for the area, it is clean inside and has great curb appeal. Potential buyers looking at your home has been good to great but you are getting no offers...Why?
Chances are your home is to personalized. When a buyer walks into your home they are aware someone is living there. What they do not know is who the person or family is. And they do not want to know. They want to be able to walk into a house and start to envison what the house will look like with their furniture in it. How they will lay out the home. They do not want to look at your family pictures and family portraits all over the place. They want to see clean walls with nothing or very limited things hanging on them.
If a buyer cannot envison their furniture, paintings, or family pictures in the house you are probably losing them as a possible buyer for your house. Today, I had a client who looked at three homes. All three homes were on a very short list of homes they were considering. We ended up with the ONE and only house that did not have ANY family pictures out in view and the walls were free of paintings and pictures. We walked out of there and they said "I can see myself living in there and where I would put everything I have. it all fits nicely in this house". They could not say the same thing about the other two homes we looked at.
I always tell my sellers to look at their home as if they were buying it for the first time. Would you want to see what the other family looked like ? Would you want to knwo their children? How would you be viewing the home? Would you even pay attention to the information that may be important or would you be too curious looking at all the photos and paintings and items hanging on the walls? Chances are you would leave the house and say it was nice...and then forget about it becuase all you woudl be remembering is the people who lived there.
So, selling your home...make sure it is de-personalized. You could lose a sale because it is not.
Dave diCecco
Realtor/Broker
www.davedicecco.com
Chances are your home is to personalized. When a buyer walks into your home they are aware someone is living there. What they do not know is who the person or family is. And they do not want to know. They want to be able to walk into a house and start to envison what the house will look like with their furniture in it. How they will lay out the home. They do not want to look at your family pictures and family portraits all over the place. They want to see clean walls with nothing or very limited things hanging on them.
If a buyer cannot envison their furniture, paintings, or family pictures in the house you are probably losing them as a possible buyer for your house. Today, I had a client who looked at three homes. All three homes were on a very short list of homes they were considering. We ended up with the ONE and only house that did not have ANY family pictures out in view and the walls were free of paintings and pictures. We walked out of there and they said "I can see myself living in there and where I would put everything I have. it all fits nicely in this house". They could not say the same thing about the other two homes we looked at.
I always tell my sellers to look at their home as if they were buying it for the first time. Would you want to see what the other family looked like ? Would you want to knwo their children? How would you be viewing the home? Would you even pay attention to the information that may be important or would you be too curious looking at all the photos and paintings and items hanging on the walls? Chances are you would leave the house and say it was nice...and then forget about it becuase all you woudl be remembering is the people who lived there.
So, selling your home...make sure it is de-personalized. You could lose a sale because it is not.
Dave diCecco
Realtor/Broker
www.davedicecco.com
Wednesday, August 25, 2010
Selling Your Home? Does Your Realtor Know The Market Area
I wrote a blog on this a few days ago. At that time I was more concnerned about Realtors who go out of their market area to sell homes. In essence; if you are not listing and selling in an area you do not know the area; you are not serving the best interests of your clients.
However; what about the friend of ours or relative we have in the business....You want to sell your home and feel obliged to list the home with them. You know they really do not know the area that well. But, it does not really matter they are only listing my home for sale. Well it may make a difference.
I had a few days ago a client looking for a home in an area and neighborhood I was very familiar with. I had sold a couple homes in there recently. The day we are going to look at a few homes in the neighborhood I checked the system and found a new listing come on the market. My eyes almost popped out of my head when I looked at the asking price. Found out it was not a error and advised my client to go and look at the house immediately. Needless to say 2 hours later we offered and had immediately accepted a full price offer on the home. Why? becasue the home was priced 28% LESS than everything else in the neighborhood that was comparable in year and style.
Doing a little research and talking with the listing agent after the offer had been accepted; she informed me that the sellers were her cousins and she listed the home for them out of a courtsey and really did not knwo that part of Charlotte at all. In fact, she had confided afterwards that she had three other calls for that property and they wanted to put an offer in. I told her the reason whay her home was getting so much activity in a short time. She said, I did not know.....
If your agent who is going to sell your home for you is not familiar with the area it could cost you money and time. Just as this agent under priced the house for the market; she could have easily gone in the opposite direction and over priced the home. Then the house would get no activity and not sell.
Dave diCecco
Realtor/Broker
www.davedicecco.com
However; what about the friend of ours or relative we have in the business....You want to sell your home and feel obliged to list the home with them. You know they really do not know the area that well. But, it does not really matter they are only listing my home for sale. Well it may make a difference.
I had a few days ago a client looking for a home in an area and neighborhood I was very familiar with. I had sold a couple homes in there recently. The day we are going to look at a few homes in the neighborhood I checked the system and found a new listing come on the market. My eyes almost popped out of my head when I looked at the asking price. Found out it was not a error and advised my client to go and look at the house immediately. Needless to say 2 hours later we offered and had immediately accepted a full price offer on the home. Why? becasue the home was priced 28% LESS than everything else in the neighborhood that was comparable in year and style.
Doing a little research and talking with the listing agent after the offer had been accepted; she informed me that the sellers were her cousins and she listed the home for them out of a courtsey and really did not knwo that part of Charlotte at all. In fact, she had confided afterwards that she had three other calls for that property and they wanted to put an offer in. I told her the reason whay her home was getting so much activity in a short time. She said, I did not know.....
If your agent who is going to sell your home for you is not familiar with the area it could cost you money and time. Just as this agent under priced the house for the market; she could have easily gone in the opposite direction and over priced the home. Then the house would get no activity and not sell.
Dave diCecco
Realtor/Broker
www.davedicecco.com
Monday, August 23, 2010
Does Your Realtor Know The Market Area?
For most people we tend to use an agent that was referred to us or soemone we know. But does the agent we are using know the market area you are looking for a home in? Generally speaking Realtors are comfortable in certain areas of town. They tend to know the areas well. They list homes there and they tend to sell homes in that area. When a good deal comes along they are quick to realize it. It is known as their market area.
So, you have a friend who is a Realtor and you want to look at a home in a market area they are not that familair with. Do you ask them to refer you to someone who does or do you let them help you out becuase we all have access to the same information? Generally they are going to help you out if you do not ask. But are they really helping you out? How do you know if the home they are showing you is a good deal, under priced for the area or over priced for the area? Without doing some extensive research they probably will not know.
For example, a fellow agent in my office knew I was very familiar with a certain area of Charlotte. He was not. He asked me to help him out and find homes that fit the criteria of what his buyers were looking for in a home. I gave him a list of neighborhoods and homes that fit the criteria of what they wanted in regards to amneties, schools, and type of home without even hesitating. But, more importantly, I was able to inform him of "material facts" of the area that he was not aware of. Those factors influenced the descsion for the buyers in regards to the home they eventually decided to make an offer on.
Yes, I can show you homes anywhere in Charlotte and the surrounding communities. However; am I doing you justice by not knowing of material facts of that area or neighborhoods that may influence your descsion to make an offer on a home or not? The answer to that is an easy NO. There is no excuse for not knowing material facts about an area; even if we do not market that area on a regular basis.
As a Realtor, we can be held liable for not informing our buyer of a material fact of a certain area that would affected them either purchasing the home or not purchasing the home. How can we tell them to make a reasonable offer if we do nto know the whole situation of the area? So, looking for a home; make sure your Realtor knows the area you are looking in...it can only benefit both of you.
Dave diCecco
Realtor/Broker
www.davedicecco.com
So, you have a friend who is a Realtor and you want to look at a home in a market area they are not that familair with. Do you ask them to refer you to someone who does or do you let them help you out becuase we all have access to the same information? Generally they are going to help you out if you do not ask. But are they really helping you out? How do you know if the home they are showing you is a good deal, under priced for the area or over priced for the area? Without doing some extensive research they probably will not know.
For example, a fellow agent in my office knew I was very familiar with a certain area of Charlotte. He was not. He asked me to help him out and find homes that fit the criteria of what his buyers were looking for in a home. I gave him a list of neighborhoods and homes that fit the criteria of what they wanted in regards to amneties, schools, and type of home without even hesitating. But, more importantly, I was able to inform him of "material facts" of the area that he was not aware of. Those factors influenced the descsion for the buyers in regards to the home they eventually decided to make an offer on.
Yes, I can show you homes anywhere in Charlotte and the surrounding communities. However; am I doing you justice by not knowing of material facts of that area or neighborhoods that may influence your descsion to make an offer on a home or not? The answer to that is an easy NO. There is no excuse for not knowing material facts about an area; even if we do not market that area on a regular basis.
As a Realtor, we can be held liable for not informing our buyer of a material fact of a certain area that would affected them either purchasing the home or not purchasing the home. How can we tell them to make a reasonable offer if we do nto know the whole situation of the area? So, looking for a home; make sure your Realtor knows the area you are looking in...it can only benefit both of you.
Dave diCecco
Realtor/Broker
www.davedicecco.com
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