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Steps to Getting Your Home Sold
Selling your home is one of the most important steps in your life.
This 9 step system will give you the tools you need to maximize
your profits, maintain control, and reduce the stress that comes
with the home selling process:
1. Know
why you're selling, and keep it to yourself.
The reasons behind your decision to sell affect everything from
setting a price to deciding how much time and money to invest in
getting your home ready for sale. What's more important to you:
the money you walk away with, or the length of time your property
is on the market? Different goals will dictate different strategies.
However, don't reveal your motivation
to anyone else or they may use it against you at the negotiating
table. When asked, simply say that your housing needs have changed.
2. Do
your homework before setting a price.
Settling on an offering price shouldn't be done lightly. Once you've
set your price, you've told buyers the absolute maximum they have
to pay for your home, but pricing too high is as dangerous as pricing
too low. Remember that the average buyer is looking at 15-20 homes
at the same time they are considering yours. This means that they
have a basis of comparison, and if your home doesn't compare favorably
with others in the price range you've set, you won't be taken seriously
by prospects or agents. As a result, your home will sit on the market
for a long time and, knowing this, new buyers on the market will
think there must be something wrong with your home.
3. Do
your homework.
Find out what homes in your own and similar neighborhoods have sold
for in the past 6-12 months, and research what current homes are
listed for. That's certainly how prospective buyers will assess
the worth of your home.
4. Find
a good real estate agent to represent your needs.
Nearly three-quarters of homeowners claim that they wouldn't use
the same realtor who sold their last home. Dissatisfaction boils
down to poor communication which results in not enough feedback,
lower pricing and strained relations. "10 Questions to Ask
Before You Hire an Agent" gives you the straight, to-the-point
questions you should be asking when you interview agents who want
to list your home.
5. Maximize
your home's sales potential.
Each year, corporate North America
spends billions on product and packaging design. Appearance is critical,
and it would be foolish to ignore this when selling your home.
You may not be able to change your
home's location or floor plan, but you can do a lot to improve its
appearance. The look and feel of your home generates a greater emotional
response than any other factor. Clean like you've never cleaned
before. Pick up, straighten, unclutter, scrub, scour and dust. Fix
everything, no matter how insignificant it may appear. Present your
home to get a "wow" response from prospective buyers.
Allow the buyers to imagine themselves
living in your home. The decision to buy a home is based on emotion,
not logic. Prospective buyers want to try on your home just like
they would a new suit of clothes. If you follow them around pointing
out improvements or if your decor is so different that it's difficult
for a buyer to strip it away in his or her mind, you make it difficult
for them to feel comfortable enough to imagine themselves an owner.
6. Make it
easy for prospects to get information on your home.
You may be surprised to know that some marketing tools that most
agents use to sell homes (e.g. traditional open houses) are actually
not very effective. In fact only 1% of homes are sold at an open
house.
Furthermore, the prospects calling
for information on your home probably value their time as much as
you do. The last thing they want to be subjected to is either a
game of telephone tag with an agent, or an unwanted sales pitch.
Make sure the ads your agent places for your home are attached to
a 24 hour prerecorded hotline with a specific ID# for your home
which gives buyers access to detailed information about your property
day or night 7 days a week without having to talk to anyone. It's
been proven that 3 times as many buyers call for information on
your home under this system. And remember, the more buyers you have
competing for your home the better, because it sets up an auction-like
atmosphere that puts you in the driver's seat.
7. Know
your buyer.
In the negotiation process, your objective is to control the pace
and set the duration. What is your buyer's motivation? Does s/he
need to move quickly? Does s/he have enough money to pay you your
asking price? Knowing this information gives you the upper hand
in the negotiation because you know how far you can push to get
what you want.
8. Make
sure the contract is complete.
For your part as a seller, make sure you disclose everything. Smart
sellers proactively go above and beyond the laws to disclose all
known defects to their buyers in writing. If the buyer knows about
a problem, s/he can't come back with a lawsuit later on.
Make sure all terms, costs and responsibilities
are spelled out in the contract of sale, and resist the temptation
to diverge from the contract. For example, if the buyer requests
a move-in prior to closing, just say no. Now is not the time to
take any chances of the deal falling through.
9. Don't
move out before you sell.
Studies have shown that it is more difficult to sell a home that
is vacant because it looks forlorn, forgotten, simply not appealing.
It could even cost you thousands. If you move, you're also telling
buyers that you have a new home and are probably highly motivated
to sell fast. This, of course, will give them the advantage at the
negotiating table.
For more information about any of
our innovative homeowners programs, give Ana a call.
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