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7 Deadly Pitfalls When You Sell Your
Own Home Yourself And How To Avoid Them!
- Deadly
Pitfall No. 1 - There are tons of horror stories out there
among homeowners who have tried to sell their own home only to
have a buyer tie up their home for 3 to 6 months trying to get
financing. Because of anxiousness to sell, homeowners fail to
find out ahead of time, before any contracts are signed, whether
the buyers have made arrangements for a loan or whether they have
even talked to a lender at all. 85% of buyers in the market to
buy a home today do not know how much they can afford, according
to lender guidelines for home loans. It is very disheartening
(sometimes sickening) when a homeowner finds out the buyer cannot
get a loan to complete the sale. Even though you may feel uncomfortable
doing so, you must be firm in getting information out of buyers,
as to their ability to get a loan. Do not tie up your home in
a contract until the buyer has brought you a letter from their
lender stating they are pre-approved, not pre-qualified. There
is a difference. Pre-approved means the buyer has been approved
for a loan by the underwriter (the person who says yes or no)
and the is money waiting for them once the house is approved.
Pre-qualification is the loan officer's opinion as to whether
the buyer qualifies for a loan. The loan officer does not make
the loan decisions. They only take the buyers' information and
pass it on. The underwriter is the one who says yes or no. Taking
this advice could keep from costing you months of headaches, bunches
of time and money, and the turning away other buyers who may be
much more qualified to buy your home.
- Deadly
Pitfall No. 2 - Watch out for the bargain hunters. Owners,
who try to sell their own home, are prime targets of bargain hunters
who will try to high-pressure you into taking offers far below
market value. In other words, they want to steal your home. They
are, normally, excellent buyers who either pay cash for your home
or have large down payments. Do not let the dollar $$ signs intimidate
you. Stick to your guns.
- Deadly
Pitfall No. 3 - Make sure you do mega-tons of market research
before you price your home. Try to find a minimum of 3 homes similar
to yours that have sold in the past 6 months. Also, try to find
at least 3 homes that are currently for sale that are similar
to yours. These homes are your competition. If the other homes
offer more for the money, your home will sell your competition.
Pricing your home in the fair market range is critical to your
success. Many homeowners get greedy and grossly over price their
homes. This destroys the marketability of a home. Do not rely
on rumors or what your neighbor said. Verify every sales price
at the County Assessor's Office. You can go online to search the
address of the property you want a sold price on or you can call
them (number on their website). They are very good at helping
you find what you want. This will let you know if the neighbor
is being truthful or if they are stretching it (It is amazing
the number of homes in a neighborhood that have sold for less
than the neighbor said). At the other end of the spectrum, some
homeowners price their homes too low. They fail to get the fair
price they are entitled to. The asking price should be at the
upper end of the fair market value range with the homeowner expecting
to get a price that is in the mid-range area of the fair market
value range. Paying for a professional appraisal will help immensely!
Then you have something to show potential buyers the value of
your home.
- Deadly
Pitfall No. 4 -Watch out for the stalkers. These are dishonest
people who come through your home to see what they can come back
to steal at a later time, when you are not home. They will appear
to be very legitimate buyers. Always ask to see the potential
buyers' driver licenses. If they refuse, do not let them into
your home. Explain the reason you want to see their driver licenses.
If they are legitimate buyers, they will be more than happy to
show you them. Write their names and drivers license numbers down.
This could mean the difference of being safe or being robbed.
Be firm in this step. Do not be a wimp. It could cost you!
- Deadly
Pitfall No. 5 - Be prepared for the buyers, who make you an
offer, to knock off an amount equal to a real estate commission.
This will come right off the top before they start to negotiate
with you. Buyers who look at homes for sale by the owner know
the seller is trying to save the real estate commission. Decide
how you intend to handle this problem ahead of time. A home is
worth only so much, regardless of who sells it!
- Deadly
Pitfall No. 6 - Be prepared for phone calls late at night
and very early in the morning. Potential buyers are only concerned
about one thing; their own needs. They will try to pressure you
into showings at times that are convenient for them, but may be
very inconvenient for you. Don't be so anxious that you let them
control you. Be friendly and kind, but be firm. If they are really
interested in looking at your home, they will be accommodating.
Experience has shown that the high pressure, pushy buyers are
the ones that are the time wasters.
- Deadly
Pitfall No. 7 - Do not fall into the trap of trying to copy
what the traditional real estate companies do in marketing your
home. Do not spend the money, you are trying to save, on display
ads placed among the traditional real estate companies' ads. Studies
have shown that owners who sell their own home and place ads in
the classified section under "homes for sale" will get
five times more calls than those who run ads in the display section
(including traditional real estate companies). Be creative in
your marketing. Look to other industries, which use good marketing,
to pattern your marketing after. Don't be afraid to be different.
Advertising only sells 5% of the homes advertised (statistically
proven by the National Association of Realtors). Statistically,
only 1% of Realtor open houses sell. Why would you want to have
your home open for 3 hours on a Sunday afternoon, only to have
potential buyers come straggling through and never buy. If you
want to hold an open house, hold it open for only a fifteen-minute
period of time. Place signs in strategic places. Flood the neighborhood,
apartment complexes, laundermats, grocery store bulletin boards,
and a bulletin board at work with flyers stating this is the only
time you will hold your home open. Everyone must be on time. State
that no showings will be held prior to this time. If someone wants
to look at your home prior to this time, be firm in telling them
the date and time set is the first time they can look at your
home. This open strategy creates the auction affect when a group
of people shows up. Have written hand outs to give them on price,
features, and other information. Let everyone in attendance know
the date when you will be looking at all offers. Make this date
3 days after the open house. This gives legitimate buyers time
to get other opinions and inspections, if they desire. All of
this creates, in the mind of those in attendance, scarcity (We'd
better move on this one before someone else beats us to it), social
proof the house must be a great value, and the urgency to make
a decision... just like an auction. The mindset is this must be
a great home, if there are so many others looking. This is creative
marketing.
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