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To order any of the following complimentary reports, just check the box to the left of the title and click "Send Me" at the bottom. You will then be prompted to enter your mailing information. Faye will send you the report(s) of your choice once she has received your request.

Special Reports for Home Sellers
29 Essential Tips That Get Homes Sold Fast (And for Top Dollar)

Selling your home? This information packed report offers tips, hints and insights to help you to a speedy and more profitable home sale.

Squeezing Every Last Dollar From Your Home Sale

In this report, learn vital tips and strategies that will help you maximize your return on investment when you sell your home. You'll be amazed at how some seemingly insignificant repairs or renovations can pay big dividends when you do sell your home.

How to Sell Your Home for the Highest Price Possible

This special report is a great supplement to the above reports and a great advantage for any serious home seller. Filled with valuable suggestions that are designed to help you sell for the highest price your property can bring. A critical must-read to maximize your profits from your home sale.

20 Questions You Absolutely Must Ask Your Next Agent Before You Sign on the Dotted Line

If your home did not sell, it could be for any number of reasons. One reason may be that you didn't hook up with the right agent for your needs. This report is specially designed to help you make sure that the next agent you select is the most qualified to meet your particular goals and needs.

29 Critical Questions to Ask a Realtor Before You List

The single most critical step is in selecting the real estate professional you will trust your precious investment to when you are ready to buy or sell your home. This report gives you all the important questions you must ask prospective agents. It can make all the difference.

Special Reports for Home Buyers
Home Buyers: How To Avoid Paying Too Much

First-time home buyer or seasoned pro, buying a house is an emotionally stressful and daunting process. This informative report gives you helpful tips on how to deal with this and avoid overpaying for your home.

A Critical Guide to Home Loans: Your Options & How They Affect Your Future

The world of real estate finance has become a world of increasingly complicated technical terms and 1001 creative ways to get potential homeowners into their new homes. What you don't know CAN hurt you. This report gives you a strong working knowledge of real estate finance. A must for prospective home buyers and sellers looking to refinance.

 



Top 10 Mistakes Sellers Make When Choosing a Realtor

Selling a home should be like any other business transaction, but all too often sellers make emotional or impulsive decisions that cost them money and time. Choosing the right Realtor to market a property and negotiate the sale is the most important step in the process.

My friend (or family member) sells real estate.

Friendship alone isn't enough to establish a professional's credentials. Use tough standards when selecting an agent, just as you would when hiring an attorney, a doctor, or an accountant to handle your taxes. A true friend will understand and appreciate that this is a business decision and will offer their credentials and expect to compete for the listing. Besides, if a problem or challenge develops while selling your home, do you want to risk damaging a friendship or family relationship?

Your presentation sounds good. I'll list right now

Look at more than one presentation and consider the advantages and disadvantages of each. Making an impulsive decision when caught up in the moment could be difficult to correct later. Since you normally contract to list your house with the agent for a specific period of time, you may find yourself unable to switch to another if you find yourself unhappy with the service you receive.

You're the only agent who agrees with my selling price.

Some agents tell you what you want to hear. In the real estate profession, this is known as buying a listing and is employed by shortsighted agents who are more interested in themselves than they are in you. However good it works as a short-term sales tactic in getting your listing, it is an extremely poor strategy in selling a home at the highest possible price.

You see, your house gets the most attention from other agents when it is a new listing. If priced properly, lots of agents will show it to their buyers. If you price it too high, no one will show the house and it will sit on the market for some time. When you finally drop your price to reflect its real value, your house is old news and buyers may think you are growing desperate. Therefore, the prices you are offered will come in lower and lower - and you may find yourself accepting a price that is below what you could have received had the house been priced properly to begin with.

Besides, pricing your home too high will only make similar houses for sale look that much better. Overpricing helps sell those houses, not yours.

I don't need references. I'm a good judge of character.

A snap judgement isn't good enough. You also need to determine if the agent is competent and the best way to do that is to check up on references. Ask for references on recent sales -- check up on references of recent customers. Find out how an agent's customers feel about their selling experience.

I'm going to list with the agent who has the lowest commission.

You get what you pay for. Paying a cut-rate commission will often get you a sign in the front yard and placement in the Multiple Listing Service, but little additional effort from your agent.

Realize that agents and real estate companies put up their own funds to market and advertise your home. Marketing and advertising costs money -- the lower the commission, the less incentive for an agent to put up his or her own money to market your home.

Incentive plays a very important role in sales. A full service agent earning a full commission will often drop everything to handle any challenges that come along - an agent earning a small commission does not have that same incentive.

Incentive is also important to the buyer's agent. Since there are almost always two agents involved in every sale, they split the commission according to the listing agent's instructions. One agent is your listing agent. The other agent is the buyer's agent. When your listing agent dropped his commission, did he also reduce the commission that will be paid to the buyers' agent? If so, you won't find as many agents willing to show your house - they'll be showing houses that offer a customary commission to the buyer's agent.

Finally, negotiating ability is an important skill in a listing agent. Are you willing to put your faith in an agent who can't even negotiate his or her own commission?

The agent is what counts - not the company.

Agents who work for large well-established companies with lots of agents do have some advantages. Large companies generally have longer office hours, so someone is always available to answer an ad call on your home. Large offices often have larger budgets and can spend more on advertising. The ad space for your particular home might not be huge, but because the total ad is so large it gets lots more attention.

Large real estate companies often have lots of agents. This is important because when your house is newly on the market, the company may stage an office preview where every agent in the office comes through and tours your home. Every agent who views your home and is impressed is another agent on your sales team.

Additionally, larger companies are often better at offering ongoing education to their agents. As a result, your agent may be better qualified and prepared to offer a quality service. Although most states require real estate agents to enroll in ongoing education to keep pace with changes in the real estate market, many agents only take the bare minimum in ongoing education courses. Sometimes, large offices are better at convincing their agents to go beyond the minimum.

There are exceptions to every rule, of course. Some very effective agents go off on their own and open private offices or boutique agencies.

All realtors passed the same test so they must know the same things.

The real estate profession is constantly changing and, as mentioned above, the best real estate professionals stay abreast of those changes by continuing their education. Some go beyond the required minimum requirements. Many agents acquire professional designations that show they took additional specialized courses.

This agent will hold an open house every week.

Open houses can and do sell homes, but usually not your home. Only a small fraction of the homes held open are sold as a direct result of the open house. More often, open houses are a way that real estate agents prospect for potential clients. If they develop a rapport with those visitors to your open house, they can find out about their housing needs and sell them the home that most closely matches those needs. Meanwhile, the person who eventually buys your home may be visiting someone else's open house.

Good agents know better than to pin all their selling efforts on an open house. They use their time in more effective marketing methods. The most effective marketing is not directly to the public, but to other agents. By getting other agents interested in your home, your listing agent multiplies your sales force beyond just one individual.

I want an agent who lives in my neighborhood.

Knowledge of the local market isn't only acquired by living in the immediate neighborhood. Sure, your agent should have intimate knowledge of recent sales, models, schools, businesses, and so on, but that is easily achieved through extensive research. Convenience shouldn't be the primary reason for choosing an agent.

This agent sold more homes last year than anyone else.

A realtor may tell you he/she is #1 in sales or listings but what they are not telling you is they are taking the production count of possibly 8-10 agents working under him/her. HIS PRODUCTION MAY BE NO MORE THAN THE AVERAGE AGENT. Ask how many agents are working under him/her and how often will I be talking with you.

That should only be the beginning. What is more valuable -- an agent who listed 32 homes and sold 25 or an agent who listed twelve homes and sold all twelve? So you need to ask some questions. How many of their listings did not sell? How many were reduced over and over before they sold? How long were the houses on the market? How smoothly was the process handled? How accessible was the agent when there were questions or problems?

Quantity is important, but only if all of the quality questions have been answered satisfactorily.

Conclusion

The best agent is the one who will do the most effective job of marketing the property, negotiating the most favorable terms and conditions, and communicating with the seller to make the process as smooth as possible.

By Faye Carlson, CRS



Faye Carlson | COLDWELL BANKER Residential Brokerage
Office: 510.608.7630
3340 Walnut Avenue, Suite #110 • Fremont, CA  94538
homes@fayecarlson.com


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