Relocate With Jen: April 2009

Check Your "Gut Feeling"

Do you really know your Buyer or Seller?  With these ever changing economic times be ready to change your game plan.    Everyone has been taught "Don't  judge a book by its cover". Is you previous experience hurting you? Are you too set in you ways or assumptions?

 Susan Boyle is the perfect example. Simon & the other Judges of British talent show thought they had her pegged the moment she walked on stage-- The truth is blew them away. I am sure Susan will be a success in some area of the music industry, despite the first impression.

Personal assumptions  may cause  a negative feeling about a buyer/seller - when the truth was the exact opposite.  Be careful not to act on your first impression you may alienate a potential new client.

Persons you may have think "won't qualify" may turn out to be financially stable.  The "nervous buyer" may purchase the first home you show.  A Seller may appear to be rich & sucessful but is truly upside down.  Be ready for anything and retrain your "gut feelings" about today's buyers & sellers!!

Talk To Me-- Have you had a Buyer or Seller blow you away???  Post it -- We all could learn from it!!!

 

 

 

 

 

 

Jennifer Marks

3 commentsJennifer Marks • April 28 2009 09:04AM

A Battle Field of Foreclosures

What if the foreclosure rate in a neighborhood is so high that it has become the NORM?

What if your home is the only home left standing on a battle field of foreclosures?  You cannot protect yourself from being compared to a foreclosure.  Even if you price your home reasonably you run the risk of not appraising.

The problem happened to me (my client) -- The neighborhood had no non-foreclosure sales to use as comparables-I went about  2 miles outside the neighborhood to find similar homes and was only able to find a couple non-foreclosure sales to make an accurate comparison . But the fact that the sales in the neighborhood in the last 8 months were either foreclosures or short sales became relevant in my presentation.  The client was surprised by this information but understood because he had noticed neighbors moving out suddenly and knew some had lost jobs.

Typically, when pricing a home I would not include distressed properties.   A distress property's sale price and/or terms are usually not a true example of the current market.  The home may be physically similar -- same square footage, style, quality of construction and features but was priced to be "given away".  The purpose of selling a distress property is so significantly different it makes it no longer comparable to an average seller.  

A seller needs to be informed of what is happening in the local or national market - good or bad!!  No one likes to be the bearer of bad news but I would not be doing my job if I left out this or any other important real estate information.  

For those sellers living in areas hit even worse by the housing decline, pricing your home may feel like a guessing game.  One foreclosure or short sale can greatly depreciate the overall value of a neighborhood. If you are in a sea of vacant foreclosures, auctions or short sales it becomes a FACT.

 If people can no longer afford an area they move and prices fall to attract new buyers. This is true in all business.  If your favorite shop started charging $10 for a cup of coffee - you would either afford it or stop shopping there. The shop owner would eventually reduce his prices to attract new customers- or go out of business (i.e. foreclosure)

 So many misguided buyers flock to short sales & foreclosures like the Clearance Rack at Macy's.  It is so easy to forget that sometimes no one bought it because it was overpriced in the first place or not very well made. If a seller/investor/builder is going into foreclosure they have NO MONEY to make basic repairs - corners are being cut.  In some cases the property has been abandoned for months before the bank forecloses.  -- Appliances are sold off, HVAC are stolen or sold.  Even the nicest neighborhoods can have "squatters".  Light fixtures may have been replaced with cheaper ones and make have been improperly installed.  The hot water tank could have burn out or ruptured when the water was cut off.    Distress properties are discounted for a reason - If the bank could get full price they would!!!

Just because you think your home is Godiva Chocolate doesn't mean it's not a Hershey Bar.  Sell and market your home for what it is so that you don't disappoint the buyers that see it.  Take into consideration all the factors occurring in your neighborhood. 

A year ago an agent had suggested pricing my client's home about $35,000 higher than my suggested price.  To better learn the market, we went to preview the one other home for sale in the neighborhood.   He felt his neighbor's home was overpriced.  My client was not willing to pay that much for a slightly larger home in his own neighborhood.

Jennifer Marks

3 commentsJennifer Marks • April 20 2009 02:40PM

Awesome N. Raleigh Short Sale- 3/2 Ranch only $115,900 Call Today at 919-387-4100

Sheri Moritz | Real Living Partners Triangle | 919-520-7205
2433 Pepperfield Dr., Raleigh, NC
Awesome N. Raleigh short sale opportunity for a detached home w/3 bedrooms!
3BR/2BA Single Family House
offered at $115,900
Year Built 1995
Sq Footage 1,121
Bedrooms 3
Bathrooms 2 full, 0 partial
Floors 1
Parking None
Lot Size .12 acres
HOA/Maint $25 per month

DESCRIPTION

3 bedroom 2 full bath ranch just minutes from 440, downtown Raleigh and I-40. Bright open all white kitchen. Vaulted living room with cozy fireplace. Bring all offers. For a private showing please call 919-387-4100

see additional photos below
PROPERTY FEATURES

Central A/C Central heat Living room
Dining room Dishwasher Stove/Oven
Balcony, Deck, or Patio Yard

OTHER SPECIAL FEATURES

Short Sale! Investors Welcome!

ADDITIONAL PHOTOS


Great 3 bedroom Ranch

Corner Lot

Side View of Home

All White Kitchen

Vaulted Living w/cozy FP
Contact info:
Sheri Moritz
Real Living Partners Triangle
919-520-7205
For sale by agent/broker

powered by postlets Equal Opportunity Housing
Posted: Apr 13, 2009, 9:58am PDT
1 commentSheri Moritz • April 13 2009 01:13PM

10 Ways Real Estate Professionals Can Use Zillow v2.0

This site really is great! Not just among Realtor or Agents --  Walking thru the grocery store or sitting in a restaurant I keep over hearing talk about using this site!! Its easy to use with tons of info -- the only negative is some of the information is dated!!!

Via Sara Bonert {Real Estate Internet Marketing} (Zillow):

Awhile ago I wrote a post citing 10 things you could do on Zillow.  Not only has our traffic ballooned to 8 million monthly users since then, the opportunities to interact with audience have gotten richer as well.  So here is an updated version 2.0 of this list, written to help you best use the site to gain incremental business along with highlighting some cool tools available on Zillow.

1)  Create a free profile - Participating on Zillow all begins with the creation of a profile, which links to everything you do on the site.  To get started, click "Register" in the upper right hand corner  and walk thru the steps.  If your Brokerage or a syndication site is feeding listings on your behalf, be sure to register using the same email address as they have on record for you.  We use the email address to match listings to profiles.  Be sure to include: your photo, all contact information, marketing text with unlimited links back into your website, geographic areas you work, and professional areas of specialization.  For more detailed information on creating a profile, visit this tutorial, How To Build A Free Profile On Zillow.

2) Professional Directory - Once you have a profile, you are automatically in the Directory.   This is why is it important to write marketing text with rich keywords, and to include you geographic and professional areas of specialization.  These are keywords that consumers can search by when looking for a real estate professional.

3) Zillow Advice - This is an interactive forum where anyone can ask and answer a questions and is a great place to soft sell yourself leveraging your expertise.  Your responses will be posted to the site, along with a link back to your profile.  You are free to browse all the topics and discussions constantly be added to the site.  But to work the most efficiently you can subscribe to be alerted via email whenever a question  about a topic or geographic area you designated in added.  Simply go to Zillow Advice, type in a topic such as "short sales" or "Chicago".  At the top of the search results, click the link "Get Email Alerts".  Please visit this tutorial if you would like more information on setting alerts

• Tip - This is a bad answer: "Now is a great time to buy, call me and I'll tell you why".  Not only will people totally overlook your answer, but responding this way may actually backfire causing people to  say negative things about such an uninformative, hard sell.  This is a better answer "In Wicker Park we are seeing annualized returns of 3%, however compare this to a 10 year return of 19%.  But each street in Wicker Park is different.  If you let me know what street you are on, I can customize this information even further to show you returns people have experienced on your particular street.  The hard sell is dead with social media.

4) Post Listings - If you just have a few listings, you can submit listings to the site for free manually.  The easiest way to do this is to search for the address, then click "Tell Us Its For Sale" in the left hand column.  If you have over 200 listings, you may want to consider setting up an XML feed, find out more about how to do this at www.ZillowFeeds.com.  Also, we work with a number of listing syndication services, so if you are using sites like Postlets, Vflyer, Listhub or Point2, your listings are appearing on Zillow.  On each listings you can have up to 50 photos, so if the service you are using doesn't send that many photos, you can log on to the site and add them.

5)  Widgets - Want to make your site content richer with spending a dime, then add a widget!  You don't need programming knowledge to do this.  Simply visit this page, click on the widget you'd like install, scroll to the bottom of the page to copy the code, and paste it into the appropiate area of your site.  (good tutorial on how to add widgets on Active Rain).  Some of own most popular widgets are: Mortgage Rates, Payment Calculators, and Local Home Value Trends.  See the side of this blog for examples of what these look like. 

6) Local Home Value Reports - Zillow has about 80 million homes on the site, of which we are constantly monitoring the valuation trends.  Each quarter we aggregate all this data to provide national, metro, and very local trend reports for approximately 160 metropolian areas in the US.  One on the things that make these reports unique is that we are using data from ALL homes on the site, not just the ones that are on the market or have recently sold.  If you are into data methodology, here is a post about how the methodlogy of these reports compare to Case Schiller or OFHEO.  On these reports we track how homes in the country performed, down to how homes performed in a particular ZIP- with a 3 month, 1 year, 5 year, and 10 year perspective. 

7) Zillow Mortgage Marketplace - As Real Estate Agents, this area won't help you sell houses, but it may help move the transaction along.  If you are a Lender, sign up for this incredible lead source that is earing Lenders business daily  How Zillow's mortgage is different - A finanace shopper goes online and fills out information about their situation (loan product desired, credit and financial info), with the exception that they don't provide their name or contact information.  Then registered Lenders give customized quotes.  The consumer then comes back to Zillow, reviews the quotes, and is in the driver's seat as to who they would like to contact for further information.  Zillow also aggregates all the quotes that are consistantly being made, creating real time charts of the type of rates people are actually being quoted. 

8)  Featured Lisitngs - There is so much you can do for free on Zillow, then how do we make money?  By offering those who want to stand out of the site even more, the chance to buy advertising.  Think about the last time you did a search on Google, you probably clicked on something on the first page (verses the page 3 or 4).  Promote your listings to the first page of Zillow search results by Featuring them.  Featured listings typically receive about 500x more traffic than regular listings.  The cost runs about $10/month/listing.  To find out more, call (866) 324-4005.

9) Showcase Ads - These are ZIP code targeted ads, in which you can promote yourself or your listings, editable at any time throughout the month.  There are two ads on each page in the right hand column.  Within these two spaces, you can purchase 25, 50, 75, or 100% of the inventory of available impressions - depending on your budget.  Cost varies by the amount of traffic available in your ZIP code.  You can create your ad and find out the cost by visiting this Advertisers section of the site.  These ads link where ever you dictate. 

• Tip - While advertising yourself can have branding effects, typically ads of listings experience better click thru rates - or direct more traffic to your site.  Use strong Calls To Action on the ads.  For example: Open House this weekend, Just Listed, Foreclosure Situation, Builder Incentives, Recently Price Reduced, Live In "hot neighborhood".  Then change the ads out as the situation warrants.  We are seeing that the more information you include in the ad (price, neighborhood, beds, baths) the BETTER the click thru rate.  Also, this is obvious, but make sure you use a GREAT picture. 

10) Accuracy Chart - Ever hear the question from buyers and sellers, "But Zillow said.."?  Using the Accuracy Chart posted online, specific to each County in the US, you'll be able to answer this question by saying "Zillow also says they have an err rate of X% in our County, and are within 5% of a home's sale price x% of the time, 10% of the time they are within X%, and 20% of the time they are within X%.  This is a great tool to use, along with the customization information that you prepare for your clients.  For more information on the topic of Zestimates, please visit this post "How Accurate Are Zillow Zestimates?". 

You can find links to all these things, plus more, at www.ZillowPros.com.  

Jennifer Marks

0 commentsJennifer Marks • April 12 2009 10:27AM

Why I Will NOT Be Putting My Money Where My Mouth Is!

Read this -- Evalute your situation!! Now is a great time to buy -- but if you are already in a great situation -- simply sit back and relax!!! Jenn

Via SarahGray Lamm ~REALTOR Broker~ 60K Hours of NC Real Estate Experience~ (Allen Tate Realtors Chapel Hill, NC):

Just a little Point-CounterPoint to round out a Tuesday night...Ken Tracy, a fellow Realtor from Naperville, IL, just offered up a post about why he is moving forward with buying a new home for his family. Go For It Ken! (Just so nobody thinks I would actually try to talk him OUT of it!) But much as I envy him the excitement and the opportunity, I will NOT be availing myself of a similar one. Not that I didn't think about it...oh, I did...long and hard....the first time interest rates dipped to 4.5%.

Seriously, how could a REAL ESTATE AGENT not think about it!?  I mean all we do ALL day long is tell other people how they will be missing a ONCE IN A LIFETIME opportunity...as Ken points out, low interest rates, fantastic inventory ON SALE, FREE money from the government, for cryin' out loud!

But here's the deal. I already live within my means. I already have a great house with equity ( I bought in 1994) and best of all great neighbors. I'm within walking distance of Carrboro, which, is a must have for many folks in my area. Sure, I have my wishlist of things I want to do to my home to make it even more perfect. But that's a plus for me. I don't need the instant gratification of selling and trying to buy my dream home already finished. It gives me something to look forward to, to budget for, to dream about.

Maybe this is what age has bestowed upon me: the ability to see that I have what I need and I don't need more. That doesn't make it any less fun to help others accomplish their dreams. Give me a first time homebuyer and let me explain the gift they are about to receive in this market. I LOVE it! Nothing better than hearing from the parents of my first timers...they are so happy their kids get to achieve the American dream. And I get to talk to them about what the awesome responsibilty of homeownership means while their folks nod and smile.

Nope, I don't NEED or even want a new house. But I do want to share what I have learned and give advice to those who haven't gotten where I am yet. I just can't help being a little teeny tiny bit wistful about my part in how proud my first timers will be when they tell their kids in 20 years about how they were smart enough to take advantage of a once in a lifetime opportunity when they got their first home!

(Just so you know...I did buy a new car...have you SEEN the deals they are making?!?!?!)

 

 

 

Jennifer Marks

0 commentsJennifer Marks • April 12 2009 10:13AM

25 Things to Ask your Realtor (Before you Buy or Sell)

Interview your Realtor -- not every Realtor will be the right fit for your needs & personality.  Interviewing a Realtor is a job interview  and you are the employer!! 

  1. How long have you been in Real Estate?
  2. Have you worked with other brands or just this office/firm? Which ones?
  3. Can we cancel this listing if we are not happy?
  4. What is a Buyers Agency Agreement?
  5. Do you charge a Transaction, Termination or Marketing Fee?
  6. Do you work as a team? If so why? Do you have an assistant?
  7. May I see your resume or personal brochure?
  8. What systems do you have in place to keep me updated? Who answers my questions?
  9. May I see all the paperwork in advance?
  10. What professional designations do you have? What groups are you members of?
  11. How do you give my home an advantage over the other homes on the market?
  12. How many homes do you plan to sell this year?
  13. How many other seller/buyers are you actively working with?
  14. Why are you personally motivated to sell my home? To find me a home?
  15. Why should I choose you & Real Living Realty Experts over another Realtor/Brand?
  16. What kind of training & experience do you have in negotiations?
  17. Will you personally present all offers & handle all negotiations?
  18. Do you have a Website? Blog? Does your office?
  19. (Seller) Do you follow up with all the showings on my house? How do I get the feedback? Email, call-- etc
  20. Do you advertise in the newspaper, send postcards or other direct mail/ print advertising?
  21. How do you get paid? Do you get to keep the entire Listing Percentage? Buyers Percentage?
  22. How does this current economy affect the sale of my home? Does the economy affect my ability to buy my home?
  23. What is equity? Do I have it? When will I have it?
  24. What are closing costs and how do I reduce them?
  25. How will we decide on a List Price? How will we know what to offer?

Jennifer Marks

1 commentJennifer Marks • April 07 2009 09:54AM

Is your Realtor Really Internet Savvy?

In today's crazy economy -the savviest Realtors are choosing "out of the box" marketing tactics to blend with the traditional.  Many have agents were forced to re-evaluate "how" they do business to stay "in" business.  Clients need to save money just as much as brokers do. 

Recently, I was shown how to print and burn my own CDs - I created a traditional sellers power point presentation (with music) and burned it -- The presentation is about 5 minutes long - Pretty much everyone has "no time" so this is a CD about my services - it's really quick and will answer a lot of your questions.   This same basic blend of traditional with tech savvy can be applied to tons of other ideas.  It gave potential clients the information at his finger tips and on his schedule.

  What does your agent offer you? Have you heard the sales pitch before? Traditional print marketing doesn't work 100 % of the time and is expensive.  If you want an answer to anything do you pick up the newspaper or do you "Ask Geeves".  Over 80% of buyers & sellers use the internet to research.   Thinking outside the box is the only way to stand out in the media rich world. Does your home stand out? Or does your neighbor home stand out more?  The same old template real estate marketing is not longer cutting edge.  I receive tons of real estate postcards and I see tons in the trash!

 Buyers will not constantly search - they either find you or they will move on. It's my job make your home not just unforgettable but easy to find.  Something simple like a CD ~ done right~ will not be tossed. It will become a keepsake passed around to friends or coworkers. Even a glossy flyer can be used as a poop scoop.  

The catch is the content -A CD or internet marketing can't look like a home movie - or a random bunch of pictures.  It still needs to be professional yet entertaining.  Imagine Move in Day at your new home - wouldn't you love the pics burned on to a CD -  on a CD with fun music and captions makes it as a keepsake-- I know my mom, dad & grandma would love one and would show it off!!   

Think it through - When was the last time you threw out a CD- Paper & Print mail gets tossed sometimes before it is read.  How is the any buyer going to find your home if they lose the flyer? No single marketing technique alone works -A print advertisement may be ignored if the user can't find more information independently. Buyers are more savvy they will not call you to get an answer they expect to get online.

Be Sure to ask your agent how they are blending print and internet marketing.  Remeber Internet savvy is more than a website--Pretty much anyone can have a website -- the question should be who is using your website.

Jennifer Marks

0 commentsJennifer Marks • April 07 2009 09:29AM