Northwest Living | Bellingham Real Estate Market

March 14, 2008

Wikipedia Launches Real Estate Wiki

Filed under: All Posts, Housing, Real Estate, Buyer Tips, Seller Tips, Education — Jerry @ 9:48 am

realestatewiki.jpg The real estate industry launched last week it’s version of an online encyclopedia called the Real Estate Wiki. A collection of real estate professionals got together and created the brand new wiki to provide a information on the real estate business in one place.

The new real estate wiki includes real estate definitions, frequently asked questions about home selling, home buying, finance process, home inspections and a whole lot more. The wiki will also provide interesting bio information on leaders in the real estate industry, real estate books, leading real estate brokerage companies, real estate associations, and real estate blogs. They go even further and tell the public about all the designations Realtors earn, courses they take, publications of the industry, our social networks and institutes as well.

With the reputation of the the larger Wikipedia as the world’s largest free encyclopedia on the Internet, this will allow a more targeted drill down to a specific profession like the real estate industry. Since Wikipedia has a reputation for being non-biased and independent the hope is that the consumers will be able to gather tons of useful information at one reliable source.

It’s estimated that at least ten million people work in the industry related to real estate including real estate agents, brokerages, mortgage, financial, construction, and appraisers. With so many consumers now searching the Internet for real estate related information this should be a big plus for buyers, sellers, and renters alike.

This will be very exciting to see how this all evolves and how the public in general takes to the new real estate wiki. This should be a great source for my local Bellingham WA and Whatcom County real estate markets.

Jerry Campbell - Muljat Group - Bellingham WA Real Estate -  360-739-7779

October 17, 2007

Marketing Your Home On line

Filed under: All Posts, Bellingham WA, Real Estate, Seller Tips, Education — Jerry @ 2:43 pm

open-24-hours-5.jpg The days of marketing your home for sale in newspapers, magazines, radio and TV are slowly going by the way side. Sure you can still open up the Local Bellingham Sunday paper and one of the real estate magazines and find homes for sale, but that’s not where most buyers today spend their time looking for a home.  The old ways of advertising your home with the media giants are slowly losing its appeal and advertising dollars instead to the speed, ease and comfort of the Internet.

When the market takes a down turn like were experiencing now in the local Bellingham WA housing market the natural tendencies are for sellers to expect more advertising dollars spent selling their home.  So what usually happens, even today, is for sellers to look for their homes to be marketed in the Sunday newspaper, real estate magazines and do lots of open houses.

This might suffice the seller by seeing their home in a magazine, but to be honest, marketing dollars would be better spent if instead they went to marketing online.  One month’s worth of advertising in a real estate magazine can easily cost from about $200 to $500 plus for one page.  The sellers home is usually mixed in with 4-8 other homes on a single page where the real estate agent is showcasing the sellers property and of course that page competes for attention with 100 other pages easily. 

As a seller, your far better off having your home on line where according to the National Association of Realtors, 78% of all buyers search for their next home.  With the likes of of so many quality Realtor search engines on line, for searching real estate, it makes total sense to market your home on the medium of choice for most buyers today. 

Think about the home search in the mind of today’s buyer.  If you took two buyers and told one they could only use the Sunday paper, local real estate magazines and drive the neighborhoods where they wanted to live.  The second buyer had total use of the Internet to surf anytime of the day, and had to forget about the print media.  If I was a betting man, id say buyer two would have a clear advantage just because they would be right there when a brand new fresh listing hit the market.  In many cases a listing will be marketed in print media and by the time it hits the news stands it’s already pending.  

According to Mike Simonton, Senior Director at Fitch ratings he says, “it seems newspapers aren’t the vehicle of choice anymore. Instead, just as more buyers are doing their homework and researching for their next home online, sellers also are turning to the World Wide Web to get their home noticed.”  

“There are some obvious benefits to some of the online search tools that are unavailable in a print product,” explains Simonton.

He says things such as being able to target geographic locations, target price range and the features they want make searching online for a home easier and faster. Ultimately, consumers can filter out homes they don’t want and search specifically for what they do want “in a much more sophisticated way than you’re able to do in a print product,” says Simonton.

Today your Realtor can put your home on their websites and feature the property with unlimited photos, detailed information, virtual tours, PDF files, and so much more.  What an experienced Realtor can to today by utilizing the tools on line is really the way our market is moving. 

When I first got into the real estate business back in the early 90’s, before the Internet, I remember all of our listings were in a thick MLS book and we always looked forward to that new copy once a week.  I don’t think you can even find those big thick clunky books anymore at any of the state wide MLS boards.

This is the same slow death that the print media is experiencing today.  Trust me, there are still some old timers out there, that would like to go back to the mls books, not this guy….smiling.  Simonton has made some very interesting comments to think about when selling one’s home in today’s market and here are a few more:

The ink isn’t running dry in just the newspaper advertising world, “We’ve definitely seen an acceleration of advertising dollars toward the Internet and that’s going on across different mediums. The mediums that have been hurt the most are newspapers for sure, and then radio, broadcast television, Yellow Pages. Anything that’s traditional advertising has been hurt,” says Simonton.

However, real estate advertising in newspapers in some smaller local markets has not yet been affected but Simonton says the clock is ticking there as well.

“I think that as more people in these local markets use broadband some of the trends that we’re seeing in the larger markets will show up in the smaller markets in the future and it’s not so much that the smaller local markets are immune to these changes but these changes haven’t reached them yet,”

There is actually some lead time for newspapers and other mediums in the small markets. If they address the declining advertising revenues and start to move their content online they can help offset the loss in revenue by replacing it with a more real-time approach to advertising.

“Overtime they will need to have a very established online position in order to deal with the fact that most of the consumers in the market are using the Internet to get their information about what’s available in the local market,” explains Simonton.

For the price that’s currently being paid for print media in one month, a better solution is to build an on line presence instead where a sellers home could be on the Internet and virtually marketed 24/7 at much more affordable prices.  It’s just my opinion and my two cents…

Market your home today with Bellingham Real Estate - Jerry Campbell - Muljat Group.

September 7, 2007

Real Estate’s Future and Web 2.0

Filed under: All Posts, Housing, Real Estate, Buyer Tips, Seller Tips, Business, Education — Jerry @ 4:25 pm

What are the changes taking place today that will influence our business tomorrow? Learn what the experts at Real Estate Connect think the future of real estate will be like.

I’ve always admired Craig Newmark, the founder of Craigslist.com. He has a terrific sense of humor, especially when he referred to himself at this year’s Connect as “eye candy.” He is an amazing model for our industry. For a man who is worth billions, he describes himself as “just the customer service guy who answers the phone.” I have every confidence that Newmark takes customer service calls. At the heart of what our business should be, even in light of all the technological innovation, is being of service to those who elect to do business with us. Our business is not about just the numbers, it’s about making a difference to those who lives we touch.

Craigslist is in a sense, like a huge blog, because it’s constantly being added to and updated with unique content.  Since Craigslist is so interactive with millions of users it definetly is part of the wave of Web 2.0.  Craigslist founder says that what Web 2.0 offers is a chance for those who are “normal” to have a louder voice than the “crazies.” What does this have to do with real estate?

Newmark says that advertising today is about authenticity; it’s not about scripts or Madison Avenue advertising tactics. Instead, it’s real people telling real stories. It’s time to stop apologizing for who you are and connect with the world out there. Ultimately, it’s the personal chemistry that gets you the business, not how fancy your Web site or advertising copy is. Especailly with the real estate business, where it’s how a Realtor connects on a personally with their clients.

Hugh MacLeod in his keynote echoed similar sentiments. According to MacLeod, “The market for something to believe in is infinite.” MacLeod spoke extensively about “social objects.” A group of 1,000 baseballs could be identical. However, the one that Barry Bonds hits to set a new world record has extreme value. It’s not the object that has value, it’s the story. What matters are the conversations that we have with others about the social object.

This dovetails with the work of Clotaire Rapaille, the marketing guru for 50 of the Fortune 100 companies. Americans are not really buying the bricks and mortar — what they’re really buying is the dream of home ownership.

Web 2.0 is about sharing our experiences. Coca Cola and Doritos elected to have their customers compete to see who could create the best commercial. Customers voted for their favorite. They talked to their friends, argued for why their choice was best, and ultimately created more buzz and word-of-mouth marketing than any well-executed advertising campaign from an agency could generate.

We are already being inundated with stories and pictures from numerous sources. A great video can give you an international reputation in just hours. Sites such as Flickr.com allow us to share our photos. YouTube.com, HelloWorld.com, BlipTV.com and Blinx.com are places to share our videos. Blogs and social networks such as Facebook.com, Linkedin.com, RealTown and MySpace.com are creating international communities of like-minded people where they share their experiences and seek advice. Sites such as Twitter.com allow people to share what they’re doing this moment.

As computers expand from dual processors to 64 processors or even more, our ability to access full-length, high-quality video and even three dimensional communications will follow. The new “maplets” from Google allow you to populate those maps with gas stations, museums, your listings, or just about any other information that you would like to include. Microsoft’s Virtual Earth is also moving into providing the equivalent of 3-D imagery.

Here’s the bottom line: our clients need us to provide them with a stellar customer experience. They want us to be their trusted advisor and a trusted source for timely information about current market conditions. They want to interact with us in a fast, fun and easy-to-use environment. We must be credible; we must be authentic. We need to help them manage their expectations about what they’re buying. They want their information now and they expect us to be mobile. The business of the future belongs to those who are willing to step forward and integrate these innovations in their business.

Perhaps this seems like a tall order for an industry that has been slow to adapt to the Web. If Craig Newmark believes Web 2.0 may be the vehicle for peace in the Middle East, then is it too much to hope for that our industry will embrace these changes to create an entirely new way of conducting business in the 21st century?  Via Bernice Ross, a national speaker and CEO of Realestatecoach.com, the author of “Waging War on Real Estate’s Discounters” and “Who’s the Best Person to Sell My House?” Both are available online. She can be reached at bernice@realestatecoach.com or visit her blog at www.LuxuryClues.com.

September 5, 2007

Selling Your Home with Feng-shui advice

feng-shui-pot.jpg About two years ago I was attending the annual Washington State Association of Realtors Convention in Bellevue, WA and decided to take an afternoon class on the topic of Feng-shui.  I was a little skeptical at first, but after about thirty minutes of the class I realized maybe there is something to the way we show case a home and it’s energy.

 I’ve actually put some of these ideas to use in some of my client listings up in the Bellingham WA real estate market and thought id pass along this article I recently read by Amy Hoak…

 Tammy Winfield made every effort to depersonalize her home and keep it free of clutter. She even baked cookies before prospective buyers came in for a look, hoping the homey scents would help persuade them to make an offer.

Still, the Truckee, Calif., home that she and her husband, Bill, put on the market last September sat for months without any takers.

“We were getting a lot of showings but not many offers,” she said.

Then, in February, they took some home-selling advice — and a leap of faith.

At the suggestion of their real-estate agent, they brought in a home stager who refocused the home using the concepts of feng shui. The couple closed on the sale of their home in March.

When their agent suggested using feng shui to stage the Winfield home, there wasn’t immediate acceptance of the idea.

At its heart, feng shui involves adjusting a place’s energy and enhancing the perception of space, often done by reconsidering furniture placement, said Christine Ayres, who staged the Winfields’ home and also co-wrote the book “Sell Your Home with Feng Shui.”

It’s a technique that has been around for hundreds — some say thousands — of years, she said. While the concept has long thrived in China, it’s only recently been embraced in the United States.

A home with a good flow of energy is one that makes someone feel comfortable immediately; a home without it, on some level, makes a person want to leave, Ayers said.

Feng shui also can be used to create a clear path to a home’s “room of first impression,” the room that will make the biggest impact on a buyer, Ayres added.

“Most Realtors are very open to it. They’re going to use any tool possible to help market the property,” Ayres said. There’s also little cost involved, she added.

Some tips to consider for those who want to try feng shui to sell their home:

Furniture shouldn’t be in the direct path of the entrance of the room, said Cynthia Chomos, a feng shui consultant, speaker, teacher and founder of the Feng Shui School for Real Estate Sales in Seattle, Washington.

For example, if the back of a couch faces a room’s entrance, the piece of furniture can cause a person to “pingpong” back to the door, Ayres said.

Chomos also advised having a solid wall of support behind a key piece of furniture — a rule that makes it a bad idea to place a bed under a bedroom window.

The front door, “the mouth of the house” should get special attention feng-shui.pngbecause “it’s where the house inhales its vitality and brings in the buyer,” Ayres said.

Spruce it up with a fresh coat of paint, replace scratched hardware or frame the door with matching pots, which has the visual effect of widening it, she said.

If potted plants flank the house, they shouldn’t have sharp, pointed leaves, Chomos said. A plant such as a palm can appear aggressive; “the last thing we want are sharp points pointing at a buyer’s stomach,” she said.

Ayres also suggests hanging a wind chime at the front, right corner of the home. That area is the buyer’s area, she said, where decisions regarding the sale might be made.  Via Amy Hoak.

September 2, 2007

Lease Option - Valid Road to Buying a Home

The subprime fallout has made the once slam-dunk home loans more difficult to obtain. While some Puget Sound neighborhoods continue to be very active, exemplified by one Bainbridge Island home drawing nine offers in one day, other areas have slowed considerably.

In addition, the first notion of back to school already has hit many second-home owners who are beginning to schedule the winterization of the family cabin. Instead of going through another off-season with little use and significant maintenance, some owners will use the last few weeks of the summer season to show and hopefully sell the family getaway, raising for-sale real estate inventory levels in popular areas.

If your house or cabin already has been sitting for sale long enough to bite into your comfort and affordability zones, you might want to consider a lease option.

A lease with an option to buy often can solve a two-mortgage problem for a seller, and provide a cash-poor buyer with an opportunity to “try out” a house while getting a portion on the monthly rent credited toward an eventual down payment.

Many sellers make a commitment to purchase another house contingent on selling the one they’re already in. But when it comes time to purchase the second house, or lose it, the prospective buyer can be faced with making payments on two homes if the first one has not sold.

A 12- to 18-month lease agreement, with an option to buy within the lease period, can solve problems. Here’s how a typical lease-option works:

The buyer and seller agree on a purchase price, usually a figure somewhere between today’s market value and the anticipated market value 12 months down the road.

The seller gives up tomorrow’s presumably higher value for money in hand today. The buyer pays a bit more than today’s value in exchange for very little cash down. Let’s say buyer and seller agree the price will be $335,000.

The seller charges the buyer a nonrefundable fee for agreeing to this option. The amount can vary depending on factors such as how eager the seller is to move and the size and quality of the house. Typically, the higher the fee, the better the buyer maintains the property.

Let’s use $3,000 for the fee in our hypothetical transaction. The fee is in addition to the monthly lease payments. And we’ll have the seller give the buyer the right to purchase the property for $335,000 at any time within the 12-month lease period. If the option is exercised, the fee could be considered part of the down payment.

The lessee has made no down payment, hence the monthly option fee is typically higher than rental market rates. The two parties agree on what portion of the rent will be applied to the down payment. Any amount can be credited. For example, if the monthly fee is $2,000, $800 could be credited to the down payment. (If the seller really is not eager to sell, he may not agree to a higher rent credit.)

Buyer and seller must be sure to specify both lease and sale terms in the agreement. For example, when the time comes for the buyer to exercise the option, if the interest rates are at 8 percent, the buyer may not be able to qualify for a loan. It’s a good idea to set an interest-rate ceiling in the agreement, or ask the seller to finance the home when conventional rates hit a certain level.

Sellers should read their mortgage agreements carefully before entering a lease-option agreement. Some lenders may activate a “due-on-sale” clause if the seller enters into a lease-option with another party. Many times, lenders will permit a specific lease-option period if notified in advance. And lenders usually are more willing to participate when they are assured of future business — like the seller’s or buyer’s new mortgage loan.

Some realty agents have been reluctant to seek lease options for clients because they have been unwilling to gamble their commissions on whether the option would be exercised. Others are skittish about deferring their commission until a deal is solidified. However, when open-minded agents understand a lease-option could keep a deal together and result in future business, the concept is readily accepted.

What’s the once-popular saying … a small piece of something is better than a large piece of nothing? Via HeraldNet and Tom Kelly

August 17, 2007

Selling Your Home in a Buyer’s Market

Filed under: All Posts, Real Estate, Seller Tips, Relocation, Education — Jerry @ 11:03 am
You’ve got to be proactive on price, marketing and more. Here are 10 steps to take before you plant the “for sale” sign.  If you’re selling your home this year, be prepared for a marathon, not a sprint.In most places, those heady days of putting a property on the market, receiving multiple bids, getting more than you expected, and accepting an offer in just days or weeks are over.    

Now, for most houses in most parts of the country, it’s a buyer’s market. That means that more houses are for sale, there are longer stretches on the market, and prices have slowed, plateaued or, in some places, decreased.

Sellers “need to be prepared for a sustained effort,” says Colby Sambrotto, chief operating officer of ForSaleByOwner.com.

Homes are staying on the market for about four months, according to the most recent averages from the National Association of Realtors.

If you plan to plant your “for sale” sign, here are 10 things you can do beforehand:

1. Recognize every market is different. Your state, town or neighborhood could dovetail with national numbers or buck the trend entirely. “There really is no national market,” says Sambrotto. “There’s a patchwork of regional markets.” Never rely solely on one person’s advice or opinion. Talk to a handful of professionals, do your own research and listen to your gut instinct.

2. Get your home inspected. “Before I would even call a real-estate agent, I’d have my home inspected,” says attorney Diana Brodman Summers, author of “How to Buy Your First Home.” Some real-estate agents advise against spending the money (basic inspections range from $200 to $400, according to a 2004 survey from the American Society of Home Inspectors), because the buyers will get one anyway prior to closing. Others recommend it because it gives sellers an early warning on any repairs they might have to make.

But in this market, says Summers, it’s better to be proactive. “I would rather know what the inspector is going to find and be able to fix it — and pick who will fix it,” she says. This method also allows you to shop around for the best price instead of perhaps paying an inflated price later on.

3. Shape up before marketing. A buyer’s market means you’ve got more competition. “You want to put your best foot forward,” says Eric Tyson, co-author of “House Selling for Dummies.” If your home isn’t appealing and in good repair, potential buyers won’t even stop. Some sellers think it’s OK to skip this step and take less, but if the house is not appealing, you may not get the chance to negotiate. “Six weeks before you want to put it on the market is a great time to get it done,” says Summers. You don’t need to renovate, but make sure everything looks good and works well. Easy ways to make your home stand out:     

  • New paint. Paint the whole house, if it needs it, or just the trim, shutters and door to freshen up.
  • A clean entryway. Sweep or pressure-wash the front walk and porch. Polish the outdoor metalwork, clean the windows and glass, and replace any burned-out bulbs in outdoor lighting. And, if you can, add planters with flowers.
  • Lush landscaping. Think new mulch, sharp edging, a healthy lawn and beds of flowers.

“Maximize your chances of people being excited about your listing when it hits the market,” Tyson says. 

4. Devise a marketing plan. Do you want to use a real-estate agent or would you rather sell it yourself? If you try doing it yourself, set a time limit after which you want to enlist the aid of a professional. Selling it yourself can save you the real-estate commission (usually about 6 percent), which can be an advantage in a tight market. But in a buyer’s market — or rapidly changing market — it can help to have a little professional expertise to price, market and move your property. And don’t forget, potential buyers may think that if there’s no agent involved, the price should already be 6 percent less. Both buyer and seller can’t save the same 6 percent.

5. Check into company relocation assistance. Are you moving to take a new job? If so, the company might offer resources to make selling your house easier, says Summers. Some companies will even provide a list of real-estate pros who will work with you at a discount. If you’re selling in a tight market, every little bit helps. Best source: Call your human-resources department.

6. Interview real-estate agents. If you’re interested in using an agent, interview several early on about listing your home, says Tyson. “Ask them for their advice,” he says. “That’s a good way to select an agent.” What would they highlight about your home? What would they change before it goes on the market?

Ask to see an activity list — a list of all the buyers and sellers they’ve represented, the areas of town and the price ranges. You don’t want private details, says Tyson. But you want to see if they’ve worked in your neighborhood, in your price range and if they have a track record of successful sales.

How old are the comparable sales (often called “comps”) they are showing you? A few years ago, you could study comps that were six months or a year old. This year, because many markets are changing, you want neighborhood comps that are no more than three months old, says Summers.

And find out how long each has been a professional. Experience counts. “If you’re going to pay 5 to 6 percent, you might as well get the best your money can get,” says Tyson.

7. Set a price. The rules are different in soft markets. “You don’t overprice your house 20 percent to leave wiggle room for negotiating,” says Tyson. That kind of strategy might never be a good idea, but it can really backfire in 2007. It’s not a matter of being willing to negotiate. If your price is too high, potential buyers may not even look at it. And they may very well see a negative message in such a high price. “Those who overprice their homes in this market are wasting everyone’s time,” he says.

If you’re not using an agent, get your own comps — from the local paper, from sites such as Zillow.com and Realtor.com — to see how similar houses in the area are priced. Also find out which newspaper in your area publishes notices when properties are sold. Sometimes it’s the local daily or legal paper. Tracking those is a good way of learning actual sales prices, as opposed to asking prices.

Then set a realistic figure. Your goal: to maximize the chances that the perfect buyer will actually see it, Tyson says.

To get an idea of what’s going on now, you want recent comps. But you may also want to look at comparables from the past six months. “You will see trends,” says Patricia Fitzgerald, broker/owner of Coastal Properties in Jupiter, Fla. Are properties moving? Are prices holding steady or are sellers dropping prices?

Pricing is strategy. And much of it comes down to just how motivated you are to sell — or how quickly you have to leave.

If you plan to pad the price, it’s “an art, not an exact science,” Tyson says. “Five to 10 percent is one thing. Fifteen to 20 percent and you have a problem.”

Two more points to consider:

  • Modern technology. Agents and buyers most likely are using computers to search for properties. If you want to sell yours for about $400,000, consider listing it at $399,999 rather than $400,500. That way, a computer search of anything between $350,000 and $400,000 will include your listing.
  • Commissions aren’t add-ons. Don’t add the real-estate commission to the value of the home to come up with your asking price, says Tyson. If you use an agent, the fee comes out of your share of the profits. Otherwise, “you’re going to get penalized for overpricing your house,” he says. Instead: Try negotiating your commission with the agent. When the recent seller’s market was in full swing, it was easy to get agents to list your property for as low as 4 percent (split with a co-broker). They knew the property would sell in days or weeks and their marketing costs would be low. Now it’s reversed. Agents commonly are looking at four to six months to sell a property, which increases their marketing expenses. This makes them hesitant to offer a discount.

Beware of hidden financing costs. Not all financing is the same from a seller’s point of view. With some types of financing, such as FHA and VA home loans, the seller pays the points on the loan. Understand the different types and what will be required of you as a seller, because that could affect how much you net in a sale.

8. Understand your price. While you don’t want to undervalue your house, many sellers today won’t make as much as neighbors who sold last year, says Summers. If you have your heart set on a certain amount and find out that houses aren’t selling for that, you may “have to change your mind and sit on the house,” she says.

9. Get rid of the junk. “This year, it’s more important because buyers are going to be more fussy,” says Summers. “Buyers are going to come in with an attitude.” Throw things out, ship them early or rent a storage locker. But clear out that clutter. Buyers look for space and light. To show it off, you need to be able to tour a group comfortably through the house, as well as actually walk into those “walk-in” closets.

10. Stay on top of the market. “You must be aware of market changes,” says Summers. That’s one reason she recommends using an agent. Stay on top of what is happening with mortgages and finance rates, keep looking at comps and “see trends before they happen,” she says. “The real-estate market is still in a time of correction. You have to be so careful with both buying and selling.” 

Thanks Dana Dratch, with Bankrate.com for that great article and I hope our local home owners will be able to use some of those great tips.

December 23, 2006

Home Sellers, Words to Sell your house

Filed under: All Posts, Real Estate, Seller Tips, Education — Jerry @ 7:02 pm

soldsign.jpg The words that are used to market your home matter in a big way.  Who ever said, “Choose your words wisely”, wasn’t just saying it because it sounded good.  After all, wars have been fought over the wrong choice of words.  Even civilizations have collapsed because of them.  And it appears that your success with which your home sells may be determined by the use of the right words.

One recent study of sales patterns showed that homes marketed with the words “motivated” actually took 15% longer to sell, while homes listed as “handyman specials” sold in half the time. The same study, where 20,000 words were looked at in home listings from 1997 to 2000, found that the buyers put style over substance.  Words like “curb appeal” or general attractiveness helped sell a home faster than words about value and price.

Homes described as “beautiful” moved 15% faster and for 5% more in price than the benchmark. “Good-value” homes sold for 5% less than average.

Here’s one I won’t be using anytime soon, the plea of “must see”.   That got about as much play as a telemarketer at dinner time. Homes with listings using the words “must see” had a no impact at all on the number of days they took to sell.

Listings where the word “landscaping” was heralded sold 20% faster, and homes in “move-in condition” took 12% less time to sell than the benchmark, although the study showed “move-in condition” had an insignificant impact on the sales price.

Owners use listing language to convey how serious they are about selling. The study found that listings in which the seller said he or she was “moving” sold for 1% less in price compared to 8% less when the seller was “motivated.”

Descriptions of houses that indicated an obvious problem — such as “foreclosure,” “as-is” and “handyman special” — drew substantially lower sales prices. Words that suggested more desirable attributes of the house — “granite,” “maple,” “gourmet” — translated into a higher sale price, the study found.

One interesting problem discovered was that “superficially positive” words that, in effect, damn with faint praise — such as “clean” or “quiet” — had zero or even a negative correlation with prices.

In another study researchers found, among other things, that buyers read between the lines. If you can’t find anything better to say than “new paint,” perhaps it’s best to say nothing at all.  But with that said “new paint” appeared on 15% of the listings and was the most commonly listed comment.

Positive and factually verifiable comments such as “golf” or “lake” drew increased sales prices; other presumably positive comments regarding new paint or new carpet brought lower ones.  Sellers should focus on words that are extravagant; otherwise buyers perceive that it’s not worth talking about.

The biggest word sellers today need to avoid is the word ‘motivated’.   Homes with ‘motivated sellers’ stayed on the market 15% longer than average and sold for 4% less.  It’s perceived that the sellers overpriced the house to start with and eventually had to lower it.  This explains the length of time on the market and lower sales price.  Via latimes.com
 

December 20, 2006

2007 Housing Trends, What’s in, What’s out

Filed under: All Posts, Housing, Green Homes, Real Estate, Buyer Tips, Seller Tips, Education — Jerry @ 10:18 am

What’s In, What’s Out with Homebuyers in 2007 by Mark Nash is based on a survey of 923 real estate agents, managing brokers and association executives who responded to a survey request in Agent to Agent ezine, published by Mark Nash. Agent to Agent is distributed monthly to real estate professionals in all fifty states and Canada.

Housing Trends in for 2007

  • The housing correction. My prediction in the 2006 “What’s In, What’s Out” I forecasted a soft decline in home prices in most markets. In 2007 project a 5-8% decline in prices on average between single-family and condominium homes.
  • Homes that are priced right. It isn’t the boom market of 2005, look at only the sold comparable’s from the last six months. Forget the cocktail party chit-chat when all you heard was record prices in the shortest market times in U.S. real estate history.
  • Online home valuation sites like Zillow.com. Mainly those that utilize up-to-date and reliable home sale data. Technology is great when it works, but tread carefully with online valuation web sites. Ask yourself how long does it take your recorder of deeds and real estate transactions to record them? If up-to-the-minute, okay, otherwise plan the lead time into the online valuation to spew out accurate information.
  • Market timing. Many buyers and sellers were on their own timelines in 2006 and they missed opportunities that were created by not recognizing the real estate markets ebb and flow. Spring is high market, the most demand by the largest number of buyers. Summer is a good market, fall is fair, and winter is the remnant market, the left-over buyers and sellers from the high, good, and fair markets.
  • Savvy buyers. With interest rates historically low and bent-up demand from a soft year in 2006, the deals and lack of frenzy won’t last long. “Deferred demand” from 2006 could ignite a mini-frenzy in some markets.
  • Third places or officetels. Home offices are on the rise, though those who work from one, need more than a coffee shop or hotel lobby for business meetings. Look for alternative work spaces that bridge the home office with hourly rentals of conference room-type spaces that offer technology and privacy.
  • Upscale garages. It’s no longer the out-of-sight-out-of-mind dumping ground. Today’s garage owners want them decked out with cabinet and storage systems, mini-refrigerators, insulation, heating and air conditioning and durable but residential-looking flooring.
  • Caving. Man caves and Mom caves are coming out of the closet. Personal dedicated space for one person in a household can go and work on projects or “chill” without being disturbed and if so only in an emergency.
  • Two home offices. Rising gas prices and commuting times have created more two-work-at-home families. Size matters, make sure each is at least ten-by-ten feet.
  • Rejuvenation rooms. A one-stop space for exercising, meditation, yoga, sauna and fancy steam showers. Showers are going upscale too. Waterfall fixtures, programmable temperature and water flow are the next trend for “showerers”.
  • Heated patios, walkways and driveways. Northern baby-boomers are tired of shoveling and are looking for ways to decrease winter maintenance, plus many have discovered how also heating the patio can add an extra couple of weeks enjoyment in spring and fall.
  • Snoring rooms. Offered as options in new homes, adjacent, second bedrooms to the master, offer relief from the “buzz saw” and an alternative to the couch. A godsend for millions of relationships nationwide.
  • Modular Housing. Many think of the out-dated double wide as the typical modular, but modular options and quality have exploded from the top end 11,000 square foot home, with every whistle and bell, complex finishing details, to the bread and butter 1200 square foot starter home. Low-cost, factory-built construction and quick conception to foundation times, make this the affordable wave of the future.
  • Sustainable Design. Sustainable design is based on three areas; energy conservation, indoor air quality, and resource conservation. Viewed as new-age in construction circles, sustainable design looks at homes holistically, and not just a group of unrelated systems thrown together. Natural forms of energy, such as wind, solar, and geo-thermal if available on-site, are maximized.
  • Structured wiring. Right up there with all the buzz about green homes is structured wiring, now entering the main stream must-have for technology based home buyers. Coaxial TV cable (RG-6), Category 5E voice and data lines, distributed radio, remote camera security are wired through out a home into multi-outlet boxes called in the trade, home network centers.
  • Mixing finishes on kitchen base and wall cabinets. Matchy-matchy is out in kitchen design. The new look is to have stained-wood bases and painted wood upper cabinets. The old-europe-look rules, but with today’s appliances.

Housing Trends Out in 2007

  • “As is” in home sale marketing. Anything went in the boom market, but if you’re planning to use “as is” in 2007, forget it. The two letter-two word kiss of death, buyers see it as a red flag about the home and you the seller. You have too much competition to be chasing buyers away.
  • Buyer incentives. Free cars don’t sell houses, realistic pricing does. Gimmicks only confuse and distract buyers. Cut to the chase and deduct the cost of your free-with-purchase from your current price and send the signal to buyers that you’re selling real property not personal property.
  • Endless Open Houses. The open house pendulum has swung from ” the house sold in the first day” to “we need to have our house open every Sunday”. Desperation is when your home is open every Sunday. Buyers know and track it. Plan on every three weeks to have a public open house.
  • Over-full-price offers. It was a strategy in the boom market to under-price a home and let the market set the selling price. Not today, one thing that won’t change in 2007 is that every buyer will want a deal, and walk from one if they don’t get one.
  • Bedrooms not large enough for a bed. In the boom, rehabbers and developers learned the fastest way to profit was to increase the room count of a home of an existing home. Bedrooms shrunk to walk-in closet size when a four-room one-bedroom was gut-rehabbed into a four-room two-bedroom. Or, the doorways and windows eliminate required wall space. Savvy agents kept asking, can you fit a queen-size bed in either room? And the answer was usually, no.
  • Loads of glass upper kitchen cabinet doors. Buyers say it looks great, but many who specified and experienced it, firsthand don’t have the time to keep their kitchen cabinets organized. Plus if you hate washing the windows, having more glass in a greasy room like a kitchen is high-maintenance.
  • Bowl-shaped above-counter bathroom sinks. The splashing and over-all up-keep have earned these the reputation of nice to look at, but don’t want one.
  • Any shiny metal finish. Brushed nickels and pewter’s are in and antiqued and polished brass is out.
  • Stainless-steel refrigerators and dishwashers are a fading trend. The cold look and higher maintenance of steel is shifting buyers to specify warmer colors in kitchen appliances.
  • Spiral staircases. Once the rage for mid-seventies make over’s, now death to a home seller. The boomers have aged, their kids don’t like them, unfriendly to pets and young children. Take yours out and put in a standard staircase (inside or out) before you sell.

Housing Trends on the way out.

  • Bamboo floors. The first reviews are in on this popular eco-friendly flooring, and they’re not pretty. Easily dented and scratched, and prone to warping from variations in our climate and humidity levels.
  • Hardwood laminate floors. The word is out that these noisy poor relatives of solid hardwood that don’t stand up to multiple sanding’s to change color or to remove stains.
  • Home sellers who smoke in their home while it is being marketed. Buyers hate second-hand and stale smoke odors. Marketing your home is not the same as living in it. If you have to smoke go outside.

It’s very interesting to look thru the list that Mr. Nash came up with based on interviewing all those Realtors. Just the fact that he made it through the process of talking to 923 real estate agents is amazing on its own.  I do a lot of new construction sales and just like the fashion world, we have to stay on top of our market to make sure we are putting out the right product for home buyers.

This article is a no-cost run-at-will with permission from the author, Mark Nash.  Mark Nash is a real estate author, broker and syndicated columnist based in Chicago. The author of five books, his latest Real Estate A-Z for Buying & Selling a Home is available in December 2006.  The Library of Congress has invited Mark to Washington, D.C. to present his fourth book 1001 Tips for Buying and Selling a Home on March 21, 2007. He contributes residential real estate analysis to Bloomberg TV, Business Week, CBS The Early Show, CNN, HGTV.com, Smart Money Magazine, The New York Times, The Today Show and USA Today. 

Thanks Mark, this is a perfect article for my Northwest reading audience.  I’m sure I can use some of these great tips in real estate discussions in Bellingham, WA during 2007.
 

December 10, 2006

Overpriced listings are hard sell in a down market

Filed under: All Posts, Real Estate, Seller Tips, Education — Jerry @ 10:30 am

buyer-vs-seller.jpg When pricing your home for sale, sellers need to be careful with the price that’s initially set.  In today’s market especially, sellers really need to be cautious of making an error of overpricing their home.  If you price it to high and the market is moving down, your home will be passed on by.

Too many sellers make the mistake of suggesting to their real estate agent, “Well can’t we just try this higher price for a month or two and then we’ll change the price” or “Lets price it higher and the buyer can just make us an offer.”  Sellers should never try these tactics in any market, but especially if the market is moving down.  Your home will not sell if buyers feel it’s overpriced.

By far, this is the main reason a home doesn’t sell. Although a seller might be just testing the market, prospective home buyers are smarter than this and they know an overpriced listing when they see it. Worse, their buyer’s agents won’t even bother showing homes with asking prices above recent sales prices of comparable nearby homes.

Any buyer that’s been out with their agent looking at homes will soon realize, as well as the buyer’s agent, that your overpriced home is out of place.  Even if they like your home, they won’t make an offer in fear of insulting the seller.  Then when you lower the price, the buyer usually thinks…”there’s that overpriced home again.”  Your far better off starting at the real market price for your home than an inflated price to begin with.

In a market like this with it favoring the buyers, most buyers are very leery about making offers in fear that they might have paid too much.  Buyers are also thinking that the prices might come down even further.   This is why an overpriced home to begin with, in most cases ends up selling for less than what it would have fetched if priced right when it was first listed.

In today’s real estate market, more than half of all home sellers attempt to set their listed price above the market. This type of strategy of over pricing the home will usually backfire on the home seller.

Because of the internet and other technologies, most home buyers now have access to the same real estate information that was once just for us Realtors.  Savvy buyers now have information about recently sold homes in a particular area.  With this information in hand, it’s hard for sellers to fool a weary buyer on the price of a home.  If your home sits on the market too long from being overpriced it can create a negative aspect to the home causing it to sell for much less.  Sellers should never play this game, and especially at this time of the real estate market with sales as low as they’ve been the past 15 months. 

It’s been an interesting run up in prices and Im certain an even tougher one to swallow on the slide backwards for some.  I can’t tell you how many times I told who ever would listen, that there’s no way the prices of real estate would continue to go up as sharp as it was for a couple years there.  Hopefully we can get back to normal times and it looks like thats whats ahead for at least the the next 12-18 months at least.

October 11, 2006

1000 Realtors attend 2006 Washington Association of Realtors Convention

Filed under: All Posts, Real Estate, Education — Jerry @ 1:34 pm

I just attended the annual Washington Association of Realtors meetings in Bellevue, WA held at the Meydenbauer Convention Center.  This years conference was held October 5-6th. It was another successful event with two full days of continuing education classes, full day of trade show and many other events surrounding this 2006 conference.  I highly recommend all Realtors to attend this event every year to improve their education and get to know other Realtors in our market area.

   During the two day conference I attended several classes.  One of my favorite’s was REALTORS and Blogs taught by Russ Cofano & Dustin Luther.  It was a very informative seminar on the basics of blogs and how to start one for our own business.  Russ Cofano, an awesome speaker in my opinion, blended his 15 years of experience as a speaker along with Dustin Luther, the guy that created a very popular blog in the Seattle, Wa area called Rain City Guide.  I would also review Russ Cofano’s web site called Realty Objectives.

In the afternoon session I attended Ralph Roberts class called How to Explode your Business through the use of a virtual assistant.  Ralph Roberts is considered the ”Michael Jordan” of residential real estate sales in the United States market.

On Friday October 6, 2006 I attended a full day of classes on The Economics of Real Estate in Today’s Market, put on by John Tuccilo.  He is one of the foremost real estate and housing finance economists in the United States.

The trade show was awesome as usual, with over 150 title companys, banks, real estate software companys, home inspectors and many more segments of the real estate business.

Jerry Campbell - Bellingham WA Realtor - The Muljat Group - Bellingham, WA 98225

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