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Unscrupulous Listing Practice?

This great post comes from an agent in Tennessee but the same thing can happen anywhere.  Sellers: you need to be in constant contact with your listing agent and you should always have a clear picture of the market, how your house is showing, and how it's priced according to the market. 

If you're selling your home in Burlington or Camden County and need a Realtor, call me!  I'd be happy to help!

Michele Rose is a Realtor and Professional Home Stager in Burlington County, NJ.  She has been assisting both buyers and sellers with their real estate needs for the last 6 years.  In 2007, she founded Rose-Colored Staging, a professional home staging and redesign business, to help sellers and other real estate agents successfully market their listings with professional home staging.

Via Tammie White (Keller Williams Realty):

Yesterday, while preparing a CMA (comparable market analysis) for a client's property, I came across something that got my blood boiling.  What do you think??  Does the following constitute an unscrupulous listing practice?   

In July 2008, I showed a house that had been on the market for 184 days.  The house was only 4 years old, beautifully decorated and well-maintained.  It showed very well but wasn't exactly what my client was looking for.  That evening, I responded to an automatic showing feedback request explaining that the property was not right for my client and gave their reaction to the home.  I always give feedback to the listing agent so he can discuss that with his seller.  Since this property had already been on the market 184 days, I was sure the seller would want feedback.

Several days later, I got a call directly from the seller.  I had lefthouse for sale my business card on her countertop at the showing.  She asked me if I could give her some feedback from my clients.  I explained that I had sent feedback to her listing agent and that she should speak directly with him.  She then said, "My listing agent never gives me any feedback.  My house has been on the market almost 190 days and I don't know why it's not selling."  I gladly explained why my client had passed on the property but then she started to ask questions about the current state of the market and my thoughts as to why her house hadn't sold.

I explained that as long as she was listed with another agent, she would need to speak with him.  She said that she had never even met him.  He had a large team and she only spoke with agents on his team. She never got the same agent twice.  She always had to call them after showings because they never called her.  I, once again, instructed her that she would have to speak directly to her listing agent. As long as she was under contract with someone else, I was unable to help her.  I did say, however, that if she decided not to re-list with her agent, I would be happy to speak with her.

I decided to put her on my auto-notification list so I would be alerted when her listing expired.  About 45 days later, the listing expired and I proceeded to contact her.  She didn't even know that the listing had expired.  She then advised me that she would call me back when she investigated further.

A little while later, she called and said that she had re-listed with the same agent.  She explained that when she originally signed her listing agreement in February 2008, she also signed a document giving her listing agent permission to re-list her property automatically.  They just hadn't gotten around to re-listing it in the MLS.

I couldn't believe what she was telling me.  I had never heard of such a thing.  Why would any seller agree to these terms?  It doesn't benefit the seller at all.  The only person who benefits from such an agreement is the listing agent.  I was shocked. 

As I watched expireds appear week after week, I would see this same agent's name again and again.  All of his listings had been on the market for many, many days.  I placed several calls to these expired listings.  The response was always the same.  They felt if any agent could sell their house, he could.  Besides, they didn't want to get into a confrontation by calling the listing agent and cancelling their agreement. 

I didn't understand what these people were thinking.  It appeared to me that he was putting a sign in the yard and walking away.  He didn't even have to call them again to re-list their home.  He did it automatically.

As I was preparing this CMA, I noticed that the home I had shown in July 2008 had finally closed.  The house was originally listed for $789,999 in February 2008.  When it closed last week, it had been on the market a wopping 821 days.  It had been re-listed with the same agent, 17 times with 9 price reductions. It sold for $500,000--63% of the original list price.

When this seller listed her home, the average days on the market was 87 days.  However, what the CMA showed is that the property sold within 77 days of listing at 91% of asking price.  This agent is manipulating the system to reflect lower days on the market and percentage of listing price.  To make it look like he can sell your house under the current days on the market for above 90% of listing.

I can't believe that this woman remained loyal to an agent that failed to produce a buyer for over 2 years.  The seller's ability to negotiate price and terms ceased to exist a long time ago.

Between 5/29/09 to 5/28/10, this agent closed 150 listings (remember he has a large team).  These 150 listings had been on the market with this agent a total of 21,946 days and had re-listed with him 403 times.  That means that each property was on the market an average of 146 days and had re-listed an average of 3 times.  These numbers don't even include the expired and withdrawn listings that had smartened up and moved on to another agent.

The moral of this story...as a seller, you owe nothing to the listing agent.  His job is to market your home and get it sold in a reasonable amount of time--821 days is not a reasonable amount of time.  If you are unsure what a reasonable amount of time is, ask the listing agent for the average days on the market for your area.

Remember, in this case, the agent re-listed his client's homes several times.  Why would he do this?  Because then he could say that his average days on the market were lower than the actual number of days he had these properties listed.  When interviewing agents, question them as to how many times they re-list their properties to reflect those numbers.  And never, ever agree to sign a document giving your agent the authority to re-list your property automatically prior to the expiration date of your contract.  Make that agent work for the listing or find an agent who will.  

Is this an unscrupulous listing practice? You be the judge.

 

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Contact me: 
Tammie White
Keller Williams Realty
(615) 495-0752

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“You Staged What?” “The Candy! I Staged the Candy!”

Now, some of you will think I've gone way over the edge.  But some of you will understand, I know you will.  I've taken to staging candy. 

Now let me explain... I umm... well, may be just a little, just a teensy bit of a... perfectionist.

Just a wee bit.

I noticed it when I was out shopping for my latest staging project.

When I stage, I make it a point to always have an entry table in the foyer.  Just a console table, nothing large, but just big enough for a lamp, the Realtor's flyers, a small dish for Realtor's business cards, and, well, a bowl of hard candy.

So I was shopping for the candy for the latest project and the discussion between my sister and I (she's my partner in craziness) went something like this:

Me:  "Ok, we need hard candy and it must be wrapped.  Unwrapped is too gross."

Lisa:  "Definitely, but what kind?"

Me:  "Well, there's this Country Time Lemonade candy that we used last time and it was good."

Lisa:  "Right."

Me:  "But this house just isn't lemonade, is it?"

Lisa:  "Not at all!  Lemonade is all wrong for this house!"

Me:  "But lemonade was so perfect for the last house."

Lisa:  "But not this one."

Me:  "I'm feeling it should be more... butterscotch..."

Lisa:  "Or caramel!" (said with great excitement)

Me:  "How about Werther's?"

Lisa:  "Perfect!  It should be Werther's!"

Me:  "OK, now we need to decide which kind of Werther's."

And that's about how it went.  I truly prefer to think of myself as "detail oriented" with a true "quest for quality."  (That's my story and I'm sticking to it!)

Really, I have fun matching candy to the house the same way I match the art, or the accent pillows, or the lighting.  And one time I got really lucky and had a listing on "Caramel Drive!"

 

 Michele Rose is a Realtor and Professional Home Stager in Burlington County, NJ.  She has been assisting both buyers and sellers with their real estate needs for the last 6 years.  In 2007, she founded Rose-Colored Staging, a professional home staging and redesign business, to help sellers and other Realtors successfully market their listings with professional home staging.

 

 

Which of These Houses Had the Best Chance of Selling?

Can you tell which of these houses had the best chance of selling?  Let's examine three houses recently on the market.

House #1:  "The Cute Ranch"   I say cute because it was small.  It had been on the market for just over a year when I got the listing and it had been overpriced.  The owners were discouraged and ready to give up.  Previous feedback (when they got it) had been mediocre.

House #2:  "The Mess"   There was mold present, an underground oil tank, and a septic tank that would never get a certification, among other things.  It was an estate and the previous owner was a hoarder.  The sellers couldn't believe anyone would want the house and actually felt sorry for me, taking the listing!

House #3:  "The Early 80's Flashback"   It featured 30-year-old bright green carpeting with light fixtures and décor to match.  It was generally well kept and had a lovely landscaped yard with a gorgeous in-ground pool.

Any guesses?  Who was our winner?

 Actually, it was House #2, The Mess, that sold the fastest but really, they are all winners!

Why?

House #1:  The owners were ready to sell, priced it accordingly, and agreed to staging.  A few simple changes made the home seem much larger than it had originally appeared.  The staging and storage investment came to under $200.00, well worth it because within 29 days, we had a buyer who fell in love with it and we were under contract!

House #2:  I arranged to have someone come and clean out the mess, so that investors would be able to see what they were dealing with.  In this case, all the staging in the world could not have helped!  Priced as a total fix-up, this house was snapped up by investors in just 1 day!

House #3:  The owners had already placed an offer on a lovely new home and were ready to do whatever it took to sell this one fast.  We replaced the carpet, lighting, and staged the entire home within 2 weeks.  The inside now matched the gorgeous exterior.  The whole investment for carpet, painting, lighting, and staging came to about $5,500.  We had multiple offers its first day of showing and it sold for $9,000 over asking price. 

Each of these homes had some serious issues that could have left them sitting on the market, unsold.  In each of these cases, the owners were ready to sell.  They were ready to price the homes competitively and if needed, stage their homes to increase the appeal to buyers.

 There is hope for every home!

Even in this market, there is NO reason for any home to remain unsold.  The fact is homes that are priced well and showing well are selling.

That, my friends, is good news for everyone!

Michele Rose is a Realtor and Professional Home Stager in Burlington County, NJ.  She has been assisting both buyers and sellers with their real estate needs for the last 6 years.  In 2007, she founded Rose-Colored Staging, a professional home staging and redesign business, to help sellers and other Realtors successfully market their listings with professional home staging.

 

Budd's KNP Farmer's Market, Country Store, Kids Pick Your Own!

 Budd's KNP Farmer's Market, a little hot spot off the beaten path in Pemberton, NJ turns out to be a fabulous find!

I was on a quest for local honey (a teaspoon a day to battle seasonal allergies) only to discover a goldmine!  Budd's KNP Farms Country Market and Country Kitchen not only carries Bob's Buzzy Bee's Honey made in Yardville, NJ, but they carry an entire inventory of products including their low milk price of only $2.99 a gallon!  One visit and I was already hooked on this little gem of a country store.  "Old-fashioned" is right up my alley.

With many to choose from, we bought a beautiful hanging petunia plant for Mom.  We have had their skim milk, eggs, honey, banana nut bread, homemade chocolate and mint chocolate chip ice cream, key lime pie (I had never had it, and though slightly tart, it was delicious.)  One day we split a footlong hoagie for $3.99 with a bag of chips (chips that looked and tasted homemade) and to my surprise, a warm chocolate chip cookie that the cashier gave us while we waited for our sandwich to be made! (I'm really beginning to like this place.)

 

 

Groceries, Deli, Dairy, Breads, Homemade Baked Goods, Jellies, Jams, Sauces, Soda, Snacks, Pet Products, Fresh Jersey Produce, Seafood, Tobacco, Flowers and Plants and a whole lot more!

A Mom-and-Pop kind of place, they cook and bake on the premises for take-out only and I was told that if it's not on the menu, just ask and they'll whip something up for you in the kitchen.  Budd's Chuckwagon lists a full hot and cold menu including breakfast (which is available all day) lunch, dinner, and snacks. There are outdoor picnic tables for dining and you are welcome to bring your own bottle.  They even do party trays!


Listed with Jersey Fresh and Pick Your Own, this is a great place for the whole family!  They accept debit and credit cards with a $2.00 service fee, and of course, cash.  Family First WIC and Senior FMNP checks accepted.  For squirmy little ones, there are restrooms available.

Budd's KNP Farms is at 131-132 Vincentown Road in Pemberton New Jersey.
Contact numbers are: 609-894-4817 and 1-800-274-2102, email at
Buddsknpfarms@verizon.net.
Check out their site:
http://mysite.verizon.net/vzeye50t/

 

 

With her permission, this blog comes to me via my sister, Lisa Rose, and was originally published at: "Lisa's Bodacious Burlington County:  http://su.pr/Aik2vX

Michele Rose is a Realtor and Professional Home Stager in Burlington County, NJ.  She has been assisting both buyers and sellers with their real estate needs for the last 5 years.  In 2007, she founded Rose-Colored Staging, a professional home staging and redesign business, to help sellers successfully market their homes with professional home staging.