The Basics of Marketing Your Home
Your REALTOR®’s marketing efforts and considerations will include advertising, showing
the property, how long the house has been on the market and whether you’re buying
another home. Your home should be listed, whenever possible, through a Multiple Listing
Service (MLS).
Advertising and Promotion
Properties are commonly advertised through real estate agents websites, Internet
home search/listing services, classified advertising and real estate guides. Promotion
efforts through office and MLS tours area a good way of getting other buy agents
to view your home and to promote it to the buyers they are working with.
Even with all these advertising avenues, “For Sale” signs on front lawns are still
remarkably effective. Many REALTORS® promote their websites on the sign and use brochure
boxes with the signs to market the property. When appropriate, and with your permission,
your REALTOR® may send a mailing about your property to neighbors. Sometimes one
of them has a friend of relative who always wanted to live near them. You never know
how far reaching the benefits of word-of-mouth advertising by friends, relatives
and neighbors can be.
Showings and Open Houses
To prepare your home for viewing, make it as bright, clean, cheerful and serene as
possible. Always look at your home from a buyer’s point of view. Your REALTOR® will
probably find a tactful way to suggest that you be absent while the house is being
shown to prospective buyers, because your presence will inhibit their actions and
conversations. They won’t feel free to open closets and cabinets, test out the plumbing
and discuss their observations objectively as they walk through the house. It goes
without saying that your children and pets should not be on the premises either.
If your REALTOR® has scheduled an open house, you may want to notify the neighbors,
and assure them that they will be welcome. They’ll jump at the chance to poke around
in your house, and sometimes they can turn up a buyer among their friends.
Quick tips for showings and open houses:
- Clean or replace dirty or worn carpets
- Open all curtains and blinds
- Replaced any burned out light bulbs and turn on all lights
- Clear all clutter
- Clear all countertops
- Wash and put away any dirty dishes
- Set the dining room or kitchen table if you have a particular nice linen or china
- Simmer a few drops of vanilla on the stove
- Put on soft music
- Burn wood in the fireplace on cold days, otherwise clean the fireplace
- Put fresh towels in the bathroom
- Take any laundry out of the washer and dryer
- Leave the house so your REALTOR® is free to deal with prospective buyers in a professional
manner
- Put pets in cages or take them to a neighbor
How Long Has Your House Been on the Market?
Professional appraisers sum up their entire body or knowledge in three words: “Buyers
make value.” Your home is worth as much as a buyer will pay for it.
If your home has been on the market for months, it’s a clear message that the property
may not be worth what you’re asking for. This is particularly true if there haven’t
been many prospects coming to see it. What you do at that point depends on whether
you really need to sell, and whether you’re working with a time limit.
If you’re not really motivated to move soon, you can always wait - years if necessary
- and hope inflation will catch up with the price you want. The problem is that in
that time, your home begins to feel shopworn. Buyers become suspicious of a house
that’s been for sale for a long time.
If you really do need to sell, with your REALTOR® discuss a schedule for gradually
dropping your price until you find a level that attracts buyers. There’s no point
in saying, “We simply can’t see our house.” Anything will sell if the price is right.
If You’re Buying Another Home
You may wonder what will happen when you’re selling one home and buying another -
how will all the details work out? This is a common situation and REALTORS®, lawyers,
and title and escrow companies have plenty of experience in arranging contracts and
loans so that the two transactions dovetail smoothly.
Should you sell your home first then buy or buy first then sell? Ideally, it’s best
to find a home you like and make an offer subject to selling your current home. This
generally works in a normal market. However, in a “hot” market most sellers will
not accept a “subject to sale” offer. In this case you need to sell your home first
and then buy a new home in the interim period between selling and vacating your house.
If you find that you need to buy the next house before you’ve received the proceeds
from the present one, lending institutions can sometimes make you a short-term “bridge”
loan to tide you over between the two transactions. Make sure you fully understand
the exposure and emotional investment before proceeding with this type of loan.