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Should You Start with a High Sales
Price? Because of the change
in real estate market conditions, more home sellers are competing for
fewer home buyers. So once again, it seemed important to challenge a
long-standing "myth" of real estate.
"The initial listing price isn't that important because the price can
always be adjusted down later."
Many homeowners believe this.
It is a myth. Not true.
If most buyers first viewed your house because of a newspaper ad, a
magazine, the internet, brochures, or the sign in your front yard, the
initial listing price probably would not make a difference. The house
would always be "new" to those seeing it.
Nevertheless, most home buyers do NOT come to your house because of
various types of advertising. That is another myth.
Sure, buyers call on an ad, they often LOOK at that house, but not
always. Once they talk to an agent, they may discover it isn't what
they need (or want) at all.
However, they ARE talking to an agent. That agent knows the current
inventory and will know of another property that DOES fit their needs.
Those are the properties buyers look at, and THIS is how most buyers
end up looking at your house, too. The reason is other agents, not
because of your ad.
Hardly anyone buys the house in the ad.
As a result, you need to get other agents interested in your property,
and this is where your listing agent comes in, and why a good listing
agent is extremely important. The listing agent gets buyer's agents
looking at your home.
Those agents have clients who called in on other properties.
Buyer's agents are not swayed by advertising. They look at the needs
of the client, where the client wants to live, location, condition,
and other details of the property...
And most importantly....
...price.
If your house is overpriced, agents are going to show similar homes
that are priced more attractively. Your listing will get passed over.
Agents pay MOST attention to homes newly on the market. There are
fewer NEW listings than current listings. It is easier to keep an eye
out for what is NEW, compared to the vast number of current listings.
New listings are on the "hot" sheet circulated in real estate offices.
The MLS computer identifies new listings. Your listing agent may hire
a service to distribute fliers to all the buyer's agents. There are
office previews and MLS tours to showcase new home listings. A lot of
attention is focused on what is NEW.
With agent's looking at newly listed homes so aggressively, a properly
priced home gets attention.
An overpriced home gets passed over.
You may be thinking, "But I'm willing to negotiate!"
Buyers are not thinking in advance about how much you are willing to
negotiate. They are comparing your asking price to other asking
prices.
Moreover, when your house is new on the market, you may not be willing
to negotiate as much as you will later, once you have realized your
error. Keep in mind that statistics show, quite often, the first offer
is the best offer.
So what happens if you overprice in the beginning and get more
realistic later?
You don't have all those important Buyer's Agents looking at your
listing because it is NEW. A price reduction later in the listing
cycle often gets overlooked. It is just one of many listings, not one
of a few new listings.
As time passes, you could actually become desperate to sell because
you've accepted a new job or because you have already bought a new
home.
That is a recipe for receiving lowball offers, so you could end up
selling for less than if you had priced the home correctly in the
first place.
Agents know this stuff, but many sellers still mistakenly believe they
should "price it high" because they can lower the price later, if
necessary.
That is not the best strategy.
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