Last updated on March 22, 2003 Email this Print this
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HOME SELLING Hire a Pro Nearly a fifth of sellers (and even more buyers) choose a real estate agent who is a
friend or relative, according to a survey by the National Association of Realtors. There
are better ways to ensure you spend 6% to 7% of your home's selling price wisely. For starters, you'll want to find an agent who knows your neighborhood, who has a good
working knowledge of schools, roads, shopping, swim and tennis clubs, and other local
amenities.
Make agents compete for your listing
Note the names on neighborhood for-sale signs and in newspaper ads. Once you've
compiled a list of three or four agents who seem to be doing the most business, go see
them in action. Stop by their open houses and see how they treat potential buyers. (You
don't need to confess that you're thinking of selling.) Afterward, call those you are
still interested in and invite them to make a listing presentation.
Beware the agent who gushes about how fast your home will sell and promises a higher
price than other homes nearby.
Ask agents to compare the original asking and selling prices for homes they've sold
recently.
Good agents base their estimate on a review of recently closed sales of homes similar
to yours. They take into consideration prices of other homes on the market and know which
neighborhoods are competing for the same pool of buyers.
Ask each agent how many transactions they've closed over the past 12 months. Their
answer should be about one per month. And it's best if most of those houses were in your
price range.
Ask to see copies of actual ads and brochures used to sell homes like yours. How many
ads will run for your home and in which publications?
Your home should be placed on the brokers' tour right after you've listed -- when your
fresh new listing will generate the most enthusiasm from other agents.
It's a good idea to have an open house occasionally, even though most open houses don't
actually prodce buyers. But don't automatically reject an agent who deemphasizes open
houses in favor of other marketing strategies.
Finally, check references. Ask for names of recent clients, then call and ask how well
the agent stayed in touch, how close the listing price was to the sales price, and whether
they would use that agent again.
Customize the contract
The typical (and usually the best) listing arrangement is to give the agent
"exclusive right to sell" your home. That means if another agent actually brings
in a buyer, your agent will split the commission with the other agent. This arrangement
gets your home the most attention from other agents.
Commit to the shortest possible listing period -- say, three months -- and renew it
then if you like. If the agent wants you to sign up for longer, compromise: Peg your
listing to the average time it takes to sell a home like yours, based on data from the
local multiple listing service (the database of homes for sale by all the brokers in your
area).
Give yourself an out
That does not mean you're stuck with an agent who turns out to be a nightmare. Write a
sentence into the listing contract that allows you to cancel the agreement if you aren't
satisfied with the agent's performance.
Brokerages will typically try to reassign you to another agent, and if that still
doesn't work out, will usually release you from the contract.
Before signing, you should also feel free to cross out any statement in the contract
requiring you to arbitrate any disputes you have with the agent. You may reserve the right
to take legal action.
Get on the market ASAP
Require the agent to place your home in the multiple listing
service within 48 hours of your signing the listing contract.
Some unscrupulous agents will "pocket" the listing, hoping to give themselves
or another agent in their brokerage office first crack at an in-house sale. That's doubly
lucrative because the brokerage doesn't have to share the commission with an outsider.
But you are better off if your house is exposed to the full market of buyers. An
in-house sale may not produce the highest bidder -- and you may not get the best price for
your home.
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