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Real Estate Savvy

San Diego, California

Consumer centric information to facilitate knowledgeable real estate decisions for buying, selling and investing in San Diego real estate.

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Real Estate Savvy

What makes for a winning marketing plan and who is in control of it?

May. 15, 2007
Categorized in: For Sellers

It is time to sell the old place and you are interviewing local REALTORS hoping to hear that your home will fetch a "pie in the sky"  price.

Doubtful that will happen but let's take a look at why you might have that expectation.

The agent wants the listing and most will tell you the market today is more normal ( level pricing with lower appreciation). You will be informed that prices have adjusted downward from the lofty exaggerated prices of a couple of years ago. The agent will also show and explain their great marketing plan and as you will notice, they will be doing a lot of advertising and ultimately have to accept that too high of price you forced on them. So the process begins.

1st weeks open house, ads in the newspaper, brochure box on the sign post, nice property brochure and the end of the first week results, No offers. The agent said it will take a while, so the request for patience is to be expected.

What's wrong with this picture? Perhaps in your mind, nothing. In my mind, it is very wrong and it all started with the marketing plan the agent presented to you that you have to great of an influence on. Setting the Price.

The Just Listed mailing will be sent to families that own a home in the neighborhood just like yours. Do you honestly believe that the neighbors want two homes or will sell theirs to buy yours? Do you believe that they have friends that want to live next door or down the street> Doubtful. Brokerages have been training their agents to send out the Just Listed announcements for years. Why?  In hopes  that neighbors will see that you selected firm if a neighbor is going to sell soon that they should select their firm as well. Great for the agent and company, not that beneficial for you the seller.

The ad in the newspaper was not put there to sell your home. It is there to get the phone to ring and hopefully attract a qualified buyer or seller prospect ( not to sell your home however).

The property brochure box will be full for the neighborhood kids to take and throw all over the place or to attract drive bys from looky loos will likely not sell your home either. If they are serious buyers they are already working with an agent and should not be discovering your home for the first time from the flyer. If the home is within the right search parameters for the buyer, they should have already received the information on the property. The property brochure is useful but likely isn't going to sell the property. I am not going to dissect all the elements of a possible marketing plan and counter each one. The point being that most things done in a marketing plan are  useful for something or someone but can they create the desired result of selling your home? Not in and of themselves, no.

So exactly what is it in the agents marketing plan that is going to "sell" your home? For starters being in the MLS and generating a strong local market and Internet presence for your home is good. Exposing the home to the likely buyers is excellent as well. The devil is in the details but it all starts and ends with price to value. This is not easy for most homeowners to understand but it is one of the most important considerations in your selection of who should be marketing the home in the first place. 

If your REALTOR makes it crystal clear to you that 90% of any good marketing plan is setting the correct price, then you may be on to something. If the agent told you that since most of the qualified buyers for your home are already under contract or already working with an agent, and they tell you that 50% of the actual marketing plan is directed to the agents who work with the Buyers in the greater area that your home is in, you are hearing the beginnings of a great plan. If the agent has as part of the marketing plan an excellent Internet Marketing presence, hang on to that agent because your home is most likely going to be sold soon. This is, with the the following caveat. 

The CMA prepared for you and used to reinforce the entire marketing plan is a bit like looking in a rear view mirror. It doesn't tell you the future of the market but rather where the market has been. The market is ever changing with strong economic influences from sources that have much to do directly or indirectly with what your home might be worth at any given point in time. An easy example to understand that principle would be the cost of money. You don't control that cost but it influences the Buyer's willingness to purchase. If your agent helped you comprehend what the accurate current market trend is and if it happens that it be currently be Buyers Market, and you priced your home too high-big mistake! A huge mistake in fact that will take some real effort to recover from. Many sellers of course won't recover.

If you priced your home in a range where comparables have been that have been more upgraded than yours, that is another big mistake. Buyers tend to search for properties at the top end of their qualified price range. They do not expect to pay top dollar and get less. Your home will be passed over and over. Buyers that would be suitable for your home at the correct price then would just as likely not ever see it. 

This miscalculation, renders the usefulness of the marketing plan out of sync with the market and most everything done or planned marketing wise will not yield the expected results. Selling your home for the most money and in the fastest time possible will face many obstacles that should not be there.

As a seller you must clearly understand that you are partners with the REALTOR you choose and your duty is the most difficult. Understanding that you will not be the exception to the pricing rule, no matter how many nice things you did to stage the property with strenghten your position in the market. If the property is priced wrong for the current market, you are in for some very disappointing results.

Is it your fault then that the agent you hired took your listing overpriced?  That depends on you. Was it your main real consideration in the interview process and further did you accept a marketing plan that was based on the wrong ( rear view mirror) criteria. If you want professional results and have hired the professional, then you should relinquish your unrealistic hold on what you think your home is worth and allow the REALTOR to market your home correctly ( at the correct market value) to where the Buyers are and then you can enjoy the results of having contributed greatly ( pricing the home correctly in the first place) to the winning marketing plan.

                      

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Market Slowdown Forces Sale of...

May. 15, 2007
Categorized in: Real Estate Market News

Once coveted parcels of land purchased for new homes and subdivisions are being sold off at record pace. Home Builders under contract to purchase land are passing on deals already made and are often forfeiting the huge deposits in the millions of dollars on many of them.

The Home Builders are not only are walking away from options to purchase the lots but are also seeking delays in closing the sales on the land already underway. Publicly traded Home Builders are writing off huge options that were purchased for future development.

Softening demand for some residential land is not surprising given what's happening in the housing market slowdown. Today, home builders are focused on slashing their inventories of homes and land, certainly not purchasing more land.

In some areas of the country land is very scarce and the land holders there are hanging on awaiting stabilization of the housing markets to catch the next upward tide.

 

Setting the Parameters for Buying a New Home

May. 14, 2007
Categorized in: For Buyers

                         

    

When discussing with your agent what kind of home you want and what areas you will consider, be sure not to be so rigid as to miss some of the great possibilities in the market.

Getting Pre-approved for your home loan is one of the first things on your list. Knowing in advance how much home payments will be ( be sure to factor in the property taxes, insurance and a reserve for upkeep ) for the home price range within your means will help you stay realistic in your search.

If you are a First Time Home Buyer this is essential.

If you are a Move Up Buyer, when comparing your current costs to your projected  new home costs, be sure to also consider costs associated with re-decorating or landscaping, the added maintenance, increase in property taxes, utilities , etc. Once you have worked out your budget be sure to share this with your agent and they can help you adjust your budget to achieve your goals. The agent may be able to find ways to offset some of your new projected costs that might even provide you with a better fit in the new home selection. Sellers also may be able to help offset some of these with credits that will make their home a better fit overall

Buying a 2nd Home for Long Term Investment of Your Earned Equities

May. 14, 2007
Categorized in: Adding Value to Your Life

Owning a second home isn't for only the well healed who are concerned about financing their children´s college education, finding an alternative to languishing company 401K plans or individual IRAs in order to have a secure retirement, or simply for a way to attain additional monthly income. In fact, you may be surprised to learn that second homes are becoming mainstream all across the country, whether they're used for rental income or as vacation homes. Today, more than 10 million dwellings in this country are second or third homes and they account for better than 6 percent of residential sales. Three-quarters are considered vacation homes and the rest are investment properties or undeveloped land.

                                

With all the equity that has been earned and often sitting in your primary residence, there would be no better use for it than to re-invest in a second home or an income property providing a nest egg for the retirement years. There is no better long term investment than Real property, be it a second home or invested into income producing property.

 

San Diego on Forbes List as #1 Most Overpriced Real Estate Market

May. 13, 2007

Just as we thought we were getting a handle on things, here we go again. MOST OVERPRICED REAL ESTATE MARKET, a great new mantra for Americas Finest City. Matt Woolsey, of Forbes who wrote the article,  admits that " had the weather been factored in, San Diego would have avoided our list of the top 10 most overpriced cities". He added that the rankings were based on a theoretical "price to earnings" ratio. This was attempting to put a price on the measure of what a homeowner paid for every $1 on return and then the housing affordability was also factored in. 

                         

Forbes also identified a list of the least overpriced markets.  The least over priced real estate market city was... drum roll..... Charlotte, North Carolina. Yeah! The median price stands at $190,600. In San Diego, there is nothing resembling a home for that price. To read the article from Forbes, click here on FORBES

The only one good note in the article for San Diego was that it did not rank 1st in any of the individual measurements but taken over all, it landed in the top position as the most overpriced real market in the United States.