The Do’s and Dont’s about Showing your Home

Via ColdwellBanker.com…

Along with their ability to afford it, home buyers’ personal impressions of a home are likely to play a large part in determining whether they pursue negotiations for it. Home sellers should make every effort to give buyers a great first impression of their home.

Clearing the household

One common difficulty is that sellers often want to be there when buyers are walking through their home. This makes a certain amount of sense, but many experts agree it is better for the current homeowners to be absent. That can make it easier for prospective buyers to imagine themselves living there, and the alternative may lead to feelings of pressure, unease and awkwardness. Having the current homeowners present can cause an unpleasant atmosphere, coloring potential buyers’ opinions due to the perception they are being watched and preventing them from discussing the home honestly while there.

Another factor home sellers may forget about is pets. While fish or other animals inside an enclosed container are unlikely to pose difficulties, prospective buyers may not appreciate being greeted or followed by a dog or cat. Some may even be allergic or dislike the pet. While this has nothing to do with the home directly, it can still affect their memories of the walkthrough experience.

Presenting a home at its best

The little things can frequently have a significant impact on how a home is perceived, so homeowners looking to sell should make an effort to ensure that the home is clean and tidy. It should look like someone lives there, but taking out the trash, removing clutter, ensuring there are no dirty dishes and taking similar steps is advisable.

If there are pest concerns surrounding a home, they should be resolved before it is visited whenever possible. Prospective buyers who see or hear pests are likely to draw the worst conclusions and leave, even if the problem is only a brief blot on an otherwise solid record.

Specific rooms and areas of the home may come with their own concerns, as well. Bathrooms and kitchens commonly attract dirt, and should generally be a focus of cleaning efforts. Damp or wet basements may cause prospective buyers to fear mold, leaking that weakens the foundation, flooding and other problems.

Trying to Define “Home”

Via Coldwell Banker’s Blue Matter

Home.

It’s a simple word with more meanings than one would expect. It’s a term that crosses continents and has universal appeal. Sports, entertainment and even financial sectors all use the word on a regular basis. It’s a part of pop culture, music and a niche market all wrapped in one.

Today the headlines have tried to change the definition of home. The meaning has been construed to be solely about financial value, investment and an indicator of market plight, but what is missing is seeing the true definition of home in the eyes of those who own one.

I set out to see how people would define their home as well as what they thought the best part about being home is  by polling homeowners on Twitter, Facebook and people that I met during my recent travels. Ironically, not a single person of the hundreds of response I received talked about the monetary value of their residence. Every response was different.

A number of responses brought the idea of a place of comfort, love, rejuvenation and even giving. Some took the concept and defined it in a physical way with the sense of dominion by calling it their palace, castle or kingdom.  Others defined it more intimately by defining their home as “no place like it” and “a gathering place for friends and family.”

The only consistent thing from the responses was that everyone defines home differently.

I love some of the response when I asked what their favorite part of their home was. One responded that “it’s mine and I bought it!” My favorite is someone who answered “the creaking front door.” When I asked for an explanation they replied, “It signals my two little ones that daddy is home and they rush out to greet me every afternoon.” That’s a priceless definition.

For me, home is difficult to define. It’s defined more by memories and moments than by adjectives. There are many great orators and poets who can more eloquently define home than I ever could. Some you’re probably familiar with. The Roman philosopher and author, Pliny the Elder, was the originator of the famous phrase, “home is where the heart is.”

But perhaps the most famous quote about home is credited to a fictional girl from Kansas named Dorothy. What many people don’t realize is that Dorothy’s legendary wish while she taps her ruby red slippers is actually borrowed from an 18th century opera called Clari, The Maid of Milan and written by John Howard Payne. Payne’s lyrics, though over a hundred years old, still very much apply today in the minds of a many homeowner:

Mid pleasures and palaces though we may roam,
Be it ever so humble, there’s no place like home;
A charm from the sky seems to hallow us there,
Which, seek through the world, is ne’er met with elsewhere.
Home, home, sweet, sweet home!
There’s no place like home, oh, there’s no place like home!

Well said, Mr. Payne. Share how you define home or what’s the best part about your home in the comments.

Coldwell Banker Home Listing Report

The Home Listing Report (HLR) serves as a “snapshot” of local real estate markets across the country. It provides the average listing prices for four-bedroom, two-bathroom homes in more than 2,300 North American markets that appeared on coldwellbanker.com between September 2010 and March 2011. The infographic below allows you the ability to compare home values in more than 2,300 real estate markets.

Click image for infographic

“REAL ESTATE IS LOCAL!” said Jim Gillespie, CEO of Coldwell Banker. “So when Coldwell Banker issued our annual Home Listing Report (HLR), we kept that in mind.”

Newport Beach, Ca topped this list as most expensive, with a four-bedroom, 2-bath listing for $2.5 Million, while Niagara Falls, New York came in as most affordable, with a listing price of $61,000. For most people, $2.5 million is out of the price range, but  1,545 markets had average listing prices of less than $300,000 for a four-bedroom, two-bath home.

“At the end of the day, the housing market is about buying a particular house, on a particular street, in a particular neighborhood.  It’s hyper-local, and I’m so proud that our trusted agents can help buyers going through this process understand what’s going on in any given market,” Gillespie said.

The full report, complete with market rankings and an automated formula to find out comparable prices for your home in other U.S. and Canadian markets, is available on http://hlr.coldwellbanker.com.

How to Sell Your Home in Tough Times

CNN Money really hit the nail on the head with this one. This article contains tons of great tips and suggestions to getting your home sold without folding too much to the times. Sellers are hesitant to list there home in fear of substantial losses but sometimes there are ways around this.

If you’re in the market to sell your home, you probably feel you can’t catch a break. Nearly five years into the housing bust, when many experts thought the real estate market would at least have stabilized, sales and prices are still dropping in most of the country.

Fortunately, there is one glimmer of good news. Bargain hunters, too, know that home prices are down some 32% from their peak. In a recent CNNMoney survey, three-quarters said that it was a good time to buy a home. But translating that interest into an actual sale can require some extreme measures.

It’s not enough to show buyers your house is a deal: You have to convince them it’s a total steal. That means slashing your price, bringing in a pro to pretty it up, and creating a killer website for your home. Here’s how to do it right.

Slash Your Price, Bigtime

Sellers are still loath to accept the extent of the toll the bust took on their homes’ value, says Tara-Nicholle Nelson, consumer educator for the housing website Trulia.com.

Many also give in to the temptation to list the property above fair market value to see what happens. Big mistake. About a quarter of sellers in the past year initially listed too high and were forced to knock the price lower, according to Trulia.com. Even in cities that have held up well, such as Charlotte, 25% of sellers resort to at least one price cut, and often two.

6 cities slashing prices

Think you can always drop the price if your home doesn’t sell? Bigger mistake.

“The first 30 days on the market are the most important,” says Norwalk, Conn., realtor Elizabeth Kamar. That’s when your place attracts the most attention and gets the most showings. The result: You often end up with less than you would have if you priced it right to begin with, says Kamar. So get aggressive right out of the gate.

Undercut your competition. In normal times listings of similar properties in your area would give you a good sense of what your home might sell for. Today there’s a big gap between what sellers want and what buyers are willing to pay.

Instead, figure out what you can realistically expect to get by asking your realtor to show you what houses similar to yours have sold for in the past three to six months. If more than a couple of the comparable properties were foreclosures or short sales, look closely at the photos and descriptions of those former listings. Distressed homes should be included in your comps if they are in move-in condition, says Las Vegas realtor Paul Bell.

Once you have a handle on your likely sale price, list your home a bit beneath that, says Rockaway, N.J., agent Ellen Klein. You don’t have to undercut by much to attract attention, because that price will probably still be about 10% or 15% below what other homes are listed for. Even if you’re competing with lots of foreclosures and short sales, your price should generate enough interest to attract more than one bidder, pushing up the final price to where it should be.

When Dorchester, Mass., realtor Julie Simmons wanted to sell her own home in January, she listed it at $460,000, about $5,000 to $10,000 below what she thought she’d sell for.

“I knew I had to attract attention,” she says. Even in a harsh winter, she received four offers in less than two weeks — and sold for $465,000.

Take out the ax. No bites within 30 days? Make a big move.

“When a property sits, people start thinking it must be listed too high,” says Klein. To stimulate interest, make a giant cut — as much as 10% of the asking price, and even more in an area where prices are still falling. That should be enough to warrant a second look from buyers who passed the first time, and to bring in a new pool of potentials who are hunting in the lower price range.

Last year Montclair, N.J., empty nesters Peter and Lauren Meyer decided to downsize from their seven-bedroom home to an apartment in the same town. They put their home on the market for $1.1 million, more than their realtor suggested. Six months and four price cuts later they pulled it off the market at $889,000.

“At that point we wrestled with lowering the price further, but we were ready to move on,” says Peter. The couple relisted their home for $799,000 and it sold for $808,000.

Play hardball. It’s okay to reject low-ball offers if a buyer won’t budge. But if a buyer is willing to negotiate, push aside feelings of anger or insult and start counteroffering, says Mabel Guzman, president of the Chicago Association of Realtors.

Ideally you’ll be able to negotiate within $10,000 to $20,000 of an acceptable offer. Then, “using incentives as carrots and sticks can make it easier to reach an agreement,” says Guzman. For example, if your buyer refuses to dicker, you might offer to leave behind the appliances. Or maybe you’d rather take the reduced price but have the buyer agree that you take 60 days, not 30, to move out.

Hire a Stager

There are people who want to sell, and there are people who have to sell. Kathy and Rex Roberts are among the latter. Based in West Hartford, Conn., the couple, who have two children, have been living in different cities since early December, when Rex, an IT auditor, started a new job in Silver Spring, Md., after a layoff.

Before and after: Manhattan loft makeover

Listed that same month, their solidly built three-bedroom 1956 colonial has had no offers, despite two price cuts (it’s currently at $389,500). Between rent on Rex’s new place and their carrying costs on the house, they’re paying a budget-straining $4,000 a month. “We need to sell,” says Rex, “but we’re not willing to drop the price again.”

So in March they tried something new: professional home staging. Staging, increasingly popular with homeowners trying to sell mid-range houses, can extend from simply rearranging existing furniture to repainting, replacing fixtures, and bringing in new furnishings. The goal: to highlight the house’s best features while making it as easy as possible for buyers to imagine themselves living there. Veteran real estate brokers interviewed by MONEY say that proper staging can speed the sale and often increase the price too. The key is to get it done right.

Start with an open mind. Staging demands a psychological shift that many homeowners find challenging: thinking of your house not as your home but as a set. That means scrubbing away evidence that you actually live there. Your goal: the homey yet impersonal look of a Pottery Barn catalogue.

Find the right stager. The ASP (accredited staging professional) designation is a plus — it indicates the stager has gone through some basic training — but it isn’t essential. Get names from realtors or at realestatestagingassociation.com, then review the stager’s online portfolio of before-and-after photos. Next, call homeowner references and ask how fast their homes sold after staging and whether they think the work helped.

Establish a budget and ask the stager to work within it. Stagers typically charge $150 to $400 to walk through your home and give recommendations for each room. You can then execute the plan yourself or hire the stager to do it for an hourly fee, usually $100 or so, plus the cost of any new paint or furnishings.

If you make big changes, costs can add up — but “I can often make a huge difference using what homeowners already have,” says Mary D. Brooks, a stager and realtor from Breckenridge, Colo.

See whether your realtor will pay. If you’re on the hook for a full 6% commission, you have significant negotiating power. “I’m happy to pay for staging because I know it works,” says realtor Paul Aspelin of Victoria, Minn.

As for the Robertses, after getting advice from stager Kara Woods, owner of Stage to Move in Danbury, Conn., they painted their lavender dining room a soft gray and removed excess furniture, among other things; a professional stylist redid the living room (see above). “It’s incredible how much bigger and more modern it looks,” says Kathy.

Find the Right Hook

These days it’s going to take far more than a FOR SALE sign in the front yard and a spot on the multiple-listing service to get potential buyers in the door. That means getting the word out in a creative fashion — and finding a realtor who is willing to do the same.

“The more eyeballs that get on the listing, the better,” says Katie Curnutte of the real estate information website Zillow.com. To do that, you need a multipronged marketing plan of attack.

Create a great site. About 90% of buyers begin their search on the Internet, according to the National Association of Realtors. Make sure your home’s online presence has a dozen or two photos: Having 20 instead of five photos will almost double the number of hits you’ll get, according to Zillow.com.

Vulture investors flipping their way to real estate profits

Throw money at them. Incentives can perk buyers’ interest just as much as price cuts, says Matt Brown, director of business development at ForSaleByOwner.com. In fact, many buyers will agree to a higher price if their upfront costs are lowered, since they often run short on cash.

If you can afford it, offer to cover the buyer’s closing costs or pay the first year’s property taxes or condo or homeowner association dues. However, those freebies may be practically standard, particularly in areas rife with distressed properties.

In that case, says realtor Guzman, you might be able to bring buyers to the door by tossing in an unusual bonus, such as a $1,000 gift card (throw in one for the buyer’s agent as well); a belonging they mentioned loving, such as the pool table or plasma TV; or a $5,000 credit to use in the home as they wish. (You can even pay upfront points so that they can get a lower mortgage rate, if you can swing it.)

Be aware, though, that you must disclose any such gifts or payments when the offer is agreed on, and some lenders will not approve them. If so, you might have to find another incentive that the bank doesn’t object to.

Showcase super condition. Yes, some buyers are hunting for foreclosures in rough shape that they can nab for a song. Yet just as many shoppers don’t want — or don’t know how — to put in that sweat equity. So hire an inspector to identify every problem with the home, even seemingly minor issues such as dripping faucets, and fix them.

“If an outlet doesn’t work, why get the buyer wondering what else is broken?” asks Beth Foley, an associate broker in Holland, Mich. Tell your realtor to give anyone who tours your home a copy of the inspection report and your list of fixes.

Spread the word online. Having your home listed on a major website like Realtor.com isn’t enough. Ask your realtor if you’ll get an “enhanced” listing on the site, where your home gets top promotional billing. Many realtors will create a website just for your home. You also want to get your listing on alternative sites like Craigslist or even Facebook.

In 2009, when Karen Mauro put her small, historic two-bedroom Orange County, Calif., home on the market she thought it would be a tough sale. Realtor Lisa Blanc listed the property at $467,500 and spread the word not only through the MLS listing but also with an update on her Facebook page. A Facebook friend of Blanc’s passed the info to someone she knew was looking for that kind of house. Within a week, Mauro had an offer for $460,000.

Stay away — far away. In better times you may not feel obliged to drop everything to accommodate prospective buyers’ schedules. Today, if buyers can’t get in on their time, they’ll skip it, says Summer Greene, who manages realtors in the Fort Lauderdale area. So be prepared to show a perfectly clean home at a moment’s notice. And disappear (along with your dog, if possible) for all showings and open houses so that prospects can imagine themselves in your house — an impossible task when your family is vegging on the couch.

Is Dare County a “Ghost Town”?

Ghost of Blackbeard

Ghost of Blackbeard

Is Dare County really a “ghost town”? Yahoo Finance seems to think so, but I’m not sure I agree with their assessment.

Yahoo Finance recently ran an article about American Ghost Towns of the 21st Century, and they included Dare County at #6 on their top 10 list. Sure, the Ghost of Blackbeard lives here, but a ghost town?!…I beg to differ.

Here’s what Yahoo Finance had to say about Dare County:

6. Dare County, N.C.

Number of homes: 33,492
Vacancy rate: 57%
Population: 95,828

Dare County includes the northern-most parts of North Carolina’s Outer Banks. The situation in the vacation area is so severe that the “Outer Banks Voice” recently wrote, “If Dare County Manager Bobby Outten was intending to sound an alarm by suggesting that the EMS helicopter and school nurses were expendable in the next budget, he probably succeeded.” His comments are unlikely to be terribly different from those of other executives of counties on the list. Vacant homes and homes which lose double-digit amounts of their value each year irreparably undermine the tax base. And, as services fall, fewer potential homeowners will consider investing in the area.

My first point of contention is that they don’t understand the location of Dare County. They mention that it includes the “northern-most parts of North Carolina’s Outer Banks.” This is clearly an error. The northern-most parts of the OBX belong to Currituck County. This could be considered a minor error, but to me it calls into question their research as a whole.

But the bigger issue I have is that despite the fact that they mention that Dare County encompasses the Outer Banks, they don’t seem to understand the relevance of this fact. The Outer Banks is a tourist destination with a large amount of vacation rental and second homes. Yes, there are a large amount of vacant homes on the OBX, but that is because they are not primary residences. We should expect vacation homes to be vacant for a large percentage of the year.

The article seems to argue that the economic/housing downturn has hit Dare County harder than other areas, and as a result,  home values are falling, services are falling, and fewer buyers are interested in the area. This seems like a big jump in reasoning. Yes, the housing downturn has affected the Outer Banks (like every other US market), but I would argue that as one of the strongest vacation rental home markets, the Outer Banks is more insulated from the downturn than most areas. We’ve mentioned a few articles on this blog that indicate that the vacation home/2nd home real estate market is increasing in strength; here are a couple examples:

The article mentions, “Some of the affected regions are tourist destinations, but much of that traffic has disappeared as the recession has caused people to sell or desert vacation homes and delay trips for leisure. This makes these areas particularly desolate when tourists are not around. The future of these areas is grim.”

Wow, quite an alarmist perspective. The Outer Banks has always been quiet in the offseason. The past few years have not been more quiet than usual, and definitely not “grim.” And as for in season, the OBX is gaining strength, not losing it.

As an industry, vacation rentals are making large gains in the travel market, and 2011 is starting very strong for OBX vacation rental homes with significant improvements over 2010…and 2010 was a strong year. We’ve mentioned a few articles that indicate the increasing strength of the vacation rental industry, and here are a couple examples:

This does not indicate a declining real estate market to me, and especially not a “ghost town.” And the March 2011 MLS stats seem to agree with my perspective.

Yes, Dare County has budget issues (like most US cities/states right now), and yes, unemployment is high (like the entire US), but this Yahoo Finance article strikes me as inaccurate. Dare County has a large amount of absentee owners and as a result, vacant homes during a large part of the year, but vacant homes in a vacation market do not necessarily indicate a “ghost town.” Yahoo Finance needs to reach past the statistics to understand the market as a whole. I would invite Yahoo Finance to visit the OBX July 4th weekend and tell us it’s a ghost town.

Outer Banks Real Estate Market – March Update

The following summary is from the Outer Banks Association of Realtors (OBAR) “Monthly Statistical Report.” March was definitely a strong month for the OBX real estate market.

Summary – It would be an understatement to say that March was a good month for sales because March was, in fact, a fabulous month. March 2011 sales are at their highest levels since March 2006 and sales are 34% higher when compared to March 2010. It should also be noted that sales on Hatteras Island have shown a 58% increase over March 2010 sales. The number of listings placed in an under contract status continues to rise with sales being up 20% from March 2010. The specifics are detailed below:

Sales

o Residential – Up 14% from March 2010 (129 units vs 113 units)

o Land – Up 200% from March 2010 (36 units vs 12 units)

o Commercial – Up 50% from March 2010 (1unit vs 2 units)

Under Contract

o Residential – Up 11% from March 2010 (163 units vs 147 units)

o Land – Up 94% from March 2010 (33 units vs 17 units)

o Commercial – Up 200% from March 2010 (3 units vs 1 unit)

Vacation Home Market on the Rebound

On the Rise

On the Rise

Here’s some good news for the real estate market…especially vacation destinations like the Outer Banks. Similar to a previous post we made commenting on a Wall St. Journal article, a recent market study by a real estate marketing firms shows growing consumer confidence in the second – or vacation – home market.

Over the past couple years most of the movement in the vacation home market has come from investors purchasing homes at a discount, often foreclosures and bank owned properties, but times may be changing. Reports are indicating a year-over-year increase of 800 percent of home-buyers interested in the purchase of a vacation home.

This good news comes from the third annual Cotton Report, which reports a polling of more than 800 participants on housing preferences, motivating factors, pricing levels and timelines for purchase. It included participants from 39 states, Canada, Europe and Latin America.

This trend is further supported by an increase in the number of buyers describing their transition as “a geographic relocation.”

With visitor spending in North Carolina rising over 9%, this is a great time to invest in a vacation home here in the Outer Banks.

Coldwell Banker Seaside Realty would love to help you find your dream vacation home. Please let us know if we can help with your search.

First “Green” Home on the Outer Banks

First Outer Banks LEED-certified Dwelling

First Outer Banks LEED-certified Dwelling

The essence of the Outer Banks is contained in its pristine, natural setting, and the goal of every OBX enthusiast is to keep the Outer Banks that way. Unfortunately, development does not always coincide with this goal. But there are an increasing about of building efforts that are making great strides toward working with nature rather than against it.

The Outer Banks is a relatively small community, and we can be behind the times a bit, but a recent OBX building project made a huge leap towards the forefront of “green” building efforts on the Outer Banks. The first “green” home on the Outer Banks… literally and figuratively.

The Virginia Pilot recently reported that this three-bedroom, two and a half-bath home in Southern Shores is setting the stage for earth-friendly building on the Outer Banks as the first and only LEED-certified dwelling.

Some of the “green” highlights include:

  • Strategic surface-water management and rain-water harvesting systems passively direct water away from the dwelling to various purposeful reservoirs. Including, a French drain, rain garden, landscaped berm and 1,500-gallon holding tank to collect water for irrigation.
  • Landscaping includes drought-tolerant native plants and a small grove of American hollies.
  • The home is heated and cooled geothermally, and lit easily by the sun through generous-sized low-E4 windows, which mitigate summer heat infiltration.
  • High-efficiency appliances, lighting and plumbing fixtures.
  • Well-sealed and double-insulated framing between 6-inch-thick walls.
  • A whole-house water filter and radiant-barrier roof sheathing.
  • Low-volatile organic compound, or VOC, paints, coatings, adhesives and carpets, as well as a central vacuum system and fresh air filtration/ventilation system

The homes estimated monthly energy-related cost to operate is $100. The Common Sense Green House is listed for $655,000. The builder explains “the whole point of green building is while we use less energy, water and materials, the quality of life is as good, if not better” than what we are accustomed to.

It’s great to see “green” building starting on the Outer Banks…and just in time for St. Patty’s Day!

Are Sunnier Skies on the Way for Real Estate?

OBX Sunrise

OBX Sunrise

It’s exciting to see all the news of better market conditions. Are sunnier skies on the horizon? A recent article on Realtor.org attempted to answer this burning question.

With home ownership rates at a sustainable 66 percent and a projected growth rate of 340 million by 2020, real estate’s long-term prospects remain bright.

Manufacturing output has been rising. The stock market has recovered nicely. Many companies are flush with cash. Consumer confidence has rebounded from very low levels, and jobs are being created.

Against this improving picture, we can expect to see some release of the demand that’s been building up for the last three years. Rising rental costs will also likely tip more renters into home ownership.

Putting these and other factors together, existing-home sales are projected to rise 8 percent to nearly 5.3 million units nationwide this year and possibly to 5.5 million in 2012.

At this level, home ownership is solid, and it’s also sustainable given our level of population growth.

Skies seem to be brightening.

Increased Confidence in a Real Estate Market Recovery-Where do we go from here?

The economy has always been, and will always be, cyclical. What goes up must come down, and visa versa. This goes for the real estate market as well. Recent reports have continued to show gains in existing and new home sales, increasing investor activity and an overall improvement in the market. These growth may not be substantial, but we continue to be moving in the right direction for restoring confidence among consumers and industry experts.

What’s Ahead

As the busy time in the real estate cycle approaches, RIS Media is predicting that we can expect 2011 to be better than 2010, with healthier trends compared to the abnormal boom times we saw in the early 2000’s. The market ahead will be driven by hopeful buyers who are regaining their financial footing and building their savings, as well as a generational wave of consumers just reaching their prime home-buying years.

With the damage caused by default payments and foreclosures subsiding, homeowners will be managing responsible mortgage terms, affordable payments and the ability to sell their home with equity.

Could this be the faint glow of the light at the end of the tunnel?

Light at the end of the tunnel?

Light at the end of the tunnel?