Monday, October 4, 2010

For Sale By Owner: The most effective way to sell your home yourself, while saving some money in the process!

Version 1.0

So you want to sell your home on your own? Well, I’m going to show you the best way to market and sell your home like a Realtor while putting some dollars back into your pocket. I broke down this report into 4 parts:

1. Preparing your home

2. Marketing your home

3. Closing the transaction

4. Mistakes to avoid


1. Preparing Your Home

Although you don’t want to do it, the first thing you need to do is either call a local Realtor or log onto a Realtor’s website and request a free Comparative Market Analysis or Competitive Market Analysis.

The second thing I’d suggest any home seller to do is to hire a professional appraiser. This will help eliminate the guesswork and ensure you get all you can out of your home. However, before the appraiser steps foot into your home, show them the comparables from your local Realtor. This will not only help the appraiser, but also help you get the price you want.

After you have determined your sales price, get your home inspected. There’s nothing worse than accepting an offer, yet finding out that your home needs repairs. Once again, you have to negotiate with the buyers and this may cause them to back out of their offer. Now you’re back at square 1 and looking for another buyer for your home. So do yourself a favor and get an inspection.

The next thing to do is run a title search on your property. Why do this now? Because you want to avoid any “surprises” that may scare off potential buyers. Following these steps will ensure your transaction stays on track.

Finally, you must get your home ready to show. If you’re tight on a budget, consider checking out this fantastic article, “10 ways to show your home like a model home, in one weekend, for less than $200”.

2. Marketing Your Home

Obviously, you want to put a “For Sale” sign in front of your property. Now I’ll help you get more prospects to buy your house while saving some money.

First, I’d advice you to distribute fliers around your neighborhood. Give fliers to at least 100 neighbors that live closest to you. In fact, I’d send one to all your friends and family. You’d be shocked how well “word of mouth” works.

Second, get a FREE website to market your property http://www.realtyreports.biz/1601/fsite. You can add up to 15 photos, write a detailed description and it even includes a map to your home for buyers. Having your own website will increase your response for this simple reason. Because people have looked at your photos and description, you will only receive “serious” inquiries. Your website will have a section for where prospects can ask you a question and it will be emailed to you without giving away your email address.

Create an account at http://www.postlets.com and syndicate your listing to 14 different real estate related websites for Free. You can add up to 12 photos and write a description of your property. You can also paste your website in these ads to re-direct prospects to your main site.

Unfortunately, this next tip won’t be for everyone. However, offering creative financing such as “owner financing” will increase your traffic, therefore puts your property in high demand.

3. Closing The Transaction

I highly advise you to hire an attorney (preferably a real estate attorney) to handle your paperwork. Trying to do the paper work yourself will run the risk of future lawsuits.

Once your offer is accepted and your paperwork is ready to go, hire an escrow company to switch the title of the property to the new owners.

4. Mistakes To Avoid

* Not including photos – Buyers do not read, they look and if there aren’t any photos or only a picture of the front of the house, they won’t even waste their time.

* No address – There are times when buyers just don’t feel like picking up the phone, dialing a phone number (if you listed it) and speaking to someone to get the address. Put the address in your ad and let people drive by.

* Not answering the phone – you do want to sell your house… right? I understand it can get crazy and you don’t want to deal with Realtors but you have to understand, we’re just trying to do our job. Here’s a secret, if you really want them to stop contacting you, just tell them you’re working with a Realtor…me!

* Relying on Zillow and other real estate websites to determine the value of your home - The biggest flaw in these websites is that they haphazardly give you a list of homes without taking into account the date the home was built, the model, and most importantly, the location. Do you know how to compare your home to others besides square footage? Do you take into account houses that are on busy streets? Bad neighborhoods? Bad curb appeal? No to little home improvements? That’s why you must call a Realtor, even though you don’t want to.

* Stating that you’re “willing to negotiate” in your ads - When buyers see this, they’ll try to take advantage of you and will only give you lowball offers. Putting this simple line in your ads will only waste your time with most likely unqualified prospects.

©Rick and Ress Skarbo

Main Street Realtors

Sunday, June 27, 2010

Buyers and Sellers List or Buy from TeamSkarbo ..Go to Hawaii for a Week

Yes...if you are thinking of buying that dream home or if you are planning on selling please go to http//:www.Free-Hawaii-Trip.com. Team Skarbo will give you a weeks vacation in Hawaii.You will stay in either a 4-5 star hotel on the sand.The reason: When you trust us in either selling your home or allow us to find you that dream home, we feel a trip to paradise is in order as a THANK YOU!

GO to www.FREE-HAWAII-TRIP.com

Friday, January 15, 2010

'Curb Appeal' host fashions a to-do list for home sellers

Spring has not sprung, but lots of homeowners appear to be coiled in anticipation of the moment they can slam that "For Sale" sign into the ground.

And those who plan to sell would be wise to take heed of John Gidding's three big tips for home sellers:

•Declutter.

•Enhance your curb appeal.

•Make the kitchen and bathrooms shine.

Gidding, the architect and designer who is host of HGTV's "Designed to Sell" and "Curb Appeal: The Block," expects lots of questions about getting houses ready for the market when he appears next week at the 29th annual Philadelphia Home Show.

He'll speak during the closing weekend of the nine-day show. Also appearing will be Paul DiMeo of ABC's "Extreme Makeover: Home Edition" and Christopher Straub, a "Project Runway" fashion designer. The show will include 500 industry experts to discuss money-saving tips and offer professional advice. In addition, four designer rooms will include an eco-friendly living room, spa retreat, baby suite and "man cave."

Gidding, who was born in Turkey to an American father and now lives in Atlanta, says the real key to selling your home is to imbue it with value. He'll talk about his shows and how people react, and he expects people to ask about what goes on behind stage, as well as what to do with their own homes.

Like many others, Gidding sees signs that the real estate market may be coming back.

"The Atlanta market has been pretty hard hit, but in the last few weeks, there's been a big uptick and everybody is breathing easier," Gidding says. "Based on that, I think something is going on. I think people are over this recession in every way, figuratively and literally, and hopefully when the flowers start coming out again and people start feeling good about where they are living, people will go out and buy some more."
Orchestrating simplicity

His three tips aren't as straightforward as they may seem, he says.

Decluttering goes beyond just picking up and clearing off surfaces, he says. It includes removing a lot of your personality from the home and showing off closets and drawers to their best advantage.

If your closets are full, get rid of about 40 percent of the clothing and items in them, and store them in a rental unit or a spare bedroom at your parents' or a friend's house. If your drawers are crowded, clean them out and put in organizers so they're neat.

"You know that people walking through are going to open the drawers," he says. "You have to assume this is no longer your home and people are going to walk through and look at everything."

The trick is to make sure it looks like there's room for plenty more.

And don't make the assumption that people buy according to what they see inside a house.

"The way people enter a home is so important," Gidding says. "The entry is crucial to make people feel safe."

If you don't have a light by the door, install one, he says. If a bulb is burned out, replace it.

If your door doesn't have color on it, paint it, he says. Put flowers on the path and entry. If you have any room for it at all, put some kind of outdoor furniture there, even if it's one piece.

"It shows that there's someone living there who loves the home and your neighborhood and that you appreciate the people around you," he says.

Inside, he says, kitchens and bathrooms are the primary things people look at.

"They don't want to have to do any work on them," he says. "On our show, we do kitchen and bathroom makeovers for under $2,000, so it doesn't have to be expensive; it just has to be thoughtful."

Painting a room can always help, he says. And in the kitchen, simply changing the hardware can make it look great.

Bathrooms should be squeaky-clean, he says. Change the shower curtain and install a new light fixture.

If you're stuck with one of the old industrial mirrors glued to the wall, ask a carpenter to cut four pieces of trim that can be glued directly to the mirror and painted, giving it a framed effect.

"It makes it look that much more high-end and less industrial," Gidding says.

The small things are what change people's impressions, he says. "They're not just buying a house that people are using; they're buying a home that someone really cares about and has spent some time improving and caring for."

His newest show, "Curb Appeal: The Block," goes into neighborhoods where people have complained of an eyesore and renovates the offending home, up to $20,000. The show also goes around the neighborhood and helps people do small things, like add window boxes or other decor that can be seen from the street.

"The whole street is engaged," he says. "By the time we leave, everyone's property values are improving. You'd be surprised to see how many people see us tooling around and feel compelled to come out and do stuff of their own."

http://www.delawareonline.com/article/20100114/LIFE04/1140310

Wednesday, January 13, 2010

Want the most bang for your buck on your home?

Exterior Remodeling Proves Best Bang for Your Buck, Realtors® Report
Washington, December 17, 2009

Despite a slow market and a slight decrease in the resale value of most remodeling projects, Realtors® report that the smartest home improvement investments may also be some of the least expensive. Results from the 2009 Remodeling Cost vs. Value Report show that small-scale exterior projects are the most profitable at resale, according to estimates by Realtors® who completed a recent survey.

On a national level, eight out of the top 10 projects in terms of costs recouped were exterior replacement projects that cost less than $14,000. Certain types of door and siding replacements, as well as wood deck additions all returned more than 80 percent of project costs upon resale. A steel entry door replacement – a new addition to this year’s list – recouped 128.9 percent of costs, followed by upscale fiber-cement sliding replacements at 83.6 percent. Wood deck additions recouped 80.6 percent of costs.

“Once again, this year’s Remodeling Cost vs. Value Report highlights the importance of a home’s first impression,” said NAR President Vicki Cox Golder, owner of Vicki L. Cox & Associates in Tucson, Ariz. “With exterior projects returning a high percent of project costs upon resale, Realtors® can help give your home curb appeal while adding value to the real estate transaction.

The 2009 Remodeling Cost vs. Value Report compares construction costs with resale values for 33 midrange and upscale remodeling projects comprising additions, remodels and replacements in 80 markets across the country. Data are grouped in nine U.S. regions, following the divisions established by the U.S. Census Bureau. This is the 12th consecutive year that the report, which is produced by Hanley Wood, LLC, was completed in cooperation with REALTOR® Magazine, as Realtors® provided their insight into local markets and buyer home preferences within those markets.

On a national level, the project with the biggest improvement from 2008 was the attic bedroom addition, recouping 83.1 percent of remodeling costs compared to 73.8 percent in 2008. The only other interior project that landed in the top 10 was a minor kitchen remodel with 78.3 percent costs recouped.

Other exterior projects in the top 10 include midrange vinyl and upscale foam-backed vinyl sliding replacements, which returned more than 79 percent of costs. In addition, several types of window replacements – midrange wood, midrange vinyl, and upscale vinyl – all returned more than 76 percent of costs upon sale.

Similar to last year’s report, the least profitable remodeling projects in terms of resale value were home office remodels and sunroom additions, returning only 48.1 percent and 50.7 percent of project costs.

Regionally, cities in the Pacific states of Alaska, California, Hawaii, Oregon and Washington once again outperformed the rest of the nation in terms of remodeling costs recouped upon resale. The West South Central region of Arkansas, Louisiana, Oklahoma, and Texas; the East South Central region of Alabama, Kentucky, Mississippi and Tennessee; and the South Atlantic region of the District of Columbia, Florida, Georgia, Maryland, North Carolina, South Carolina, Virginia and West Virginia also performed relatively well.

The regions that generally returned the lowest percentage of costs were New England (Connecticut, Massachusetts, Maine, New Hampshire, Rhode Island and Vermont), East North Central (Illinois, Indiana, Michigan, Ohio and Wisconsin), West North Central (Iowa, Kansas, Minnesota, Missouri, Nebraska, North Dakota and South Dakota), and the Middle Atlantic (New York and Pennsylvania).

Golder commented that remodeling projects are just one of many factors that contribute to a home’s overall resale value. “As the first, best source for real estate information, Realtors® are experts in providing insight into what projects and investments will make a difference in your house. It’s important to consult with a Realtor® who can explain the variety of factors that affect a home’s value, such as location, condition of surrounding properties and the regional economic climate,” she said.

Results of the report are summarized in the January issue of REALTOR® Magazine. To read the full project descriptions, access national and regional project data, and download a free PDF containing data for any of the 80 cities covered by the report, visit www.costvsvalue.com. “Cost vs. Value” is a registered trademark of Hanley Wood, LLC.

Hanley Wood, LLC, is the premier media company serving housing and construction. Through four operating divisions, the company produces award-winning magazines and Web sites, marquee trade shows and events, rich data, and custom marketing solutions. The company also is North America’s leading provider of home plans. Founded in 1976, Hanley Wood is a $240 million company owned by JPMorgan Partners, LLC, a private equity affiliate of JPMorgan Chase & Co.

The National Association of Realtors®, “The Voice for Real Estate,” is America’s largest trade association, representing 1.2 million members involved in all aspects of the residential and commercial real estate industries.

http://www.realtor.org/press_room/news_releases/2009/12/exterior_proves

Thursday, March 19, 2009

Offers Made in Writing are always Best !

Offers Made in Writing Are Always Best!!

Imagine this: You're on your way out of town when your real estate agent calls to let you know about a hot new listing. You arrange to meet your agent at the property to take a look before you go.

The house is just what you've been looking for. But there's no time to make a written offer so you ask your agent to make a verbal offer for you. When you return from vacation, you find that the home sold to someone else.

A real estate agent is obliged to convey a verbal offer to the seller. However, if the offer isn't written, it's not legally binding on either the buyer or the seller. It's rare that real estate purchase offers are accepted without a counteroffer, even if the price is acceptable.

Home purchase offers are complicated legal documents that include all the details of the sale--the personal property that's included and excluded, the closing date, the financing arrangement and the inspection conditions, to name a few.

Buyers and sellers frequently have a counteroffer dialogue back and forth before they finalize the terms and conditions of their deal.

Even though a seller may be negotiating with one buyer, this doesn't preclude him from entertaining offers from other buyers. Until the purchase contract and any counteroffers are accepted in writing by both the buyers and the sellers, the property is still available for sale.

First-Time Tip
Timing is critical in real estate transactions. So it's important to make arrangements for times when you'll be unavailable to make an offer or respond to a seller's counteroffer.

Today homes are often sold with the help of the telephone and facsimile transmission. Facsimile signatures are usually binding as long as the intent is to sign the original documents at a later date. You and your partner can sign separate copies of the same document.

Make sure, if you're using facsimile copies, that the text is legible and that you know and understand what you're signing. Also, if you're having contracts faxed to your office, you might want your agent to send the documents at a time when you know you'll be available to retrieve them.

If you're leaving town in the middle of a negotiation and you won't have access to a fax machine, you may want to give your power of attorney to a trusted friend or relative. To be legally binding, the power of attorney should be on the proper form and it should be notarized.

Your real estate agent can help you with this. But don't give a power of attorney to your agent. This would create a conflict of interest because your agent is owed a commission if the sale goes through.

Some agents present offers, and negotiate on a buyer's behalf with a written authority letter from the buyer. This letter is not notarized. Be aware that when an agent signs a real estate contract for a buyer without a power of attorney, it's not legally binding.

So even though a written authority letter saves time during the negotiation process, you could lose out to another buyer whose offer is properly signed. You also risk committing to terms you hadn't anticipated if you're dealing with a less than scrupulous agent.

Don't rely on e-mail for making real estate offers and counteroffers. An e-mail isn't signed, so it's probably legally binding

The Closing
Taking shortcuts when you're trying to buy or sell real estate is risky.

Thursday, February 26, 2009

First Time Home Buyers $8000 Credit

First-Time Home Buyer Tax Credit: 6 Things to Know

February 17, 2009 06:19 PM ET
While the proposed $15,000 home-buyer tax credit died in negotiations between the House and the Senate, the $787 billion stimulus bill that President Barack Obama signed into law Tuesday includes a similar--albeit smaller--measure designed to help revive the real estate market. Here are six things you need to know about the freshly-enacted $8,000 first-time home buyer tax credit.

1. Eight grand, new buyers: The tax credit included in the economic stimulus legislation is much narrower than the $15,000 proposal. This credit is equivalent to 10 percent of the purchase price of the home--although it's capped at $8,000--and applies only to first-time home buyers and principal residences. But unlike an earlier $7,500 home buyer tax credit, this one does not have to be repaid.

2. First time buyers defined: For the purpose of this legislation, a "first-time home buyer" is someone who hasn't owned a principal residence for three years before buying a house. (The date of purchase is considered the day that the title is transferred.) That means if you've owned a vacation home--but not a principal residence--within the past three years, you would still qualify for the credit.

3. 2009 buyers only: Only those who purchase a home on or after January 1 and before December 1, 2009 are eligible for the credit. Anyone who bought a home last year won't be able to take advantage of it.

4. Income limits: The tax credit is subject to income limitations. Single buyers need a modified adjusted gross income of $75,000 or less to qualify for the full credit, that's $150,000 for married couples. Those earning more than these thresholds may be eligible for reduced credits.

5. Refundable: Because the tax credit is "refundable," qualified buyers can take advantage of it even if they don't have much tax liability.

6. Recapture: Buyers have to own the home for at least three years in order to capitalize on the credit. If they sell the home before then, they will have to return the credit to the government. (Exceptions will be made in certain cases, such as death or divorce.)