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FSBO’s – Where are They Now?

By
Real Estate Agent with Marc It Sold!

Last year, 13% of all homes sold went the For Sale By Owner (FSBO) route, according to the National Association of Realtor's 2005 Profile of Home Buyers and Sellers (www.realtor.org/Research.nsf/files/2005HBSonlineHighlights.pdf/$FILE/2005HBSonlineHighlights.pdf) That figure will show a drastic decline when the 2006 figures are published. FSBO's work great when we are in a seller's market - but that was so last year.

Most FSBO's go that route because they wish to save on the commission (nowadays I require a 7% commission). But I must admit that my marketing, as a realtor®, has also had to be altered. I have to offer a lot more to my clients. But that is for another story.

Studies have shown that you can get more in less time utilizing a Realtor®. A recent NAR Profile of Home Buyers & Sellers study showed that a realtor® can get 16% more for a typical For Sale By Owner home. Everything else being equal & you just do the math, why would anyone want to go the FSBO route, if you figure that they will average at least 9% (16 - 7) more utilizing a realtor®? I just don't understand the logic; but then again, I think that too many people do not look at the whole picture & just one little aspect of it. So, who's kidding whom?

Last year, you could put a sign in your yard & your home would sell within a reasonable amount of time. Nowadays, you need a proven marketing plan. And, utilizing a discount realtor®, who will typically just charge you a fee for putting your home in the local MLS (Multiple Listing Service) is not considered a ‘proven marketing plan', nor should you expect your home to sell too quickly.

Presently in the Greater Orlando area, there are over 16K homes for sale and that's just in two counties - Orange & Seminole. How can someone think that by just putting a sign in their yard that they are going to garner the attention necessary to sell their home with that much competition? And that does not even include a lot of the homes offered by new home builders that are not listed in the MLS.

A good marketing plan has many different aspects to it & includes advertising in different media. Even a realtor® who just puts a sign in the yard & places the listing in the MLS is not doing enough. You need to show Price & Value to sell a home these days. It's not difficult, but you have to prove it & not just once. Because for a home to sell, it must first be sold to the selling realtor® before it can be sold to the buyer.

Leaving this all aside, there are still many reasons not to go the FSBO route.

Until next time - MARC IT SOLD!

K C
Independent Leadership & Financial Fitness Consultant - Pleasant Grove, UT

Marc,

I agree that you need a good marketing plan, but most real estate agents in my market have NO PLAN!!  Live has been to good for to long!  I perosnally will not allow an agent to even look at my home until they've been in my office for a good hour, given me a comprehensive marketing plan, and THEN I'll actually consider their help.

Bottom line, real estate agents have become lazy in some markets.   They think that the MLS is some magical panacea that will bring them riches!

Dec 21, 2006 01:51 AM
Brian Foxworth SC, GA, FL, & TN Mortgage Loans
Palmetto South Mortgage - Columbia, SC

Marc;

I find what you say to be true here in SC too. I contact FSBO and offer advice and a kit to get them started. Then when the home has not sold in a month or two - they ask me to refer them to a good Realtor. 

Dec 21, 2006 03:42 AM