We have a new listing, and it's not yet in the MLS. Why not? We don't enter a listing into the MLS until it is 100% ready to go. For us, 100% ready means the home is ready and staged, the yard mowed, walls painted, carpet cleaned, house is professionally makeready cleaned, maintenance items handled, all photos taken, the virtual tour completed and online, flyers ready, and the sign and lockbox are up. On this one, we don't yet have the photos, flyers and Virtual Tour, which we're having done today.

Why not enter the listing when it's "almost" ready, perhaps with one photo of the front of the house? Because first impressions matter. Not only do they matter, they matter A LOT.

Every buyer we work with has an online portal with automatic notification of new listings that match their search criteria. Sylvia and I also have various portals set up for ourselves, which we use to monitor and keep and eye on certain areas and neighborhoods we like. Each morning, us and our Buyer clients, receive notification emails for new listings that match the different search parameters being watched.

I'm amazed at how many agents enter listings into the Austin MLS with no photo, or worse yet, crappy photos. Those listings are at a disadvantage from day one.

Which listing, upon initial preview online, would you be most interested in learning more about?

This one?.. Austin default MLS Pic or this one?.. Austin Real Estate

When we or our Buyers get the aforementioned email notifying us of a new listing, and we click on that listing link to view the property, that is our first impression - either a nice photo of the home, or the ugly default "no photo" image shown above.

It is within about 10 to 30 seconds that I will decide if a new listing warrants further investigation, or if I'm going to drive over for a preview look. For some listings, I know instantly that the home will be sold within days, based on the location, price and the photos. Many of our Buyers, especially if they've been viewing the portal on a regular bases, are savvy enough to spot a good new listing right away also, and they call us immediately and ask about it. First impressions matter!

Listings that have all 8 photos plus a virtual tour get a longer, harder look than the ones with no photo. If there is not a photo, or multiple photos, it diminishes our first impression of the listing because we can't see what it looks like. Great photos of beautiful homes can generate an instant emotional attraction that result in further interest in the home.

In addition to no photo, some new Austin MLS listings have comments such as "work still in progress", or "new carpet coming". In other words, the house is NOT ready for the market but the seller and/or agent are in a hurry to put it on the market anyway. This is not a smart way to sell a house. I've walked through a bunch of these ill-prepared homes and we usually walk right back out unless there is some other over-riding merit, such as a very low price. There is nothing you can do as a Seller to hurt your chances of receiving a good quick offer, at or above your asking price, than to not properly prepare your home for its first day on the market.

As a Seller, you know, or should know (and your agent as well), that your new listing is going to pop up on hundreds, maybe thousands (I don't know for sure) of Buyer and Agent search portals, as I've described above. You want your listing to be studied at that moment by as many potential buyers and/or agents as possible. Research shows, people look at photos first and foremost to decide if they're interested in a home. You keep their eyeballs on your listing, as their interest grows, by making sure your listing represents a beautiful property, priced right and ready to go. You can't do that when the photos are missing.

Then you want those interested buyers to call their agents, or vice versa, and start talking about that listing. Then you want the agent to go preview the listing, or better yet, meet the Buyers at the home to have a look. When that first walk-through happens, you want the home to be clean and staged and to show beautifully. If you've done that, you increase the opportunity for the buyer to have continued interest that hopefully culminates in a quick, full price (or better) offer.

And this process all starts with that first online look at the listing and photos, either by the buyer sitting at home viewing a search portal, or the agent through the Austin MLS at that day's new listings. That first impression determines whether the ball gets rolling toward a quick offer, or your listing gets a quick glance and passed over. First impressions matter!

Steve Crossland, REALTOR, MPM
Crossland Real Estate
http://CrosslandTeam.com
(512) 327-3900

 

17 Comments on When is a Listing Ready to be Entered in the MLS?

FEB
05
2007
273,597 Points 4 Featured Posts Outside Blog
I agree with you 100%.  However, I do recommend to agents that if you can't get all the photos done in time, at the very least, get a front exterior photo into the MLS at time of entry.  This way, all those buyers receiving listings via email at least have a front photo to look at the next morning.
1:34pm • #1
655,247 Points 29 Featured Posts Localism Sponsor Outside Blog Attended Rain Camp Called Shot Master
I'm with you.  I don't want a listing to pop up on automatic notification without a picture.  I have had more clients contact me asking me if I can get pictures for a listing that they saw on automatic notification.  I always tell them to watch and the listing agent should get the pictures in the listing within a day or two.  They usually do (or they will be fined) but I'm always amazed that they put the listing in to MLS without the pictures.
6:13pm • #2
1,586,413 Points 430 Featured Posts Outside Blog Attended Rain Camp Called Shot Master

Great information Steve.

Drives me nuts to see listings without photos (and buyers too). If you take your own you can load them when you enter the listing (at least here) - how hard is that? If you have a professional take them and they are not ready right away, and you put  the listing on MLS, why not at least upload your own pics in there to start, rather than have the BLANK page show up.

What really is annoying is when you see a listing that says "no showings until X" (often 7-10 days, sometime more). What's the point here?

Jeff

6:59pm • #3
Couldn't agree more!  It's very frustrating to see something on the hotsheet then hafta go back a few days later to "see" something about it beyond the words.

In our market, we have very stringent rules about how much time is permitted to pass between signing and posting so I understand that not all the pieces can be in place but at least a placeholder photo (preferably a flattering one) should be on that first shot out.  
7:04pm • #4
126,899 Points 6 Featured Posts Called Shot Master

Yep, Steve, this is one of my biggest pet peeves, too.  There is no reason in the world not to have a photo on that listing when it's put into the system.

The different regional MLS systems seem to vary HUGELY on how they work, though.  I know our local MLS in Maryland fines for lots of things but a missing photo is not one of them. We have the option to upload our own photo(s) or have the free front exterior one taken by an MLS affiliated photog.  Although, sometimes I think it might be better to have no photo vs. the ones the "pros" take!  I swear they don't even get out of the car on some of them (at least that's what it looks like...) LOL!

7:54pm • #5
131,378 Points
Have you ever had clients ask you why there aren't any internal pictures of the house they saw online?  The listing broker usually has them, they've just never bothered to put them up with their listing.  I'll never understand how they get the listings in the first place.
8:14pm • #6
11 Featured Posts

> What really is annoying is when you see a listing that says "no showings until X" (often 7-10 days, sometime more). What's the point here?

Yeah, that's always a head scratcher.

> If you take your own you can load them when you enter the listing

Yeah, I do that too.

> The different regional MLS systems seem to vary HUGELY on how they work, though

I think many agents feel pressured by the 2-day rule in the Listing Agreements - listing has to be entered within two days of signing. We change that in the listing agreement with the owner such the the Seller "instructs" us not to enter the listing until all prep work is done and proper photos can be taken.

Steve

8:15pm • #7

Great post, Steve.  As I read your comments, I thought about a potential homebuyer sitting at his/her computer at home looking through Realtor.com.  (Even buyers I have on automatic listings still seem to look on Realtor.com.) 

I recall that once the consumer enters their criteria, and before the search results come back, they have three thing to consider:

1.  The featured homes;

2.  Sort to see listings with photos first;

3.  Sort to see listings with virtual tours first.

I'm going to go ahead and predict that the agents who don't have photos are quite possibly not participating in the featured homes (but it's almost worse if they are, because you'd see that empty spot right up front there, and what a waste), and they also probably don't have the virtual tour up and running yet.

So.... their poor sellers' homes, once the consumer views the featured homes, and opts to sort by photos and virtual tours, are really missing out on a lot of potential exposure as they end up on page twenty-seven of the search results.

What a shame for the sellers, who probably don't even know what's happened... or not.

 

Maureen Kelly

Rumson, NJ Real Estate

8:21pm • #8
Localism Sponsor

In Tampa we have very specific requirements from the date of the listing agreement for entry into the MLS.  Failure to comply with these requirements, including an exterior photo can result in fines, etc.

The purpose of these requirements to prevent listing agents from "hiding" the listing from other agents, and to "ensure the integrity" of our MLS.

Sounds good in theory.....

Some think that if you don't have an exterior photo of the house, that MLS should not allow entry into the system.

 

8:21pm • #9
532,041 Points 15 Featured Posts Localism Sponsor Outside Blog

Hey Steve,

You sound like a real pro, you obviously know what you are doing and I'm in agreement with you.  

As our inventory in so-cal has increased, we've done everything we could to incease our showings.  Insteak of some of the more complex showing instructions, we've added one more thing to our "comments" section of our listings. EASY TO SEE, EASY TO SHOW!  (that's all) This has become the beginning of my comments.

If the consumer finds one of my listings on line, I want them to know right up front, (whether they call me, or their own Realtor, that's just fine) we want to make it easy for them.  And as for Realtors, it works for them too. I can tell you from experience, it works.

Lynda Eisenmann

9:25pm • #10
1,309,282 Points 96 Featured Posts Outside Blog Hit Router Attended Rain Camp Called Shot Master

Fined for not entering photos?  I wish they had that here!  Way too many listings don't have pictures.  The biggest culprits are the agents who list foreclosures.  They're typically lazy as they're not always getting the full commission, though they're getting the commission they have agreed to work for...

I wish they fined people for no pictures!!!

10:01pm • #11
FEB
06
2007
Seems like it should be common sense! In fact, I actually show other agents photos of a house they have listed. Oftentimes, we may see the agents coffee cup, camera case, etc in the photos. When I meet with a prospective seller, I assure them that only photos that show their property in the best light will be seen by agents and the public.
Doug Lindstrom
12:49am • #12
So true!!! First impressions mean so much. People/Consumers tend to skip past listings without photos.
12:59am • #13
283,710 Points 45 Featured Posts Outside Blog
Like "no wine before its time" a house should never go into the MLS until it is ready.
1:23am • #14
Good point. I found myself saying the other day "and the owner is planning to paint that wall soon..."  Bye bye buyer.
8:43am • #15
FEB
19
2008
You make some very good points in your above blog...
George Jordan, Red Soil Real Estate Inc. , PEI, Canada
6:26pm • #16
FEB
20
2008
Localism Sponsor
In Tampa our MLS is implementing a change within the next week.  Without at least one photo, the listing won't be active/entered into the system.
8:52am • #17


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Steve Crossland - Austin TX Real Estate

Austin, TX

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