|
Find WV real estate agents and Hurricane real estate on ActiveRain.
Disclaimer: ActiveRain Corp. does not necessarily endorse the real estate agents, loan officers and brokers listed on this site. These real estate profiles, blogs and blog entries are provided here as a courtesy to our visitors to help them make an informed decision when buying or selling a house. ActiveRain Corp. takes no responsibility for the content in these profiles, that are written by the members of this community.
© 2013 ActiveRain Corp. All Rights Reserved
5 Comments on Open Houses - What makes them work?
Hi Mitzi, I wrote a post on Open Houses if you want to pop over to my blog and read about it; I have also seen a few others posted as well. Maybe if you search Open Houses, you'll see the posts as well.
It's always a hit or miss; but I think you can definitely sell a house at one and certainly get a buyer or two over time. I know when I started in the business, that is how I built my transactions.
glass half empty....
I think that you did everything right... and guess what it was a waste of time and energy.
glass half full
maybe a neighbor will tell another neighbor etc, etc, and your home will sell.
I used to bake cookies during my opens- of course with permission. This made the house sell good and let the potential buyers remember me...
Hi Mitzi,
Here are a few things you could try, which may help you bring some interested buyers:
Please forgive me, but I have written a great series on Open House Strategies - here is the link if you are interested Open House Although many find them to be a waste of time, they aren't. Pick any weekend and you find dozens of open houses. Why? Because they still work (if done properly and with the right attitude). Don't go into it as a way to 'satisfy the client'.
Let me know if I can offer any additional tips. :-)
John Cannata
Cindy, Judy and John,
Thank you all for your comments. Seems I'm doing most things I've read about, I guess it will just take that one "super" open house to change my thinking about open houses.
Also remember that some prospective buyers don't want to be bothered by a Realtor's "hard sell," so they'll commonly say that they are "neighbors who are just curious."
Back when I was a Realtor in Houston many decades ago, I almost always had people tell me that they were just curious neighbors. That was when the Texas oil boom was going bust, creating a market like we have right now. There were too many neighbors, so one weekend I hired a bunch of college students to follow home those who left my open house. Less than half lived in the neighborhood. After that I treated everyone, absolutely everyone, as a prospective Client, just curious or not.