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Maybe THIS is Why You Don't Have Any Offers on Your Home....

Reblogger Trisha P Realty Group
Real Estate Agent with Realty Executives SP00223822

Great examples of why sellers should de-personalize their home!

Original content by Chris Ann Cleland VA License # 0225089470

It's always something new when you are a Realtor® taking buyers through occupied properties.  Today, I called a listing agent on a very desirable townhouse listing.  It had been on the market for two weeks with no offers.  That is an eternity for a house in good condition, priced under $400,000.  And it wasn't a short sale or foreclosure! 

As I drove to meet my buyers, I thought that it must be my lucky day.  Sure, the other properties they wanted to see had tons of activity and offers within 48 hours.  Maybe it was the holidays that had this lonesome gem just waiting for my buyers.

A walk through the home showed that it was worth every penny of the list price.  Nicely updated and well maintained.  A perfect match for my buyers.  And then my buyers caught a glance of the photographs, framed on the wall. 

There, for every buyer that walked through to see, were no fewer than a dozen "action" photographs, of the supposed home owner, a career firefighter, fighting blaze after blaze.  There was one of a bus engulfed in flames.  A house where a fire had started in a garage.  He was even on scene at several horrific car accidents.  And wait, there he was with the jaws of life.

Home Stagers and Realtors® will ask you to take down such personal items from a home.  For one, they call attention to the fact that the home is someone else's.  Therefore, the buyers have a hard time picturing themselves in the home.  Secondly, they are a plain, old distraction in general.  And in this case, a ghoulish one. 

While the home owner is probably very proud of his career, and the fact that he helps people in terrifying situations, those photographs called to mind circumstances that folks outside emergency professions do not have the ability to easily brush off.

I bet if that home owner had not had those pictures up on the wall, my buyers would have written an offer today.  There is just something about seeing a lovely single family home going up in flames that can give any regular Joe the creeps. 

 

Chris Ann Cleland, Realtor- Licensed in Virginia, GRI & Short Sale Specialist. Affiliated with Long & Foster, 7526 Limestone Drive, Gainesville, VA 20155.  To contact Chris Ann, call 703-402-0037 or email chrisann@LNF.com.

Blog Header is a picture of a street in Bristow, Virginia's community of Braemar during the blizzard of December 2009. 

 

Posted by

Trisha Alton

"Holding the Keys To Your Dream Home"

Experienced Realtor proudly serving KS & MO in the Kansas City Metro area, as well as Fort Leavenworth Relocations! Visit my WEBSITE or call @ 913.683.9535 for all of your real estate needs.

 

 

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Heather the Realtor Orlando, Lake Mary
LemonTree Realty - Orlando, FL
First Time Home Buyers, Bank Owned Homes

It's a good rule of thumb for sellers to declutter but this should be something as agents we can help buyers overcome when looking at homes that are perfect for them.

Jan 04, 2010 12:57 PM
Tammi Copsey
Perry Hall, MD

I always remind sellers that the less of them there is in the home (photos, knick-knacks and what not), the easier the buyers can picture themselves in the home and building a life there.  If I do encounter this with my buyers, I always remind them that they are looking at the home, not the people currently in it.  We are there to look at the rooms, not the stuff in the rooms...how easily they forget, especially if they know someone in a photograph.

Good post!

Jan 04, 2010 01:06 PM
Elyse Berman, PA
LoKation Real Estate - Boca Raton, FL
Boca Raton FL (561) 716-7824

It's always good advice to tell sellers to declutter, but I ran into a situatio one time where the seller's wife got testy and refused to do it.  There was so much stuff in her house that I almost fell over a desk trying to shoot the pictures.  When I gently asked her to start packing, she told me that the buyers didn't have to love her stuff, just her house.  And, she refused to move a thing.  Needless to say, her house never sold!

Jan 04, 2010 01:10 PM
Lora "Leah" Stern 914-772-4528
Coldwell Banker, 170 N Main Street, New City NY 10956 - New City, NY
Real Estate Salesperson

Somehow or other, it's always hardest to get the "collecters" to declutter.  They just can't seem to part with any of their stuff and there's so much of it around that others have a ahrd time seeing past it.

Jan 04, 2010 01:17 PM
Trisha P Realty Group
Realty Executives - Leavenworth, KS
"Holding the Keys to Your Dream Home"

Heather - I agree I ask all sellers to de-clutter and tell buyers to look over their stuff.  Ive checked out your site before - awesome!!! 

 

Tammi - you are right.  I find myself checking out pictures all the time.

 

Elyse - I had the same thing happen.  Funny isnt it.

 

Lora - I know what you mean, they think that their collectables are sooo cute.  I hate seeing those the most.

Jan 04, 2010 01:23 PM
Andrea Kappre
Keller Williams Hometown - Mantua, NJ
New Jersey Realtor, New Jersey MLS, Homes for Sale

That is so true.  I toured a house once where a portrait of the female homeowner hung over the bed.... the alarming part... she was naked!

Jan 04, 2010 01:37 PM
Sheldon Neal
Bergen County, NJ - RE/MAX Real Estate Limited - Maywood, NJ
That British Agent Bergen County NJ

Yikes ! Sellers usually find it tough to see that buyers strangers may not view their personal pictures and items the same way that they do !!!

Cheers Trish !

Sheldon

Jan 04, 2010 03:02 PM
Trisha P Realty Group
Realty Executives - Leavenworth, KS
"Holding the Keys to Your Dream Home"

Andrea - Oh my goodness that is so funny.  She wasn't shy was she?

Sheldon - True true!

Jan 04, 2010 03:12 PM