Charlotte Property Management Weekly: Your Rental Home Wants You to Wait Until It’s Ready

By
Services for Real Estate Pros with BDF Realty, Inc.

 

Wait!

Every client we've ever had has wanted as little vacancy time for their rental as possible.  Zero days are optimal; every day after zero winds up costing them money in utilities, mortgage payments, and maintenance.  Not wanting to lose any money leads to a mentality of getting the home on the market as soon as possible, regardless of condition and resident situation.

 

So some clients want us to put their homes on the market prior to them being ready for occupancy.  What I mean by this is that the home has not been completely repaired and there are still personal items in the house.  They (or their current tenants) also are within the process of moving. 

 

The rationale, by itself, is sound.  The greater the length of time the house is on the market, the greater amount of potential tenants that can see it.  If more potential renters see it, the law of large numbers would dictate that someone at some point would love it and want it.

 

However, does this really work?  I would argue it doesn't.  Huh?  Why's that?  Isn't it common sense?

 

Simply, the American consumer's mind works differently now.  There is an inundation of information being flung at them on a constant basis.  Most of it is ignored; however, there are some marketing messages that get through (like a rental listing).  If the consumer takes the time and makes an inquiry to visit the property, there is typically one shot to get them.  Their attention span is limited. 

 

This one shot means that the house has to look perfect.  This visit needs to conclude with the prospective tenant loving the house.  If they see or feel something they don't like, it will probably turn them off and they will want to find another home.  And there are many other rental houses on the market that look very similar.  The competition is fierce!

 

So why does this matter?  Maybe the diamonds in the rough that aren't turned off by the home's uncleanliness will be unearthed and they'll take it.  It's certainly possible.  But are renters who don't care about the condition of the home desirable?  If so, there may be disappointment when move-out time arrives and the home doesn't look so great.  Clean people typically want clean homes. 

 

The other main reason is that once the marketing of the property begins, momentum is started.  The rental is on the top of all the searches from rental websites, people who are waiting for a rental are told about it by their property managers, and it is fresh.  This is when things typically happen for an average rental home- the first two weeks.  Interested calls, inquiring e-mails, and subsequent showings come quickly.  They need to be harnessed and converted into applications and security deposits.

 

But when the rental house isn't up to the task, momentum is stunted.  Interested, potential renters see the property in less than ideal shape and compare it to better kept homes on the market.  The home loses out.  Or the current tenant in the home is packing boxes to move and glares at the renter who is interrupting their evening after work.  The house looks horrible and the vibe is bad.  Potential renters flee to the next home.  Can you blame them?   

 

With rental homes, it's more about quality time on the market and less about total time.  Make sure the rental home is ready and most inviting when the most people want to look at it! 

 

Brett Furniss is the President & Owner of BDF Realty ("Charlotte's Most Innovative Property Management & Investment Company"), and Rent-To-Sell Realty ("When You Need a New Solution to Sell Your Home") which  specialize in rent-to-own (lease options) and rent-to-sell homes.  His newest book, A Real Estate Agent's Complete Guide to Representing Rent-To-Own (Lease Option) Tenants (Delight Clients, Fill Vacant Homes, and Earn $2,250* Upfront! (*Minimum!)

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Rainmaker
1,278,094
Wallace S. Gibson, CPM
Gibson Management Group, Ltd. - Charlottesville, VA
LandlordWhisperer

I've had GREAT success renting homes while the workmen were painting, etc.  I always leave application forms in a kitchen drawer with my listing sheets for prospects to take with them.

I end my leases on the 3rd Friday of the month to allow for some down-time before the 1st so that make-ready work can be done!

Oct 30, 2010 01:42 PM #1
Rainmaker
421,509
Michelle Francis
Tim Francis Realty LLC - Atlanta, GA
Realtor, Buckhead Atlanta Homes for Sale & Lease

Brett, 

I agree, unless it's very superficial, you want all of the work done before it gets shown.  Who wants to live in something run down?  

All the best, Michelle

 

Nov 01, 2010 01:04 PM #2
Anonymous
Anne

Brett, I am curious why you don't mention in your blog that many people who pay the refundable security deposit and then do NOT get the home, still don't get the refundable security deposit money back. So you are getting the security deposit money from multiple people for the same home.  That is illegal and immoral, don't you agree?  I think people should get their refundable security deposits back when they don't rent the home.  Nine out of nine other realtors agree with me.  How do you sleep at night when you cheat people out of their security deposits and refuse to give them back?        

Anne 

Oct 05, 2011 05:50 AM #3
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Brett Furniss

Charlotte Property Manager
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