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Did You Enjoy Your $900,000 Breakfast?

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Home Inspector with B4 U Close Home Inspections&Radon Testing (www.b4uclose.com)

 

J. Philip has a unique way of looking at how much refusing a showing can cost a seller! 

Last time I bought a house, there were several refused showings.  We didn't bother going back for a second try at a showing on those.  There were just too many others out there to look at.

How do you explain the cost of refusing a showing to your sellers?


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Original content by J. Philip Faranda License # 49FA1074963

Nice house in New RochelleYes, there are $900,000 breakfasts. There are $400,000 out of town guests. There are also $600,000 naps. Have you ever seen a $300,000 pack of cigarettes? I have. I personally witnessed a $900,000 litter box once this past spring. I'll never forget the $675,000 dog either. 

What I am referring to are the banal, small indulgences many home sellers grant themselves that cost them the sale of their home to another more motivated homeowner. This morning, an out of state buyer asked me to add on two homes to the tour we had scheduled, and the homes we were seeing weren't far shy of $1 million. There is still 6 inches of snow, it is cold and windy, and they are serious buyers or they wouldn't be out in this weather on a Monday. 

One home declined the showing with 2 hours' notice. Now, as a listing agent I see both sides of this; 2 hours notice can be an inconvenience. They might not want to run around and straighten up. There could be more compelling reasons, such as a sick child or home dialysis. After several months of bending over backwards for inconsiderate mud trackers I can see how people wouldn't be up for that again. It's like dating. By the time I was in my early 30's I was so sick of asking first dates about social small talk I wanted to put a voice-activated tape recorder on the table and eat in peace. I get it. But that's how it is. And all too often viewings are denied because they just aren't up to it on shorter notice. They might be having their first quiet breakfast on the Monday after 2 straight frantic holiday weekends.  

But if people with close to $1 million to spend are going to drive in from out of state in the snowy winter to see your house and you say no out of convenience, that coffee had better be mighty delicious. Those croissants should be laced with ambrosia. That quiet morning after 2 weeks of holiday madness might be well earned and hell to give up for people to walk through your home, but I've got news for you: it may well have cost you every dime of $900,000 to say no and stay in your bathrobe. 

Buyers don't mean to be bullies when they request showings. They can tweak their criteria and see something new and worth seeing on their smart phone when they are taking their ride up here. They have money to spend. And they are looking to spend it. Maybe even on your house, if you let them. They are going to look at something when they go out, and if they like it, they'll buy it. And then they are gone. They simply have too many other choices. 

There is a natural tension between the urgency of million dollar buyers and the desire for million dollar sellers to not be living in a constant state of accommodation. But in this market, the buyers win the stalemate.

Buyers, my dear people, are rare in this market. 

Very rare. 

As my home stager friend Marie Graham says, the way we live is very different from the way we sell our home. It is a hassle. It is intrusive. It takes us away from our routine. But the sums of money involved ought to motivate us to bite the bullet and let the folks in. Yes, it would be nice to have a week's notice, preferably on a day when your kid isn't home from college or the laundry isn't piled up. But buyers who are willing to wait a week aren't what I'd call urgently interested, would you? Someone who found you today and wants in today is a hot buyer. And accepting the showing request from a hot buyer could be a trip to the drugstore or coffee shop that pays you $900,000.  

The prices I am discussing reflect the Westchester County, NY housing market. Your mileage may vary. 

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Erby Crofutt
KY Lic# HI-2041
B4 U Close Home Inspections & Radon Testing
Georgetown, KY
www.b4uclose.com
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Comments (1)

Erby Crofutt
B4 U Close Home Inspections&Radon Testing (www.b4uclose.com) - Lexington, KY
The Central Kentucky Home Inspector, Lexington KY

This re-blog is courtesy of J. Philip Faranda (J. Philip R.E. LLC) Westchester County NY:

Comments have been disabled.  Please comment on the original authors post by clicking the link.

Jan 04, 2011 11:25 AM