{"id":328,"date":"2014-06-02T16:47:00","date_gmt":"2014-06-02T16:47:00","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/dev.gahomesdigest.com\/blog\/3-common-home-seller-mistakes.html"},"modified":"2014-06-02T16:47:00","modified_gmt":"2014-06-02T16:47:00","slug":"3-common-home-seller-mistakes","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/search4.homes\/3-common-home-seller-mistakes\/","title":{"rendered":"3 Common Home Seller Mistakes"},"content":{"rendered":"

\"Home3 Common Homes Seller Mistakes<\/strong>\u00a0or we could say 3 Common Mistakes “GREEDY” Home Sellers Make as<\/em>\u00a0the real title of this one. \u00a0It’s greed or ignorance that causes these decisions. \u00a0I know that’s really a lot of tough love right out of the gate, but don’t you deserve the truth? Right now it’s 2013 and we’ve had 2 full quarters of increase in sold prices! \u00a0The market for the first time in the 11 years I’ve been doing real estate has shifted to a home sellers market. \u00a0However, with great power comes great responsibility.<\/p>\n

Home Seller Mistake #1: Overpricing the Home<\/span><\/h2>\n

Everyone falls for this one. \u00a0It starts like this – you’re out walking the dog and you see your neighbors home for sell and pull the flyer and it’s listed at a price that you’d love to sell your home for. \u00a0You then do some “due diligence” and look at Zillow and find that, the price is “in line” with their zestimate (which is only 10-20% off per their own disclaimer). \u00a0Then in some versions of this story, your friend\/neighbor sells their home…. so they must have gotten full price, right. \u00a0<\/p>\n

Then it happens… You see the market go up, so what’s asking for a little bit more, after all your home is nicer then theirs, you’ve got some nice “molding,” or upgraded padding in your carpet.<\/p>\n

Solution: In this scenario and all versions of it, the home seller is getting faulty sources of information. \u00a0It’s not what is FOR SALE, it’s what has sold. \u00a0The seeminly innocent thought of “I’ll just try to ask for more, I can always come down,” is deadly as it will cost you on average 3% for every 30 days you “overprice” your home. \u00a0The solution is clear, Know your home value.\u00a0<\/a><\/p>\n

Home Seller Mistake #2: Under Market The Home<\/h2>\n

This is pretty common among 15% of the home sellers. \u00a0They start off, For Sale By Owner. \u00a0It’s a great thought, save the commission and pocket the change, afterall you’ve bought and sold maybe a home or two. \u00a0Agents don’t really do much anyway. \u00a0You’d be right by the way, MOST agents don’t. \u00a0 In fact, for sale by owners aren’t the only ones that suffer from this mistake. \u00a0Many sellers, even those in luxury homes such as Chateau Elan<\/a>\u00a0don’t even pay attention to their agent’s effort to market the home and thus are left with bad cell phone photos of their home.<\/p>\n

Solution: \u00a0Not marketing the home properly means you’re not getting to every buyer and that buyer’s searching for your home won’t want to see it with those cell phone photos. \u00a0Not even instagram can help. \u00a0This problem is compounded when a seller tries to do the marketing on their own, as even zillow only contains 60% of the available listings. \u00a0 The key here is getting an proactive, action oriented agent. \u00a0We’re not talking about the glamour shots person or the flat fee company that puts you on the MLS. \u00a0Statistics show a good real estate agent will outperform every other way of selling your home by over 3% to your bottom line.<\/span><\/p>\n

Home Seller Mistake #3: \u00a0Wrong Action Taken, Wrong Market Interpretation<\/h2>\n

This is my “catch-all.” \u00a0 I’ve heard so many thoughts that it’ll be fun to list them here:<\/p>\n