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You've already talked with your sellers
about the physical work involved to get a home ready to show,
but have you mentioned other events that may take place while
the house is on the market? Giving home sellers a basic
education in Buyers 101 will help prepare them for the realities
of showing their house.
Be Ready to Show at All Times
Sellers should be aware that same-day and even
last-minute requests for showings are common, so a seller with a
'24 hour notice to show' stipulation often cuts himself out of a
good chunk of the buying market. The only standard hefty lag
time that should be necessary is when you must give ample notice
to a tenant. Once a house gets tagged difficult to show by
agents, you won't receive as many calls to show it.
Explain to your home sellers that most agents do try to arrive
within the scheduled showing time, but sometimes it isn't
possible. They may get stuck in traffic, or the house they saw
prior to your showing took longer than expected. It happens, and
sometimes it happens too late to be fixed by a phone call.
Encourage sellers to stay away from home a little longer than
they think is necessary, just to make sure they don't interrupt
a showing.
Sellers Who Want to Be Present
This is nearly always a bad idea. Sellers think agents
and buyers won't be able to find everything, that they must be
there to point out important features. Truthfully, most just
want to be present to see buyer reaction firsthand. Sellers
should be aware that at the very least buyers feel uncomfortable
when they are present, and that it can actually kill a sale.
Buyers often won't even open closet or cabinet doors when the
seller is home, and when they cannot view a house comfortably,
they'll hurry up and move on to the next one.
Sellers want to talk, and not just about the house. You never
know when a buyer will be turned off by the mood of the seller,
or by a statement the seller makes. Buyers are there to look at
the house, not chit chat about hobbies or the weather or
worse--politics and other controversial topics. If sellers must
be home during a showing, counsel them to go outside or stay put
in one location, not wander around with the agent and buyers.
Sellers Who Want YOU To Be Present for All Showings
If you're selling a large estate or complicated
property, it might be the norm to plan on being present for all
showings, but it's not necessary or smart for the typical house.
Explain that other agents generally feel uncomfortable with the
selling agent hanging around, listening to and participating in
conversations with potential buyers. If the other agent is
representing the buyers as a buyer's agent, she won't be free to
have open discussions about the house in front of you.
There's another negative that may be more important: busy
agents don't have time to work around your schedule. Requiring
the listing agent to be present for all showings is another way
to give the house that difficult to show reputation.
If your sellers are worried about theft of small items, they
should store them away. Packing up collections and small
personal items is part of the process they should have already
gone through to prepare the house for showings.
Pets Must Be Controlled
Pets should be out of the house during showings,
especially large dogs, since many people are afraid of them. A
gruff bark coming from inside the house is enough to make some
home buyers turn around at the front door.
If there are pet odors, talking with your seller about the
subject can be tricky, because most people are not aware of
odors in their own home. You may need to conjure up your best
be-tactful mode to deal with that subject, but it must be dealt
with. Your sellers don't want buyers to remember the home as the
house that smells.
Gaining Seller Cooperation
Share showing information in a 'did you know this about
buyers' tone, rather than simply telling a seller what he must
do. Explaining why these steps are important helps sellers
realize that it's in their best interests to comply. Consider
putting showing advice on paper in an easy-to-read format. Give
the seller a day or so to digest the information, then ask if he
has any questions about the information.
Show that you respect the seller's opinions by asking what he
thinks are the home's best features, then spotlight those
features in a flyer or brochure that can be left on a table for
prospective buyers. Sellers usually just want to help. It's up
to you to figure out a way to give them a role in the sales
process, one that is truly helpful and that won't have a
negative impact on showings.
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