|
The Laurex
Process: Exit Strategy Implementation
Selling
Houses Fast - Part 2
By Ron LeGrand
The first step to success in buying and selling is locating
prospects. Without potential buyers it's very hard to sell houses.
Frankly, an ad in the newspaper should be enough to attract plenty of
prospects if you know how to write the ad and where to put it.
I can't turn this into an ad-writing course, but any ad that gets
prospects to call is a good one. Any ad that doesn't is a bad one, or
it's in the wrong publication. Make sure your ad gives the prospect a
reason to call. Try to include a USP (Unique Selling Proposition): What
can you offer that everyone else isn't?
For example:
Lease Purchase
No Qualifying Owner Financing
No Bank Qualification
No Money Needed
Easy Terms
Owner Will Help
Will Accept Anything On Trade
No Down Payment
You Get A Car With The House, etc.
Some students use flyers distributed in newspapers and don't run ads.
Others use a lot of signs, referrals, mail outs, the Internet and
electronic voice broadcast.
We'll cover all these in the Selling Houses Fast Boot Camp, but the key
is to make sure you keep a good flow of leads coming in until the house
is sold. Where most people fail is how they handle these leads once they
come in.
That, my friend, will receive a lot of attention at the boot camp. It's
by far the weakest link in the chain. Leads must be prescreened properly
and the good ones worked daily. Out of any batch of leads will usually
come some qualified ones. Maybe not with a credit, but qualified if
you're flexible as we discussed in the last issue. What I look for most,
are people who love the house and are excited about owning it. Give me
that and a little something to work with and I'll get them in it.
8. No Follow- Up System in Place
Why do some folks insist on doing the same job several times when it can
be done once? If you're not building a buyer's list of some kind you
must love punishment. It's simple. If you have more buyers than houses,
you don't run ads, send flyers, mail letters or any of that other stuff.
You pick up the phone and call the prospects you've prescreened from the
last time and tell them about your new house.
Why is that so hard? It looks to me like it's easier to suffer the pain
of creating a buyer's list once, rather than talking to dozens of
prospects from ads every time you get ready to sell. You don't have to
be an organizational wizard to enact a little follow up. Hey, a pile of
prescreened buyers on the corner of your desk with no separation or
filing system is better than nothing. Sounds like my system. No, that's
not true. At least I put them in a file folder. Then I misplace the
folder, but I always know it's close by (somewhere).
9. Functional Obsolescence
This one is a house problem, not a people problem. You usually can't fix
this and shouldn't buy if it's present. That way you won't have trouble
selling.
Here are some things that come to mind:
- Extremely small rooms
- Bathroom off the kitchen
- Walk through bedroom to get to the only bath
- Low ceilings (under seven feet)
- House added-on unprofessionally
- Strange layout that can't be fixed
- Adjacent to odors, commercial property, school or anything else
that makes it undesirable
- Bad or no foundation
That's just a few of the things I can think of now. Note: Sometimes
you can correct this and sometimes you can't. If you don't see a way,
simply pass.
10. House is Very Small
I guess this is also functional obsolescence, but it's very common. Any
time a house has less than 1,000 square feet I get cautious. I've
learned that houses under 900 square foot are usually hard to sell and
there's not much you can do but keep looking for a small family of 1 or
2 people. I'm not saying they won't sell. I'm just saying they're
harder. I've probably done 200 houses below 1,000 square feet.
I think I own 3 or 4 now. I guess that verifies there is a buyer for
every house. If I can buy them cheap enough, I'll still do some today.
But I know going in they may take a little longer to sell.
11. Salesperson Loses Control of the Loan Process
You must remain in control from the moment you buy the house until you
get a check. That includes the loan process. You decide who does the
loan, who appraises the house, who gets the survey and termite report
and who closes. You are also in charge of speeding up the loan.
Yep! You, not your lender. You should check in every few days, push for
results and round up missing paperwork. If you don't, the close will
drag on forever. Would you allow your boss to hold your paycheck for 2
to 3 weeks until he decides to pay you? That's exactly what you're doing
when you let a loan processor jerk your chain. So, the next time you
lose a buyer because he didn't close quick enough, go to your bathroom
mirror and cuss out the person responsible.
The last time I lost a buyer two days before closing, it was because God
told them not to buy. If I'd been two days earlier, maybe I wouldn't
have been competing with God. Oh well. Six weeks later I sold the house
for $3,000 more than the first buyer. Maybe I wasn't competing with God
after all.
12. House is Located Too Far Away from the City
That's an easy one. Don't buy it. Unless you want to create a lot of
driving time so you can listen to more of my tapes. Frankly, I don't buy
anything I intend to retail that's more than 30 minutes from my office.
Of course I know for some of you in big cities that's about three blocks
away. Hey, you can always move.
13. House is in High Price Range Where Few Buyers Can Afford
Actually, sometimes that has no bearing because the upper market is hot.
If it is, the high value is not an excuse for a slow sale. The problem
is elsewhere on this list. But in smaller cities where a $500,000 house
is the mansion, you can certainly expect it to take much longer.
All that just makes a case for you to not guarantee monthly payments on
big loans. Unless you're a sadist and looking for pain you shouldn't try
to outguess the market. Don't count on a high priced house selling
quickly just because you like it. Remove the risk, give yourself time
and you'll discover the big ones sell just like the little ones, but
hopefully with a lot more profit.
Caution
You'd better make sure you have a large spread on those big babies.
Buyers of $500,000 homes are more sophisticated and more apt to ask for
a price reduction.
The good news is these folks can usually qualify for a loan, and the
majority of the sales are all cash. Owner financing and lease purchase
just doesn't have the sizzle it does on the lower end. That doesn't mean
it's not used, only not as often.
14. Only One Bath
I've sold hundreds with only one bath but it's not my preference. Cheap
houses, not a problem. Houses above $80,000 - $100,000, it's very
difficult. For houses much above $100,000 it's almost impossible. People
who can pay more, want more. If you can't add a bath you may wish to
consider not buying if you feel it's important to the sale.
I have never added a room on the house to add a bath. The only time I
have added a bath I've used the existing structure. That should cost you
no more than $1,500 - $2,000. Trying to sell a 4-bed/1-bath house ain't
easy. Selling a 3-bed/1 bath is okay as long as the house is small.
Selling a 2-bed/1 bath is the norm and buyers will expect it.
Well, that's about it. I won't guarantee that every problem you'll run
into is on this list, but chances are, the next time you're having
trouble selling a house, if you'll take a good look at this list, I bet
the problem is in it. If you do run into something out of the ordinary
that I've not discussed here, drop me a line.
In the meantime, remember that there are no real problems, just
solutions. And, very often, when you do run across a problem property,
there's hidden profit there for someone who knows the answers and can
create a solution.
Article Provided by:
Ron LeGrand
Real Estate Author & Speaker |