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Sacramento Real Estate by Julie Jalone Selling a Home: Should you have an Open House?
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Roseville real estate,
Roseville realtor, Rocklin and real estate, Rocklin realtor, Rocklin real estate, realtors in Sacramento California, Sacramento
realtors, Sacramento real estate listings, Granite Bay realtor, Granite Bay real estate, Lincoln real estate, Lincoln realtor,
real estate property listings, Julie Jalone, real estate agent, Lyon Real Estate
Selling a Home: Should you have an Open House? By
My personal experience
is, as much as I would rather be doing something else with my weekend afternoon time, open houses have led to sales and new
clients. The relationship of house sitting hours to finding a buyer or new client
is not very good. For me, I would estimate it at about 65 to 75 hours per “catch.”
This means Open Houses may not be the most effective use of time for me or my
sellers, but there are other reasons to consider them. You can't always count
on agents to sell your listing. Sometimes agents don’t know their clients well and don't show them a listing that might
work for them. In addition as all agents know, clients change their minds and don’t always tell us. A certain number of buyers find the home they ultimately buy on their own and often at an open house. Finally buyers sometimes will not make an appointment to see a house if the listing
information is not exactly what they are looking for. This same buyer will stop
at an open house because there is no commitment and may be surprised to find they like the house much more than they did when
they were reading the listing. Some sellers wonder if
the Open House is worth the work and inconvenience. Some even complain that agents
only do open houses to pick up clients, not to sell their home. Others worry
about having items being taken from their homes. Other sellers expect their Realtor
to hold open houses, so agents, regardless of their personal feelings about sitting on homes, will do what makes their client
happy. “My seller thinks they're important, so I do them” is what many Realtors feel and say when it comes to
open houses. But then there are sellers who wonder why they should open their
homes to the public if most people coming through are not serious buyers. Preparing
for an open house is a great deal of work because the house should be “perfect” and then you have to be away for
most of a day, not to mention wear and tear on the house and the risk of theft. "You
get Lookie Lou's trying to pick up some decorating hints and curious neighbors who always wanted to know how your house looks
on the inside," said Eric Tyson and Ray Brown in their book House Selling for Dummies (Hungry Minds, Inc., 1999). One
client who declined using the open house as a marketing tool said. “I don’t want to lose control of who is actually
coming into my home.” Clearly not having open houses is easier for the
seller and agent. The opinions of Realtors/agents
are as diverse as sellers when it comes to doing the Open House. One agent said
people attend open houses to compare the house to the one they really want to buy, to gain a better understanding of what
is on the market before making a decision, to see what their neighbors house looks like and finally to get decorating ideas. Since none of these is valuable to the seller he recommends avoiding the hassle of
open houses. So what are other agents
saying about holding an open house? I found the following agent comments on the
internet in various articles. "I do not see any need for open houses right now,
houses are selling quite rapidly and sellers can focus on other items of importance."
Another agent says she "very rarely" has open houses now because buyers shopping on the Internet can see pictures or
take virtual tours of homes. But then
there is this, “The open house is the best way to market a home, the more people we can get to look at their house,
the more opportunity they have to sell the house and get top dollar for it." Here
is one agent who says it pretty straight, "I don't believe in Open Houses. They rarely bring buyers." Here are a few more, "The more potential buyers you can get to view your home,
the better chance you have to sell it” and “Open houses can provide instant feedback to sellers, as well as word
of mouth once neighbors know it's on the market.” And finally "I hold an open house when I have a nice house in a nice
area; I don't like to hold them for homes when people are still living in them. I don't want to have to watch their stuff." A survey conducted in
The National Association
of Realtors polled agents and found that open houses led to only 7 percent of all home sales.
Referrals were sited as the biggest sales factor at 29% of all sales. In
a 2005 profile of Home Buyers and Sellers, also conducted by the NAR, 42% of home buyers found open houses to be "Very Useful"
as an information source and 55% said they used open houses as an information source in their search but of the nine categories
in the chart showing where buyers first learned about the home they purchased, open houses were not even listed. The Texas survey which
had 36% of all Certified Residential Specialist license holders in the state respond, found that 97% had held open houses
but only 41% said they were effective. According to the article associated
with the survey, “Survey Slams Door on Open House” (http://recenter.tamu.edu/pdf/1258.pdf), “While 32 percent agree that public open houses attract
many potential buyers, 62 percent believe most people attending open houses are not serious buyers. In fact, three out of
four (77 percent) of the respondents say most open houses are held merely to appease sellers.” In addition the survey found that three out of four agents think open houses are effective in interesting
buyers in homes other that than the one being shown. The Open House has been
a staple of selling homes for a long time and although we are seeing agent resistance and even data demonstrating they are
not very effective I don’t see them going away anytime soon. As long as
there are sellers out there who see value or at least believe there is value in holding an open house, there will be agents
who sit in houses on weekend afternoons. |
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