My House Won’t Sell: Why?
Sally & Eric Martell ©
2008
When your home goes on the market there are basically only
three things that happen during the marketing period. Depending on which of the three categories your home fits into,
you can diagnose and predict your chances of selling.
1. Your home is almost never shown and you get no offers. This is serious!
· Perhaps your agent is failing to make the home available or failing to promote the home and nobody knows it is for sale.
· Perhaps your home is situated in a very unmarketable location. For example, it might be on a busy street, in an industrial zone, or next to the local power plant, etc.
· Or, maybe your home is grossly over-priced for the neighborhood. You normally can’t sell a home priced thousands of dollars higher than other similar homes in the same neighborhood. Today’s buyers do lots of comparison-shopping. You can’t fool them.
2. Your home is shown quite often (10-20 times per month), but you receive no offers.
· This indicates some minor problem that can usually be easily cured.
· This is where honest feedback on what the buyers are thinking is critical.
· Buyers won’t normally tell the owner of a home that they think something is wrong with the home. They’re usually too polite.
· We can only tell you what we do in this case: We aggressively pursue all agents who have shown our listings until we get feedback from them. They’re more likely to tell us, the listing agents, that something turned their buyer off.
· We provide weekly, written, feedback-reports to our sellers.
· If we see a consensus of opinion from several agents, this lets us know what needs to be done to improve the home’s chances.
3. Your home is shown often and
you receive offers.
· Placing our sellers and their home in this third position is the single biggest step in marketing and it is largely responsible for our personal success. From our experience, we will usually know within 3 or 4 weeks whether or not the home we have listed is in this position.