Why Is a Home Valuation Important?

Posted by Manager on June 2nd, 2007

There are a number of reasons to consider having a have valuation performed before you sell your home - especially if you are selling it on your own with the help of a flat fee MLS listing.

The most important reason for a home valuation, however, is simple: before pricing your home, it’s important to know how much it - or any residential real estate property - is worth.

While a home valuation is not an appraisal - it doesn’t provide a definite price at which you could sell your home - it will, based on your house number, street name, city and postal code, it can provide a sense of what your home is worth.

By knowing the value of your home, it is easier to assign the right price to your home. Having the right price will help you to sell your home quickly and far more easily than if it is over or under priced. A home valuation is a simple and effective way of finding the right price to set for your home.

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Technology Driving Change

Posted by admin on May 18th, 2006

What’s the biggest influence on the real estate industry

What has had the biggest effect on change in the real estate industry? Has it been lawsuits filed by the Department of Justice providing increased awareness of flat fee MLS companies and limited service brokerages? Has the internet and the display of MLS listing information had the greatest effect? Or has it been free websites providing home valuation information to home sellers? Whatever the answer, one thing is for sure, the industry is changing on a daily basis. There are more alternatives to selling with a traditional agent than ever before and the internet has empowered home sellers. Sellers can learn home valuations, search for homes currently for sale in their area for pricing, list in the MLS and create home fliers all from the convenience of their own PC. It will be interesting to see over the next few years if technology will have the same effect on the real estate industry as it did on the travel agency industry.

Home Sales Data Going Public

Posted by admin on May 18th, 2006

Property information being made public by MLSs

Home valuation and real estate tech sites have added pressure to the ever-changing face of real esate and the way MLSs and brokers alike display their property information. Under the pressure Northwest Multiple Listing Service, which serves western Washington, Prudential, and Zip Realty have made the decision to provide sold property information for public display. With the ongoing litigation between the Department of Justice and the National Association of Realtors it will be interesting to see if this becomes the norm or just an anomaly. Websites like Zillow.com and competitor RealEsateABC.com have increased consumer knowledge of home valuations and provided a springboard for home sellers to assume more control over the sales transaction. With accurate home valuations sellers can now confidently list their homes through alternative models like flat fee MLS brokers and discount real esate brokers eliminating the high commission structure demanded by full service brokers and agents.   

Agents Lie and Conceal to Win Listings

Posted by admin on March 30th, 2006

Agent ethics questioned by a segment on ABC

The National Association of Realtors is once again defending the reputation and ethical practices of its nearly 1.5 million members. After a segment aired on ABC, “What Your Broker Won’t Tell You”, depicted real estate agents as liars and crooks NAR responded by maintaining the segment was “very inaccurate, grossly misleading and an unfair depiction of the nation’s Realtors”. The segment implied agents will lie and withhold pertinent information in order to ensure either the sale goes through or the listing is theirs.

The segment provided examples of some of the information an agent may not impart to their clients and examples of some responses to clients that may need “decoding”. Given all the information available to home sellers via the internet it is curious why any one would enlist the services of a trade group that is constantly under scrutiny from not only the media but the government as well. Alternative models like flat fee MLS brokers – a hybrid of For Sale By Owner and MLS listing – and discount brokers provide an opportunity for home sellers to remain in complete control of the transaction. Why hire an agent to assist in the single biggest decision of your life, if he cannot be totally trusted?

 

Home sellers now have the opportunity to control every aspect of the transaction. Home valuation sites like Zillow and Real Estate ABC provide accurate market analysis and pricing information which is the most important aspect of listing the home. No longer is the MLS the only source for comparative data. With information only a click away home sellers can utilize available tools to retain complete control of the transaction.

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A National MLS on the Horizon?

Posted by admin on March 17th, 2006

Will the National Association of Realtors Amend the Way Property Data is Displayed

A National Association of Realtors (NAR) advisory board will meet in the coming months to determine if a new version of the Multiple Lisitng Service system needs to be implemented. With over 900 local and regional MLS’s each mandating its own rules and regulations, is it possible, or even feasible to think there could be a unified MLS covering the entire nation? The advisory board is meeting to discuss the possibilities of change.

Strange to see the effect the evolution of technology has had on what used to be one of the most guarded sources of information in any industry, the almighty MLS. But it seems the traditional way of guarding information is whittling away. Now, it is up to the advisory board to determine how the MLS would be used and what capabilities it would offer if there were no current MLSs in place and development were to start from scratch.

The fact NAR is even considering such a development is significant given its ongoing battles with the Department of Justice over its current policies of the online display of property information. It is cited that Zillow and other home valuation sites have provided major "wake up call" to the current MLS structure. It will be interesting to see what capabilities and upgrades a "new" MLS would offer to its members. With product information only a click away from the general public, a new MLS will have to offer more in providing detailed and accurate information to its practitioners.

Will New Real Estate Models Survive Housing Bubble Burst?

Posted by admin on October 8th, 2005

How limited service and MLS entry only models can help homesellers in a down market.

Much of the real estate news today focuses on the "eminent" housing market downturn. What after the longest run of increasing house prices since World War II, it seems likely that the housing bubble must end at some point, sooner rather than later.

During these residential real estate market boon years, alternative discount and limted service models of real estate brokerage have proliferated and flourished. Under a "sellers market" it’s easy to understand how home sellers might need fewer services and less marketing in order to sell their homes. In a seller’s market homesellers have obviously been able to sell their homes without paying a traditional 5-7% commission because of the demand for housing.

But what happens when the bubble bursts? Won’t sellers come running back to the traditional Realtors?

Not according to Claude Davenport, President of limited service brokerage, InSight Realty. "InSight has operated in markets throughout the Mid-Atlantic since 2001. And during that time, not all of these areas have experienced the same housing boom as most of the United States has for the past 5-7 years. The tremendous success we’ve had in those areas where housing sales have been sluggish is indicative of how limited service brokerages can assist sellers in a down market." 

His point is that in a down market, the key to selling property is competitive pricing, not as many traditional agents contend, more services. By charging clients less to sell their homes, limited service and "MLS entry only" companies allow sellers to pass on those savings to their buyers thereby undercutting the competition in terms of house pricing.

Most Realtors will tell you that the ultimate amentity is price. The lower the price, the easier it is to sell a home. It makes sense then that if you are not paying a relatively high real estate commission, the largest single expense of the sale, you would be able to offer your property to a buyer for that much less thereby attracting a larger portion of the market to your home.

"If you can sell your home in a down market for 2-3% less than your neighbor because you don’t have to pay those monies to a Realtor, your going to sell your home faster." Davenport said. "You really can’t get much more marketing exposure for your home than you can with an MLS listing and posting on Realtor.com, so the differentiating factor then becomes price."

If all of the recent forecasts and forewarnings of a bearish housing market come to pass, we may find out for sure fairly soon.

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