Which Real Estate Services and Supplies Do You Need to Sell Your Home?

When you’re planning to sell your home, plenty of people will tell you that you need a seller’s agent. However, it is possible to sell your home on your own - so long as you have the right real estate services and supplies.

Among those supplies are:

  • A flat fee MLS listing so that buyers and their agents will know your property is on the market;
  • An audio tour or a virtual photo tour that will allow prospective buyers to learn more about your home, even before they see it;
  • A lockbox so that agents can show your home to prospective buyers even when you’re not there;
  • and a guide to rel estate services that will allow you to learn more about the finer points of selling your home: repairs to make, home staging tips and much much more!

Take the time to find out which real estate services you really need before you sell your home.

Flat Fee Realty
Learn more real estate services and tools that will help you to sell your home without a seller’s agent..
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Kentucky Flat Fee MLS

Minimum service legislation shot down

Hooray for Kentucky! Consumers just narrowly missed being subjected to a new law that would have all but eliminated "a la carte" real estate brokerage services in the state when Senate Bill 43 was amended at the last minute.

As has happened in several states around the country, old guard real estate forces in KY have, through their virtual stranglehold on the real estate regulatory body in that state, pushed for legislation aimed at protecting the traditional real estate commission structure. Luckily for home sellers in Kentucky, the U.S. Department of Justice and Federal Trade Commission have been vigilant in their opposition to proposed laws that would mandate that consumers purchase a bundle of real estate services.

Of course, this battle isn’t over and is being replayed in state after state as real estate commissions face downward pressure from new, low-cost alternative business models.  

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InSight Realty Overcomes Real Estate Industry Obstacles

New Business Models Face Tough Challenges

Victor Hugo’s quote, “An invasion of armies can be resisted, but not an idea whose time has come.” aptly describes the current environment in which InSight Realty’s business model finds itself. InSight’s rapid success has met with the full and continuous opposition of traditional industry competitors. In spite of the fact that commission rates in the United States are, by far, the highest of all industrialized countries, traditional real estate companies have shown a marked recalcitrance to change.

Traditional real estate agents and brokers have resisted InSight in several ways. Some of these methods have been overt, such as individual agents choosing not to show their buyer clients properties listed by InSight. Some are subtle. In several markets the leadership of Realtor Associations have gone so far as to modify MLS rules and regulations to discriminate against new business models like InSight’s by preventing MLS entry only listings from appearing on public websites like Realtor.com.

Today, the entrenched leadership of the real estate industry’s trade group, the National Association of Realtors (NAR) is attempting to stifle innovative business models even further. State & local Realtor Associations and State Real Estate Commissions whose memberships are largely comprised of traditional real estate brokers, have, with the advice and support of NAR, proposed legislation to require “enumerated minimum services” for real estate brokers. Depending on the extent and severity of the new laws, these actions could spell the end for innovative business models in real estate and with them "consumer choice".

Several states legislatures have already succumbed to the pressure of Realtor lobbyists by passing laws that force consumers to purchase a bundle of services similar to the traditional real estate companys’ offering. In these states, consumers who want any assistance from a real estate professional, such as a flat-fee listing in the MLS, must also purchase “contract negotiation”, “closing assistance” and/or other services associated with the traditional bundled service offering. The effect of these laws has been to eliminate consumers’ ability to choose the types of real estate services they can purchase. The successes of these efforts significantly impacts InSight’s pricing for “a la carte” real estate services. In these states, InSight has been forced to alter or modify its service offering to adjust to a changing regulatory landscape.

In response to these efforts by the traditional power brokers, both the United States Department of Justice (DOJ) and the Federal Trade Commission (FTC) have characterized NAR’s Internet listing display policy as well State Realtor Associations’ proposals to enforce “enumerated minimum services” through legislation, as harmful to consumers and anti-competitive to new business models. Both the DOJ and FTC have sent a number of warning letters to state legislators and governors opposing legislated “minimum service requirements”. The DOJ is currently preparing for a lawsuit against NAR for its Internet listing display policy. See http://blog.insight-realty.com

Regardless of the opposition from traditional Realtors, Mr. Hugo would agree that the concept that “the consumer can choose the real estate services that he or she wants” and “pay just for those services” is an idea whose time has come. The efforts of traditional forces to maintain the status quo in an attempt to protect their longstanding commission structure are failing. Home buyers and sellers are no longer content to be held captive to Realtors’ control of the vaunted Multiple Listing Service (MLS) and through it, access to property information and marketing exposure. With InSight’s business model, consumers have regained control of their real estate transaction.

The efficiencies and economies now available to consumers through the Internet, have allowed InSight’s model to thrive. InSight’s concept embodies what consumers now want and expect from a real estate company in today’s market – CHOICES. 
InSight’s success has been the result of providing real estate brokerage services on an “as needed” basis for a price commensurate with the value received. InSight’s mission is to continue looking for ways to improve the real estate brokerage industry using innovative and creative approaches to increase consumer choice.

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