Check Out The Latest IHS Realty Flat Fee Listing

Posted by admin on November 30th, 2006

More than 4,000 square feet of colonial living space

Located in the Gambrill Oaks subdivision of Springfield, Virginia, this 5 bedroom 3 bath home is an absolute wonder! Here’s a sample of the listing itself:

  • Directions: Fairfax County Parkway (1/2 mile south of 95/395 interchange) to Gambrill/Sydenstriker exit. South on Gambrill road 3/4 mile to Kings Ridge Court. Only pipestem on street is just before the cul-de-sac. Take the pipestem up. #8313 is house on right.
  • Property Amenities: Auto Garage Door Opener, Built-In Bookcases, Drapes/Curtains, Fireplace Glass Doors, Fireplace Mantles, Fireplace Screen, Fireplace Equipment, Granite Counters, Master Bath - Separate Shower, Master Bath - Full Bath, Shades/Blinds, Sump Pump, Tub - Soaking, Walk-in closet(s), Washer/Dryer Hookups, Wood Floors, Whirlpool Jets
  • Built in 1991, the home has central AC, a colonial architecture and more than 4,000 square feet of living space.

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      Get more information on this flat fee MLS listing and see others as well.

    Virginians Have More Than One MLS Option

    Posted by admin on September 26th, 2006

    Virginia’s flat fee MLS services reach as far as Pennsylvania

    If you live in Virginia, you have four chances to get listed with the MLS.

    The Tidewater-Hampton Roads MLS has proven itself to be an effective vehicle for home sellers. More than 75% of homes sold take place through the service. If you’re not listed, you’re missing out.

    The Metropolitan Regional Information System in Northern Virginia is one of the largest MLS systems in the country. It also covers D.C. and southern Maryland. More than 50,000 real estate professionals rely on the information in MRIS every day.

    Home sellers in Richmond can list their home with the Central Virginia Regional Multiple Listing Service. When you list with IHS Realty, you get on the MLS for 6 months, get a unique property web page, appear on REALTOR.com, Richmond.com, and CentralVirginiaHomeSearch.com. But that’s just the tip of the iceberg.

    If the home selling market gets too cold for you, take it to the beach, Virginia Beach MLS. A part of the Tidewater-Hampton Roads network, you get all the benefits of listing on any other Virginia MLS. You’ll even be picked up by such powerhouse Internet icons as Yahoo, AOL, and MSN. Flat fee MLS has never been better.

    Take the easy road and list on the MLS today.

    Richmond, Virginia noted as affordable housing market

    Posted by admin on February 22nd, 2006

    Wall Street Journal says Richmond offers lower cost of living

    A recent article in the Wall Street Journal’s Real Estate Journal today stated that Richmond, VA market is giving the D.C.- New York corridor a run for its money. "The area’s relatively affordable housing and lower cost of living has helped attract companies like packaging giant MeadWestvaco Corp., which recently announced plans to relocate its headquarters to the area from Connecticut, bringing an estimated 400 new jobs and giving the Virginia capital bragging rights to a seventh Fortune 500 company headquarters."

    According to the article, Richmond’s third quarter median home price was $214,000, a bargain compared with Washington, D.C. where median home price was $441,400 for the third quarter of 2005.

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    Virginia Considers New Real Estate Agency Law

    Posted by admin on January 29th, 2006

    Limited Service debate spreads to the Old Dominion

    House Bill 316, Agent Services Legislation is now being considered for passage in the Virginia Generaly Assembly. Ostensibly, the bill, backed by the Virginia Association of Realtors (VAR), seeks to ensure that consumers understand what services they will or won’t receive in a brokerage relationship by creating a new form of agency "Limited Service" (LS).

    Currently, Virginia agency law allows for two kinds of relationships: 1) standard agency, in which clients are owed the full gamut of statutory agency services/duties by the real estate licensee; and 2) non-agency/independent contractor, in which licensees provide only the services contracted for, with no disclosure requirement as to services not provided. But new limited services real estate brokerage models anticipate a hybrid approach: a limited kind of agency relationship, in which consumers may choose brokerage services a la carte, and in return pay the broker a flat fee or reduced commission.

    Overall, I am pleased with the decision of VAR to back a simple disclosure rather than enforced enumerated service requirements which have been promulgated in various states. The disagreement I have with the proposed legislation is that it provides for Multiple Listing Services (MLSs) to create a data field to designate "LS" listings without a prohibition of not making the designation field searchable. By making LS designation searchable traditional agents are able to selectively elimlinate LS listings from their searches as well as any searches they may create for automatic email to their clients. It invites discrimination against LS firms and provides no counterbalancing positive effect that is not already available in the existing MLS data fields.

    To me the LS designation in the MLS data fields is a "red herring". It is disingenous for agents to say that they "need" a separate MLS field to know that they are dealing with an LS listing since this disclosure can be readily made in the existing "agent remarks" field of the listing. From my experience, LS brokers aren’t attempting to hide the fact that the listing is LS. In fact, one of our biggest time/money wasters as an LS firm is answering calls from agents who haven’t read the MLS instructions about who to contact for showings, contracts, etc.
    From the other side, I really can’t see what all the fuss is about from these agents who are supposedly having to do SO much more work with LS listings. When I was a traditional agent, I would have welcomed (read: jumped all over) the opportunity to directly negotiate my buyer clients contracts with the sellers (not allowed by precendent in my market). Not only would I have been able to more clearly and fully present the interests of my clients, I would have been making contact with another future buyer/seller prospect which is the name of the game for real estate agents.
    I presume that traditional brokers see this new legislation as a win for the status quo because they think that by telling the "poor, uninformed" sellers what they’re missing by listing LS or MLS entry-only they will change their minds about attempting to look for ways to save their equity. (HA HA).
    What confounds me is how the traditional real estate leaders continually consider these issues affects them without giving any though to what the consumer wants. Such a myopic and selfish outlook only serves to make the new entrant innovators look even more consumer oriented. And it’s beginning to show. Look how may flat fee, limited service brokers there are now. A quick Google search shows our numbers are increasing exponentially. Wouldn’t they think it’s a result of consumer’s being fed up with the lack of choices? Being forced to purchase a bundle of services doesn’t protect anything except the traditional Realtor’s right a full commission.
    My feeling is that even in states where minimum service laws have been passed, those laws will eventually be overturned once the consumer wakes up to what’s really happening. Calling the laws "consumer protections" can’t belie the fact that choices are being eliminated. Experience shows that the consumer, and specifically consumer choice, always wins in the long run. Even Microsoft now says they’re going "open source".

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    Home Sale Pace to Quicken

    Posted by admin on December 8th, 2005

    Bigger Real Estate Boom on the Horizon

    According to a report by Virginia Tech urban planning professor Robert Lang, the real estate boom of the past decade is nothing compared to what’s to come. Over the next 25 years it’s estimated that over $25 trillion in development will take place, or more than twice the size of the U.S. economy.

    Lang is betting on emerging super-regions like the Boston, New York and Washington D.C. area to lead the drive towards future real estate growth. Lang calls these and 9 other gargantuan region scaled growth zones organized around major interstate highways across the country "megalopolises". Accordingly, one location in this megalopolis is Moorefield Station, Virginia, a key area primed for development in the coming years. This currently vacant farmland west of Dulles Airport is  planned to offer millions of square feet of commercial space and homes for 40,000 residents. By 2012 a planned commuter rail line will ferry home owners from this D.C. suburb into nation’s capital.

    Citing Lang’s report, Bruce Katz,  Vice President and Director of the Brooking’s Institute’s Metropolitan Policy Program notes that these "mega-regions now encompass more than 70% of the country’s population and extend into 35 states. They will add 7 out of every 10 new Americans to be added by 2040, three-quarters of the capital to be expended nationally on private real estate by then."

    See Also

    • The Next Real Estate Boom
      In the coming 25 years, the biggest wave of development since World War II will turn America’s major metro areas into giant “megapolitans” teeming with opportunity.
    • The $25 trillion land grab
      Ten megapolitans are poised for a boom that, by 2030, will dwarf America’s post WWII buildout.

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