PROPERTY SELLING TIPS
Rick’s Dozen Tips to Bring His Sellers More Money.
- Cultivate curb charisma. Some of the best buyers are the most impatient because they need to make a decision fast. If the view of your house from the street turns them off, they might not even stop. Shape up your front yard.
- Take a critical look at your house’s front. If it’s weathered looking, if anything needs repair, or if anything needs to be hauled to the dump – eliminate these problems. Don’t turn your buyers off outside before the inside can turn them on.
- Never stay in your house with house hunters. Let the agent handle it and remove yourself if you possibly can. Remember, the agent has worked for many hours with these potential buyers, knows what they’re looking for and how to work with them. Let them do their job without interference. The presence of any member of the seller’s family can’t help, always unnerves possible buyers and often prevents a sale. Don’t put this obstacle in your path. Leave when buyers are coming.
- Give your dogs and cats a vacation. They need it and so does your pocketbook. Having pets around (especially aggressive dogs) when you’re selling your home can be incredibly expensive. Many people are acutely uncomfortable around some animals and simply can’t think buy when their minds are on bye.
- A few cans of paint and putty to brighten up your home’s interior. This is the best investment you can make when you’re selling a house.
- Drips do more than run up your water bill. They focus the attention of possible buyers on your house’s entire plumbing system and cause them to worry. Fix these little problems before they cost you a sale.
- Squeaky doors and creaking floors. Torn or missing screens, cracked glass and anything in need of repair dampens the house hunter’s enthusiasm.
- Hide (or neatly arrange) everything connected with work. Lawnmowers, garden hoses, vacuum cleaners and all the gear you used to fix up the house. Accent everything connected with play and relaxation: sound systems, skis, toys in the kid’s rooms.
- De-clutter. Repack and compactly, dispose of unneeded items, or rent storage space and move out as much material as you can. Your home’s storage space can’t look adequate to a buyer if you’ve got it jam-packed.
- Turn up the shelter. If it’s hot, cool it; if it’s cold, light a crackling fire.
- Harmonize the elements. Turn the music on softly and the television off. Turn on all the lights, day or night. Open the drapes in the daytime.
- You can sell pride of ownership faster and for more money. It’s called cleanliness and fresh cleanliness has more buyers than used dirt. Put sparkle in your bathrooms and kitchen and you’ll take lots more silver out.