Open Houes

Can You Go To An Open House Without Your Agent?

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Hi Dave,

Just curious if this applies to Open Houses: if a couple has chosen a real estate agent, should we not go to open houses on our own? Do we need to announce who we're working with when we walk in? We had seen a particular house with our agent, and the next week it came up as an open house and we wanted to see it a second time, but didn't want to take up the agent’s time again.

Name withheld, Grand Junction

 

        


Name withheld,

This is an easy question to answer…. Finally!  Just kidding, but the answer is easy!  An open house is held “open to the public” for anyone to come look at a home, regardless of their agent representation.  The scenario you described happens all the time and it is always best to just let the agent who is working the open house know that you had seen it with your agent and you are just coming back to take a casual second look.  Let them know who your agent is and leave it at that.  It was kind of you to be respectful of your agent’s time, but I am sure he/she would have been happy to go with you if you desired.

 

Dave Kimbrough

The Kimbrough Team

RE/MAX 4000, Inc. 

How Can We Remain Open To Higher Offers Without Losing The Buyer?

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Dave,

There are four siblings involved in trying to sell a house. The Realtor has it listed a price that two of us feel is too low. His hope/plan is to have an offer at the open house the day the house is listed. It seems like this will trigger an aggressive buyer to either offer this lower list price or an even lower lowball offer.  Can we hold out if an offer is less than the list price? So, this is the flip side to your article "Making an Offer Before the Open House." How can we remain open to higher offers without losing the buyer?

-Jake (area withheld)


Jake,

Okay, there are several angles to the question and answer. First, good luck with the four siblings “trying” to sell a house! I have found over the years that trying to get four siblings, or fewer for that matter, to agree on anything if quite difficult. I come from a family where I have three older sisters and as you can guess unanimous agreement is as rare as a Yeti sighting! That being said, I believe the strategy of your real estate agent is a bit risky…by putting all his (your) eggs in the proverbial open house basket!  For the purpose of this answer, I will assume that the home in question is being sold locally, as we do from time to time get questions submitted from outside our area and the location was not included with your question.

For anyone who has read this column for the past four or five years, you will know that I am not a huge fan of the traditional open house! Why am I not a fan of the open house? Simply put, they are not impactful at generating offers on the house being held open. Does this mean that they don’t work? No, it just means that in our market they are not very effective at creating a feeding frenzy type of atmosphere. I know, I also watch HGTV and see the open house frenzy at the end of each episode of Flip or Flop, Good Bones or Hometown. (BTW these are about the only kinds of shows, outside of football or hockey, that we watch at the Kimbrough house!) Unfortunately, I have just never seen it work this way… they call it reality tv, but it is far from any reality I have ever seen. Again, this does not mean it will not work, just means that the statistical chances are not high! If this magic open house does not work and you do not receive any offers at all or the offers you receive are from “low ballers” (any time I hear the word ballers I think of The Rock) you can certainly hold out for a higher price from another buyer on down the line. If you do receive an offer at your asking price and you do not accept, there may be some potential issues with agent commission being due, but that’s a question for a completely different column. The last part of your question is kind of like having your cake and eating it too!  How can we hold out for higher offers and not lose our low-ball buyer? This answer is also simple…you can’t!

I have heard my mother say it many times…you are either pregnant or you are not! As it relates to real estate, you are either under contract or you are not! You cannot, at least no self-respecting buyer would allow you to shop their contract, be under contract with one buyer and still soliciting offers from other buyers that may be higher and then just go kick your current buyer out of bed! It just does not work that way…or maybe it does in some weird “reality” tv show! You need to list the home for a price you are willing to sell it at and then market it to solicit offers. An angle that we will use from time to time when we think there may be an unusually high demand for a property is to put it on the market and then hold any and all offers for a period of 5 days. This allows more than just an open house to take place, it allows a fair amount of market saturation to occur and the generation of traffic and interest in hopes to accumulate several offers where you end up with buyers competing for the property. At times this works great, but it works best when the property is unique, in a high demand price range or in a high demand area. 

Ultimately you can look at this as any family would when there is dissent in the ranks…two of you are going to be right and two of you are going to be wrong! Sometimes being right is the only consolation you get!

Hope this helps.

Dave Kimbrough
The Kimbrough Team

Have a question? Ask Dave!

Do open houses really work to sell homes?

Grand Junction Real Estate Advice

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Dave,

Do open houses really benefit sellers? Our home has been on the market for a few months and we’ve had four open houses per our realtor’s advice and still no offer! We understand that we should be as accommodating as possible if we want to get our home sold, but it’s a lot of work planning a day away from home with our three young children so an open house can happen.

Our realtor says each open house has had a lot of traffic, but just no luck on an offer! We’re starting to wonder if open houses really work to sell homes or they’re just a way for neighbors to come check out our home and compare it to theirs!

Brittany, Grand Junction


Brittany,

The age old real estate question, do open houses really work? I hear this question at virtually every appointment I go on and this is what I believe to be true about open houses. I can reiterate what you already experienced, statistically they are not effective at selling houses. A number somewhere in the vicinity of 2% of homes sold are sold as a result of an open house. If you are one of the 2% they are awesome, but if your one of the 98% they are far less awesome and quickly become very disappointing! In my opinion 2% is far too low to make it a staple of any “true” marketing plan. I understand having an open house every once in a while, however they certainly should NOT be the backbone of any marketing plan that you should take serious or think will prove very effective.

I do not believe the open house is a necessary tool. For selling homes, a solid and consistent marketing plan is far more efficient and far more productive than having you displaced every Sunday afternoon.

I do not believe the open house is a necessary tool. For selling homes, a solid and consistent marketing plan is far more efficient and far more productive than having you displaced every Sunday afternoon so your agent can look busy and meet new clients. With the proliferation of the internet and the amount of information at our finger tips the usefulness of the traditional open house is not what it used to be. I would not worry one bit about missing out on the Sunday open house. I am not saying it will not work, just saying that it will not work very often. Hope this helps.

Dave Kimbrough
The Kimbrough Team

Have a Question? Ask Dave!