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R.E. Calculators
For Sale By Owner (FSBO) vs. Discount Realtor.
Thank you for taking the time to read this, you are welcome to challenge my views on any of these points.

The FSBO option a $599 MLS Listing


Past Practices.
Ten years ago real estate commission rates were ‘fixed’ at 6% on the first hundred thousand plus 3% on the balance. On a $500,000 home this works out to be $18,000. This commission is split equally between the sellers Realtor and the buyers Realtor. FSBO’s believe that this is an excessively high amount of money to sell a house. With the emergence of discount Realtors the real estate selling process has changed significantly. Commission plans now range from flat up front fees to a percentage of the sale price with commission splits that are no longer fixed. The caveat is this: not all discounts are created equal, some come with unintended consequences. You need to balance your desire to save commission against the potential of a lower selling price. It is impossible for a FSBO to get the best price possible. Having owned a FSBO company for 15 years I know this to be fact. Commissions are no longer excessive, because you can choose a service that fits your needs.

"Can the FSBO process produce better financial results than the MLS?"

The Limitations of the Private Deal.
The advantage of selling and buying privately is the perceived saving, the down side is that there are no checks and balance and inventory is extremely limited. The MLS has critical mass and therefore the vast majority of buyers will rely on Realtors. This results in limited 'private sale' demand. Demand is the key component of any market place. Sellers inevitably have only one chance and are often forced to deal with a 'like minded' buyer in a vacuum. Limited demand results in lower prices which are not offset by the perceived savings. The optics are good but in reality the results are poor.

It’s All About the Commission.
The common thread between private buyers and sellers is commission. Essentially the point is this; most private buyers will feel entitled to the buyers Realtors share of the commission and consequently a private sellers can only save the listing Realtors share of the commission.

The Buyer Wants Their Share of the Commission.
Here are several reasons why this is likely to happen.
The Typical Buyer:
  • The Buyer has signed a Buyers Agency Agreement, Realtor gets paid anyway!
  • The Buyer wants their Realtor in on the deal.
  • The Buyer has no Realtor and wants their half of the commission because that is what the process is about.
Buyers attracted to the FSBO process:
  • The Buyer who will not deal with Realtors. Wants a share of the commission.
  • The Less Qualified Buyer. Wants all of the commission
  • The Budding Millionaire. Wants all of the commission.
Summary.
A private seller can potentially only save the listing Realtor’s share of the commission and these savings will turn entirely on getting top dollar. If your selling price is just 1% lower than what an MLS sale can produce for you, your theoretical share of the savings will begin to look like a loss.

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Getting Top Dollar.
Can a private seller get top dollar? There are many factors that come into play. Here are some points to consider and the caveat is: none of these issues come with warning labels.


    The Selling Price.
    Your selling price will depend on marketing. Marketing is the collective impact of a strategy based on advertising, networking, systems, incentives and know how.

    Limited Exposure.
    Whatever the reasons: limited exposure = poor demand = a lower selling price. It’s a fact of life. Symptom: No demand. The demand problem masks itself as a pricing issue. Pointless price reductions occur that give money to the buyer for the wrong reasons. The FSBO process rewards buyers more than it does sellers because it reduces competition.

    Buyers Feel No Urgency.
    Symptom: Multiple visits by buyers who are under little or no competition to make an offer. Buyer understand that the seller is dealing with a limited market.

    Extended Selling Times.
    Symptom: Extended periods of little or no action, eventually resulting in no action. It is a generally accepted fact that FSBO sellers take longer to sell. Time is money.

    The Asking Price.
    The asking price can affect the entire process. An overpriced home ends up competing with houses of better quality and value. An underpriced house isn't worth a discussion.

    The Buyers are informed.
    Buyers probably have a better idea of the market than sellers do because they are actively searching and know what's out there.

    Market Conditions.
    You have to be right on top of what is going on in the market place. In a slow market an overpriced house will sit on the market as prices slide down.

    Subject Removal.
    Have you prepared for the day when ‘subject to’s’ are removed? Have you inspected the title? Will you surrender thousands of dollars in the 10 minutes preceding subject removal?

    Overlapping Issues.
    All of these issues arrive in one document, and they come without warning labels. Will you end up accepting a deal that you are unsure about? Will you be forced to accept in order to facilitate other forward commitments?

Summary.
The FSBO process does not guarantee any saving at all, the perception of saving is based on one simple premise: ‘cut out the Realtor’. That’s a simplistic and naïve premise because by eliminating the MLS you are effectively eliminating 90% of the market.
Which strategy is the right one?
You may be well informed about the process but the tools you are using are restrictive and limited. You become locked into an inefficient process so you end up dealing with what you get, rather than what you deserve from the market place.

Conclusion.
When you connect all of the dots you can’t help but ask yourself if the FSBO route is really worth anything. The buyers desire to share the commission, extended selling times, limited market exposure and the real potential to sell for less are issues that can’t be ignored.

Last But Not Least.
When your FSBO effort fails to produce results you wil be faced with listing it with a Realtor or pulling it off the market. Consider the effects of both of these alternatives. If you list with a Realtor you will have to pay a commission that essentially jacks the price up and leaves you with less. If you pull it off the market you watch the price slide even lower, which is the present scenerio Oct 19, 2008.Details Here

How to Structure a FAIR discount that Will Work for You.
The two part commission:
  • The buyers Realtors share of the commission (3% + 1.5%).
  • Issue: You have to decide whether you are going to pay this half of the commission to the buyer as a straight discount or if you are going to make this money work for you to maximize the selling price through the MLS process. Either way you will pay this money out.
    Solution: When you list with me the buyer will be forced into paying "what they would otherwise have wanted out of a FSBO deal". Instead of paying "the buyers Realtors share of the commission" to the private buyer as a straight discount, you can appoint me as your Realtor to pay this to the buyers Realtor. This becomes the incentive for all of the local Realtors to bring their buyers to your home. It works!
  • The sellers Realtors share of the commission (I charge 1%)
  • Issue: This is the money that you where hoping to save.
    Solution: You pay me a discounted listing Realtor fee of 1% of the selling price with a minimum of $3500. You are already saving money and with a slightly higher selling price you could save even more.

    The total that you pay is 4% + 2.5% AND to satisfy your initial objective: if I should sell your property myself you only pay me the buyers Realtor share of the commission (3%+1.5%) + $1500 (GST applies to both). That way you get to save most of the sellers Realtors share of the commission, which was your original objective! My discount MLS package (4% + 2.5%) eliminates all of the FSBO concerns and uncertainties. You simply hand the whole process over to me and I do the worrying for you.

    The FSBO option that cost you $599 for an MLS Listing


    My last question is, "Can the FSBO process guarantee you anything close to what I am offering you?"


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