| Port Orange Real Estate Blog. Houses, Condos and Reports by Lisa Hill, "THE SMART CHOICE!" |
I keep wondering, when I bring buyers to see a house, and compare the house itself, to the Daytona Beach MLS information, why I see not just discrepancies and mistakes, but sometimes what can only be defined as downright laziness on the part of the listing agent.
A couple of days ago, while showing several houses, I found
- One that had no mention of the garage!?!
- One that had only 3 photos of a gorgeous home, when The Daytona Beach area Multiple Listing Service holds 12.
- One that had no mention of the pool ??
- One that had no mention of the new granite counters, solar hot water heater, and place to store your boat behind the side-yard fence.
One of my biggest issues is with lazy agents who don't write a thorough description of the property. I mean, I can understand if it's a REAL fixer-upper (like one of Rich Kruse's listings, yeah I went there) and the listing agent is having trouble finding some positive light to shed, but these were upscale, beachside (meaning on the peninsula, or strip of land between the Atlantic Ocean and the Intracoastal Waterway) single family homes. Just walking through with my buyers, I found plenty of things that should have been mentioned in the MLS descriptions.
Why is it that some real estate agents are OK with providing sub-standard service to their sellers? Do they have so many listings that it just doesn't matter? As a professional, I consider these things to be the minimum level of service. I feel like I owe it to my clients to do EVERYTHING in my power to present their most valuable possession in the most positive light, in order to place them ahead of the competition. After all this is a buyer's market and we have unprecedented levels of listing inventory in our MLS right now.
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Yup yup yup! It happens here all the time!
The more information, the better traffic you will have to your home. I think some agents don't get that. I don't understand if they don't work with buyers or they just don't "get" how to execute a search and how drips work.
On the flip side, there are agents out there who put stuff in that doesn't belong JUST to get the traffic.
Renee- Good point. I've run across the ones who've exaggerated beyond the acceptable boundaries.
Ines- I've seen a couple of your posts where you were venting about the bad information in your MLS. My problem with this stuff is, they're not violations. They're just bad business!
Thesa- I got a gold star? Yay!
Right on Lisa. Even on a dump you can always come up with a comment like, "You won't forget this one in a long time!"
Rob
Yes, not only are they NOT mentioning things that they should, but they also mention things that they shouldn't:
They also do things like:
I posted a while ago about my frustration over lame photos (or no photos) on the MLS. This just gets me steamed again...I review all the ML input sheets and web printouts for my listings, scouring for errors or misstatements. Again I ask, what ARE the sellers paying for if the agent can't even get the listing itself right?
Grrr.
Holy cow I am! I went on a listing appointment recently where the seller wanted way more than I could comp it at. I didn't take the listing. Check the new listings this morning on MLS, there it was, listed with another agent. I saw buckets of mistakes, lots of carelessness, and I was shocked. How are you going to attract buyers in that price range if you can't spell?
I have seen lots of horrible pictures, details left out, mis-spellings, lack of remarks, and more.
One thing I always know - I maximize the MLS. I put everything in there I can fit. I pride myself on that one little detail. :)
Lisa,
This is a hot button topic for me. My office mates often chuckle as I go from MLS listing to MLS listing commenting out load that the clients are paying good money on a million dollar listing and there is either no photo or one that is taken with a camera phone. Drives me nuts!
Oh yes, Lisa, it is rampant. Amazing, given the market, that so many agents do such a poor job of marketing and even using the tool we ALL use...the MLS.
But what also surprises me is that some do not see fit to return phone calls to answer questions or to confirm appts. to show. Guess they don't need to sell the house (but does their client know what kind of job they are doing?). Makes the rest of us look better.
Jeff
Donna- Great example! Why say it's completely remodeled, then not say what was done?
Hi Lisa,
Allow me to play the Devil's Advocate :)
There are a couple reasons an agent might not mention EVERY SINGLE neat item about the property in the MLS descriptions. I don't.
Why?
DISC.
Those are personality types. And different kinds of people want different kinds of information. And they won't read the same parts before going to the property, if ever.
Those long, eloquent paragraphs are read by people who want to know how the house will make them feel. Is it updated and airy and ready for entertaining? Will their children or dogs be safe? What is the lifestyle this property accomodates?
The people who want all the details read through the listed detail info (which I am very careful to complete) They want to know not only beds, baths, square footage before going into the property, but type of heat, number of garage spaces, dimensions of lots, etc. Does it really need to listed out in sentence form?
Another reason an agent might not list out that information is simply space. Mt MLS only allows 500 characters in the main description. It does allow additional comments alongside the photos, and that is where I put the detailed descriptions. I also put in lots of details in the House Book at the property.
But I do agree with you that the listing agent should know all those details and should present the property in the way that will appeal to the potential buyers.
In this market, with so many real estate professionals, it's an honor and a priviledge just to have clients. I would think that agents would be doing everything possible to be at their best. I'm shocked at some of the stuff I run into these days. It's no wonder people are screaming about our commissions.
I have "issues" with it too.
Sarah- Great information for anyone who's not familiar with the DISC system. I used to administer it to applicants when I was in management, years ago. And you're right about the personality types. But as Realtors, we have to conform our own personalities to whatever is required to do the job. We'll always have strong and weak areas, but it's not like an outgoing person is incapable of shutting up when they have to (I fall into that category :P) And an aggressive person can pull back if they see it's overwhelming a client (I fall into that one too) And if someone is low on the detail scale, then they need a checklist, or they need to partner with someone who can compensate for them.
I have a lot of physical problems that I have to overcome on a daily basis, as well as morphing my personality to make a client feel comfortable. It's part of what we do. FTR, I'm super high on the D, just below it on the C, above the mid point on the I, and I bottom out on the C. So I have to really WORK at being "warm" when I really want to just get to the point and get it done right. But I CAN do it. It's just a matter of being aware of what you have to do if you want to be successful.... I may have to write another post :P