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Dirty Homes = No Sale!

Clean homes sell!Have you ever been dissappointed showing homes?  You know the feeling, you have a great buyer and most of the Atlanta homes you show are just a total dissappointment?  I have a buyer that must settle in 45 days and doesn't want a foreclosure.  He wants a home, not a project.  "Turn Key" would be perfect. The first two Atlanta homes we saw had terrible views, really needed some trees behind to hide the nuclear landscape or perhaps beautiful wood blinds to buffer the obvious, not just juvenile curtain toppers.  I told the buyer if she really liked the home, we could ask for trees to be planted, fast growing pines.   Had a few trees been planted there, the bare landscape wouldn't have been an issue and the reason the buyer didn't put in an offer.  Buyers have a lot of inventory to go through, so why add to the hassle?
 
The third Atlanta homes we looked at had a lovely area around the front door and looked very appealing and inviting, like home.  Across from it was the community park which was well groomed adding to the appeal.  Once we opened the door, you could smell a lingering cooking oil scent; not just today's meal but many different meals and that oil and spice scent hung heavily on the draperies, furniture, and carpets.  It permeated,a nd penetrated everything.  Even the door knobs and floor were sticky.  I thought to myself that once the owners moved, they could take the draperies and furniture and clean the carpets.  However, as we walked around, it was obvious the carpets had been more than well lived on.  A note announced "we will clean carpets upon move out."  What happened to having your listing pristine?  Obviously the owners know the carpets are a mess and should address that issue. 
 
When we got into the kitchen area, there was a nice breakfast bar, but no stools or chairs because that's where their child played and stacks and stacks of toys and books were piled under the counter area so that was made "invible" to the eye, like an optical illusion.  I had to go over and put my hand on the counter and point out the barstool possibilities.  No dishes in the sink, but lots of pots of varying sizes clean and placed on the four burners of the stove.  "That means there's no storage in this kitchen" my buyer said as her eyebrows raised punctuating her point.  The dining room chandelier had glass globes that were dirty - we originally thought they had the lighting turned down low, but the glass was obscured by a greasy film.  We walked over to the door going down into the basement and I was ready to leave as was my buyer.  How much money and time would it take to paint a door?  Someone who used the basement door must have had a routine of reading several newspapers, then opening the door because there were inky hand and fingerprints at all levels and again the door knob was gummy.  We left.
 
Now if I were to return that agent's email and phone call asking for my honest feedback, all I'd get would be grief because he/she probably keeps their home like that.  Possibly they have tried to reason with the seller and the seller would either not want to hear it at all, or would say "let the new people deal with it" because they're already emotionally detached from the property.  The agent would forward my email to the seller because the agent doesn't have the common sense to have told the seller her home needs to look like new as that is the standard set by today's buyer.  Atlanta is a buyer's market on steroids, and even most foreclsoures homes look better than this one. 

This home in this market in Atlanta will not sell!  All the staging, a good price, lots of advertising and showings will = NO SALE!  The buyer I had isn't going to be the "new people" and until you do some housekeeping, have your mortgage company loss litigator's number handy because you'll be sitting for awhile.

Jim Crawford REMAX

RE/MAX Paramount Properties  678-595-5286 Direct

Or  888-940-0074 Toll Free Office

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Comments

I guess there are certain standards in different areas. I sold a house for a dear friend of mine that was a bankruptcy, it was a mess!

Always good to see you Jim, enjoy The Superbowl!

Posted by Luke Constantino (REMAX Park Slope) 5 months ago

Jim,

Those things you mentioned aren't rocket science to fix. You have to place some blame on the listing agent, as well as the seller.

Rich

Posted by Richard Iarossi, Crofton MD Real Estate, Annapolis MD Real Estate (Long and FosterĀ® Real Estate, Inc.) 5 months ago

Those are the worst.  An otherwise beautiful home that you can tell used to have lovely features that are totally obscured or ignored by the sticky oily greasy film over everything.   Heavy cookers can ruin a home as easily as heavy smokers.   And the "new buyers" can just clean it?  I just spent THREE DAYS cleaning a stove we pulled out of a home like that.  Got a steal on it because it was gross and noone wanted it, but it took 3 long days of scrubbing with GOO GONE (nothing else touched the grease!) to get it in usable shape.   I couldn't imagine cleaning a whole house!

Posted by Sheree Wilkerson (Realty World Alliance) 5 months ago

Luke Constantino (REMAX Park Slope)  Not in this market, there is still too much inventory.

Posted by Jim Crawford ~ Atlanta Real Estate-ABR E-PRO (RE/MAX Paramount Properties) 5 months ago

Richard Iarossi, Crofton MD Real Estate, Annapolis MD Real Estate (Long and Foster® Real Estate, Inc.)  This would take a days work, but without it...the home will never sell!

Posted by Jim Crawford ~ Atlanta Real Estate-ABR E-PRO (RE/MAX Paramount Properties) 5 months ago

Atlanta has tough standards! 

Posted by Chad Baird (Re/Max Spirit) 5 months ago

Sheree Wilkerson (Realty World Alliance)  The Atlanta market is an overbuilt speculative market, no most buyers will not touch it.  They do not have to, and they can still get a great price on something else.

Posted by Jim Crawford ~ Atlanta Real Estate-ABR E-PRO (RE/MAX Paramount Properties) 5 months ago

Chad Baird (Re/Max Spirit)  Nope too much competitively priced cheap inventory!

Posted by Jim Crawford ~ Atlanta Real Estate-ABR E-PRO (RE/MAX Paramount Properties) 5 months ago

Jim - Great illustration.  We have the same problem for some of our buyers in that even though there is a lot of inventory, there are not that many properly priced properties.  And if they go down in price range then they get something that needs too much work.  It is very difficult to get the message across to sellers sometimes that not only does the property need to be priced to sell but it has to show very well too !

Posted by Christopher and Stephanie Somers - Realtors - Philadelphia Real Estate (Owner - RE/MAX Access) 5 months ago

Christopher and Stephanie Somers - Realtors - Philadelphia Real Estate (Owner - RE/MAX Access)  I think the newer agents are the ones that cannot get the message across to the sellers.  If it is not spotless clean, I will not list it!

Posted by Jim Crawford ~ Atlanta Real Estate-ABR E-PRO (RE/MAX Paramount Properties) 5 months ago

I would rather show a vacant home that is dusty from sitting over showing someones poor housekeeping.  This is great info for Sellers and buyers alike.  If you sell your car yourself, you wash it before people test drive it don't you?  declutter and clean up before the showing appointment

Posted by MIKE GALLO - 727-271-2667 (Keller Williams, Elite Partners 727-271-2667) 5 months ago

Michael J. Gallo - m.j.gallo@kw.com-727-271-2667 (Keller Williams, Elite Partners)  Exactly.  What I really detest is that many of these homes required 24 hour advance notice.  This is pathetic and inexcusable!

Posted by Jim Crawford ~ Atlanta Real Estate-ABR E-PRO (RE/MAX Paramount Properties) 5 months ago

Boy, how hard is it to clean a doorknob!  Some sellers just don't get it.  I wrote a blog this week about a seller that thinks agents should bring air freshener along - to get rid of the diaper smell in her place.  Can you believe it?  It's OUR job to get rid of HER stink!  Yikes!!

Posted by April Hayden-Munson Realtor, Southeastern Wisconsin (RE/MAX Realty 100) 5 months ago

April Hayden-Munson Realtor, Southeastern Wisconsin (RE/MAX Realty 100)  April that is unbelievable, yet very believable.  It is no wonder homes roll into foreclosure.  What ever happened to effort, elbow grease, and spic and span?

Posted by Jim Crawford ~ Atlanta Real Estate-ABR E-PRO (RE/MAX Paramount Properties) 5 months ago

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