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How Do You Help Your Client's Sell Their Homes

There was a time when attention to these issues was not important...but that time is so OVER! Those of you with real estate licenses for only a few years, especially here in Seattle where the market has been hot during that time, need to change your practices a bit.

Don't rely on the fact that your methods worked in 2005 and 2006 and 2007 until September. The market has shifted! Sales are down YOY 30% to 32% since that time.

Let's assume we all agree that 77% more or less of people start their search for property on the internet. In our area buyers will often refuse to go see a property after they have viewed the photos and "don't like it". So good photos have become one of the most important things that we do for sellers hoping to sell their homes.

Even if the property sells with bad photos, maybe it's later rather than sooner and with only one offer and price suffered. So photos are #1 priority. I do not agree that all properties need a professional photographer. In fact, most don't. But if it serves your purpose as an agent to always have a professional phtographer, that's fine too as long as the property is not misrepresented by wide angle lens photos that make everything look twice the size of what it really is.

THE NUMERO UNO MISTAKE THAT AGENTS MAKE REGARDING PHOTOS, and the reason for this post, is putting them in the wrong order. It's not a visual tour. When buyers look at property the first photo on many sites, like REALTOR.com, must attract them enough to get them to click on something to see the rest of the pictures. So your first shot (depending on your mls rules) should be your BEST exterior shot. Here there is a rule that interior photos cannot be the #1 photo. But VIEW can and view often IS the best feature to show in that first photo.

Don't show all of your outside shots in a row and then "go in" the house as you might with a video tour. You MUST order the photos in the order of BEST features of the home. Why? Because if you have ever watched a buyer look at property on the internet, often they will move away at photo 2, 3 or 4 and not look at the rest.

Make sure your photos are such that your best ones are at the top and worst at the end...or not there at all. Better to have 8 great shots than 15 including 7 bad ones.

Exceptions:

1) If you show everything except the kitchen, people will assume it sucks. Kitchens are important features of any property and should not be excluded.

2) Unless the best thing the property has going for it is outside, and the inside is really bad, don't put one or two ro more exterior photos at the top before you get to the inside photos. Otherwise people will assume that five photos ina row of the exterior means the inside is terrible.

3) Don't forget to crop and add light. If you don't have a photo editor then GET ONE FAST! Often I have a shot where it is so dark that I can't see anything, but by adding light you would never even know the original photos was practically black. I'm not going to drag lighting inside a property. If I'm tempted to...then it is time to hire a photographer for that property. We need to spend most of our time on real estate issues, not all the ancillary things. But most times a decent digital camera is good enough and some wide angle usage as needed in tight spaces.

4) Don't take a picture without moving anything. The number one thing I see in photos that should be removed is a kitchen towel on a new stainless steel stove handle. The feature of the stove is more important than a towel. Take it off, take the photo, and then put it back for the owner's use.

5) This I learned from a Jeff Turner post and it has come in handy. Stand on something to get a bit OVER things when you take the photo. It makes a lot of difference and is well worth the effort of moving a chair around as you take the photos.

YOU DO NOT NEED!

That photo with the tarp covered car in the driveway as photo number 3.

The picture of half the street in front of the house. If you go that far back to get the photo, then don't forget to crop out the street and the neighbor's homes, when possible.

Any bad photos at all. It is your job to market the property. Let them see bad things after they come to the house. Don't show bad things so that they never bother to come.

How many owner's have reduced their asking price to sell the home simply because no one was coming due to poor photos? One is too many, and I fear the amount is staggering and a darn shame.

Make good photos your number one priority when representing a seller client.

Posted Saturday Feb 23
( 02/23/08 06:12PM ) — Cheryl Johnson

Ardell,  How about adding this post to Photography Group?

And please put the toilet seat down.  And clear away all that clutter and dirty dishes by the kitchen sink.  : )How about those fridge magnets?  Do they come with the house?

So true!   Pictures are the key....let me rephrase.  Great pictures are the key.  You are dead on about poor photos.  They do absolutely nothing for selling a home and can actually hurt the ability to sell.  Great post!

Great tips, Ardell.  I wear comfortable clothes and go up, down and all around a room to get the best photos.  On average, I will take over 100 shots of a house to narrow down to the handful that make the cut.  It's critical to make people want to see more!

I too have a pet peeve about the fridge magnets and toilet seats...what about a good pic of the trash bin?  We even had a Listing Agent put a pic of himself in front of the fireplace.  Sheeesh!  Great post.

interesting post.  It is amazing to me how I still see listings with two pictures of the exterior and that's it.  Or one in and one out.  This post says think about what you are doing and that is what is needed.

( 02/23/08 07:37PM ) — Debbie Summers - Move To Lake Mary!

Ardell - I will never understand why agents only have 1 photo let alone even getting in some kind of order.  Why, why, why?  Hopefully some of these agents will take your advice!

 

( 02/24/08 12:47AM ) — Spokane Real Estate - Ross Quintana

yep,I have been doing great photos for years. now people are catching on

( 02/24/08 07:08AM ) — Randy L. Prothero - Hawaii REALTOR®

My favorite are the toilet shots with the lid up and the kitchen shot with so much clutter, you can't tell what type of counters it has.

I recently decided to use an interior instead of the exterior and it has gotten better results. Not many care as much to see the front. If you have a property that is being marketed as an awesome lakefront property then why not use the back with the lakfront premium instead of the front of the home. Marketing the premium seems to be a better idea. I just picked this up in my last CRS class.

( 02/24/08 09:59AM ) — Krisy Clayton

Thank you for your tips and advice I will put it to very good use!

( 02/24/08 10:04AM ) — Kim Skumanick, Northeast PA REALTOR

I'll ditto the comment about the fridge magnets. And keep Fido out of the picture - his water bowl too. Can you take a minute to close the garage door? It's February - the pumpkins on the front porch looked great when you listed the home in October. Do you really want to let buyers know it's been on the market this long?

One thing I have learned...as much as we love photoshop, DO NOT erase those overhead powerlines, and don't let your virtual tour provider do it either. The Code says we need to present a TRUE picture in all our advertising. Take a picture from a different angle to minimize their appearance, but don't dare erase them.

( 02/24/08 10:07AM ) — ARDELL DellaLoggia

Neal,

That would be against our mls rules, though I agree and did that with condos in other states.  NWMLS rules say the first photo must be an exterior photo.

( 02/24/08 10:10AM ) — ARDELL DellaLoggia

Kim,

My rule for other agents is you can erase something that is not going to be there when the seller leaves, but you can't erase something that is staying.  I don't use photoshop or an editing program that erases.  Only lighting and cropping.  Beyond that, it's a photographer.

But I will go for the angle that doesn't show the wires when taking the shot in the first place.

( 02/24/08 10:12AM ) — ARDELL DellaLoggia

Ross,

Does your mls still offer to take that one shot for agents?  That could be why.  Ours discontinued that service some time ago.

That's interesting that you have such a rule.....I wonder if they could amend it...if more agents think it might impede on the sale they might have to think about that one.

Ardell - Excellent advice. I see photos everyday that make me cringe. Thanks for the good pointers.

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