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Mark Organek - Tempe Gilbert Mesa Chandler REALTOR

An Impromptu Open House Kicks off a Great 2009?

I had a great start to the New Year!! A new client wanted to see a foreclosure property in Phoenix. Told her that there was a smoking one listed by Scott Gibson's team from RE/MAX Renaissance. She loved it.

The crazy part, as I'm getting ready to leave, people start coming out of the woodwork as if it were a new movie release.

now showingI end up showing the home from 12:30pm to 3:40pm, unintentionally! An impromptu open house of sorts! By the end of the three hour period a total of 10 people saw the home!

What a great start to the NEW YEAR! Guess who's going to do open houses through this weekend?

Good luck to everyone this year and if you need to search Phoenix foreclosures feel free to use www.monopolyman.com!

Gilbert, AZ Foreclosure Gem. Listing provided courtesy of RE/MAX Renaissance

When I saw this home, I knew that I would get some buying interest on it.  I have been to the home almost daily for the past week.  I plan on holding it open every other day.  Enjoy this segmented video walk-through of this home and you'll know why this is a gem of a home.

The Greatroom, Dining area in greatroom, the kitchen has granite countertops, beautiful cabinets, an island, a pantry and plenty of counter space and cabinet space.  The common areas are gorgeous tile:

The backyard has an oasis like setting with a pebble tec pool, grassy play area, children's play area, dog run and plenty of room:

Coming back from the backyard, you get to see the size of the family room, the plant shelves just waiting to be decorated, the openness of the eat-in kitchen as you're led to the two bedrooms that are spacious with large closets.

The video doesn't do the tile justice but believe me, it adds a very warm touch to the home. This segment covers the full hall bathroom and then shows the size of the home as we travel back through the kitchen to get to the large inside laundry. The 2.5 car garage has great natural lighting that works well with the workbench!

Lastly, the spacious master bedroom overlooking the backyard and swimming pool. Check out the luxuriously sized master bathroom with oversized tub, separate shower and toilet, dual sinks, huge walk-in closet and take a look at all of the natural lighting the windows provide

Thank you to  Tim Maitski "Secret Agent Guy and Cheryl Johnson for their tips and pointers on embeding Youtube video segments into a post.

This listing provided courtesy of RE/MAX Renaissance.

To search Phoenix Metro foreclosures, visit www.monopolyman.com

When REO's won't turn the utilities on or make minor repairs...BUY IT!

Sometimes it seems that every non-short sale property that hits the market gets snatched up quick!

There are plenty of buyers, they just want deals! The bidding-up of values sometimes gets crazy.

I have a couple with a large family. They're looking to buy their first home. They can easily afford it as the payment is slightly higher than the current rent payment on their lease. They need down payment assistance and closing cost assistance. Doesn't make too strong of a looking buyer even though they will sail through underwriting. Very strong in all regards except the initial investment.

Regardless, a 6% concession is not as strong as a buyer with their own down payment. In all other regards, they are quite equal.

Since they're willing to do some work of their own on a home, they didn't search for the creme-puff, they looked for a home with some minor "problems". Preferably, broken window, peeling paint, broken stove, torn carpet in a room, damaged walls, empty pool, broken fan on A/C (they freeze up out here in AZ if you don't use them regularly.)

Then, we found it!!! Only a couple of major FHA blocking issues: The seller won't fill the pool, buyer must pay to do this for the inspection. Seller won't turn on electricity. Seller will make no repairs.

They did not care about whether or not they had to pay DPA or closing costs... They were smart enough to focus on the net. We worked all the numbers out and my clients' offer was accepted with no counter.

We picked it up LOW! It was priced low because it couldn't pass FHA inspection. Pool was drained and AC/Heater wouldn't kick on. Our target home!

As long as the home wouldn't pass inspection nobody could buy unless items were fixed. Fortunately, this bank specifically stated, "Seller will make no repairs! Buyers wishing to inspect must turn on utilities in their name!" Our perfect home!

For $790.00, Joe Caba of Mr. Kool AC/Heating and Pool came out, fixed the A/C, cleaned and set the pool, inspected the pool equipment and made everything work out.

My clients went after what nobody else thought was possible. They did know one thing was for certain:

Home ownership was always the end result they were focused on, in THEIR minds!

Don't violate our industry with the unsupervised use of a guinea pig

What do guinea pigs and the Code of Ethics have in common? Article 11.

I'll paraphrase - If you can't provide service that shall conform to the standards of practice and competence which are reasonably expected, don't hire yourself out to do the job!

guinea pigDON'T MAKE YOUR CLIENT THE GUINEA PIG!

Real estate has enough twists and turns without some inexperienced agent coming in and making things worse.

I've never sold an office building before - so if I get an opportunity to sell one, I have to put my client's needs first. It doesn't mean I can't take the listing, I JUST CAN'T TAKE IT WITHOUT THE "ASSISTANCE OF ONE WHO IS COMPETENT ON SUCH TYPES OF PROPERTY OR SERVICE, OR UNLESS THE FACTS ARE FULLY DISCLOSED TO THE CLIENT"

If you've never done a short sale, don't try it on your own. You may end up inadvertently creating a foreclosure situation for your client. Other agents may be relying on your compliance with the Code of Ethics, giving you the benefit of doubt when it isn't deserved!

Instead, consider a split arrangement whereby you do all of the work and the split agent supervises.

mansionNever listed a luxury home before? Split your listing with the most experienced luxury home specialist in your office. You do all of the work, they supervise and provide guidance. You get paid for the learning experience and they get paid for the experience you borrowed.

This will save time, and alleviate headaches not just for your clients but for you, your broker, your creditors (you have to get paid for them to get paid), etc.

At the end of the day, I would rather take a split and learn than put my client at risk. Their trust in us are the whole reason we get the learning experiences in the first place. Let's not let them down through greed.

Maybe this can shed some light for sellers dealing with REALTORS

trustNow is the time for each and every seller to ask themselves, "Did I choose the right agent to sell my home?"

Selling a home in a difficult market can be tough. How often are sellers getting in their own way?

Look, unrestricted lockbox access increases the likelihood that your home will be sold since agents won't have to jump through hoops to show it. Restricing access will greatly diminish the number of showings you'll have.

This morning, I just saw a listing hit a client's search parameters as a price reduction. I went and previewed this property about two weeks ago. It was on the market for $229,000. My clients didn't want to spend more than $195,000 for a home. I previewed it anyway since it had a pool and was the exact, EXACT same floor plan of a home that they didn't get when they were outbid in a three week process.

Why didn't they make an offer on it anyway? - The $229,000 price scared them. There were three other EXACT MODEL MATCHES that were priced below $200,000. All three went under contract. My clients would have easily paid $190,000 to $195,000 for this home, CASH. They really wanted to move! They were worried about whether or not the seller would settle for a price in the $190's so they didn't feel comfortable making an offer. LOSE-LOSE

EVERY EXACT COMPARABLE on the market sold for less than $200,000! It was painfully obvious that the subject listing was overpriced by $20,000 to $30,000. Sure it wasn't a short sale or REO but I doubt there was an agent that would miss the mark by that much! How do I know about every other comparable? The same way I know that there are 6 of this model in a two square mile radius that are in default! My clients liked loved the floorplan so much that I was tracking potential short sales and foreclosures for them...

They fell in love with something else!

don't hold your breathToday, this listing sits at $190,000. THE "OWNER WANTS SOLD" comment is even in the MLS report. Maybe the owner should have wanted this sold a couple of weeks ago and had it priced accordingly. If so, my clients would have picked it up. Instead, they paid cash and closed on a home last Thursday. I can only imagine how the sellers insisted on a $229,000 price. BIG MISTAKE!

Sellers, trust the professional that you hired!

  • If they tell you to keep the air on cold, trust them.
  • If they think that unrestricted access is important, figure out how to do it.
  • If they're willing to do an open house, let them.
  • If they tell you that pricing has changed and a price cut is in order, do it or counter argue or expect your home to sell whenever the market gets around to seeing value in your house.
  • If they suggest staging, get it staged.
  • Needs work, get it done.
  • Clean off the counters, remove family photos, clean the closet, clean the front door, plant flowers, keep the interior spotlessly clean

Do what you can to sell your home or get a lawn chair out and watch your neighbors sell their home first.