My List of 10 Big Real Estate Mistakes

1. Letting your emotions take complete control and making an offer on the first home seen without looking at others.
Please do not get me wrong, I want to sell you a home. Many homebuyers, particularly first time homebuyers, fall into the trap of falling in love with the very first house that they see. I suggest looking at 3-7 more homes even if you do not want to. Then Sleep on it. Even in a sellers market when the homes were getting multiple bids, I still encouraged people to think overnight about one of the largest investments they would be making. It's important to visit a house more than once also I feel before making an offer. This way you can see the neighborhood itself and how it may change, depending on the day of the week and the time of day. Now go home and THINK about it and SLEEP on it.
2. Not using an agent (I know I am bias)
Only real estate licensees who are members of the NATIONAL ASSOCIATION OF REALTORS® are properly called REALTORS®. REALTORS® can assist to determine your buying power while at the same time helping you understand different financing options and in identifying qualified lenders that might work best for you. They have a multitude of resources to assist you in your home search while at the same time providing objective information about each property. A REALTOR® can help you negotiate. They will provide due diligence during the entire process for start to finish and guide you through the closing process while making sure everything flows together smoothly and is stress free as possible. They can market your property to other real estate agents and the public using a variety of tools and knowing when, where and how to advertise the property. They are there to help negotiate on your behalf, objectively evaluate every buyer's proposal without compromising your marketing position and help bring a close to the sale of your Property.
3. Working with the wrong agent REALTOR®
Interview an agent before you sign a contract with them. That REALTOR® is going to be working for you, so make sure it's a good fit and your questions are answered. Meet them once in their Office and another time in your home, this allows you to see how organized they are, what kind of environment they work in and If they are on time or not. Once I have gone through an interview with clients, if they decide to use me. I ask for a buyers contract to be signed so I can represent them. I look at it this way, there are so many agents out there to choose from and if you have chosen me, then I am working for you. A contract is a sign of commitment both on my part and the buyer I work with. If no contract is signed, Then we really only have a one sided commitment and I do not like to work that way. I would not offer a half committed service to clients, why would I accept it from them?
4. Buying Property sight unseen.
With the Internet and virtual tours it is really easy now to look at properties and make an offer without ever seeing them. I can not express how many issues I have seen or heard over the last 4 years on this. People really need to look at what they are investing in. The Internet and virtual tours can be deceiving, and not everything some agents write down is fact, sometimes this can be misleading. A walk through is always the very best. If for whatever reason that is just not possible, hire an independent inspector that works for yourself to go look at the property and provide you with an assessment of it before an offer is ever even made. Its a little money spent, Paper work saved, and headaches avoided.
5. Sellers hanging out in the house while buyers are taking a tour.
I know, your selling YOUR home, but Sellers really shouldn't be around at the open house and showings. It creates is a little uncomfortable with the buyers and the seller might not want to hear objective feedback. People take things personally and tempers can flare up. That is not the time to have a blowup during a showing. By leaving, even if it's for a walk around the blocks, you allow the buyers and the agents to work on selling your home without confrontation and awkwardness.
6. Thinking that your home is a personal ATM
When the real estate market is really hot and values are rising, people tend to look at it like it's the stock market. Soon their home has become their personal ATM machine that they leverage, borrow and refinance against to finance whatever it is that they see worthy. But when things take a turn, and they will, all of a sudden that real Estate Stock market is upside down and People are in over their heads. Congratulations you just failed in the stock market game when you invest in real estate for your personal home or for investments, your much better off looking down the road for a longer term, rather then the shorter get rich fast approach.
7. Not getting a Professional Inspection
Unless you're an inspector or have build homes for a long time, I strongly suggest that you get an inspection. If a client chooses not to, I request they sign a release on my part in an addendum stating that I have explained the importance of a home inspection and they have decided to go without against my professional recommendation. Look around and find a good one. Most agents can give you a list of some that they have worked with. Avoid inspectors that look unorganized, sloppy, and are not up to date with technology. That is my personal feelings because Pictures and clean printed out reports are so much better to work with and explain they chicken scratch with little details. Those inspectors need to step into the present or get left behind.
8. Not having a Loan Pre-Approval letter set up.
When you are pre-approved, the Lender is stating what they will loan up to based on your financial information. Have that ready before you even start looking. Nothing is more frustrating then working with somebody only to find out they our in the wrong price market or they do not qualify for a loan. I will not work with buyers or start showing until that is taken care of. Why you ask? Because my time is valuable to me and I do not like to waste it. I know that many buyers don't really care nor have their own thoughts on that. It's real simple, if I did not value my time, how would I even hope client might? If listing a home I always make a suggestion that a pre-approved letter be sent over or faxed before the other agent tours with the client. There is no reason for a buyer to be going into other people's homes if they do not qualify for a loan or they are just taking a Sunday stroll killing time. A Pre-approval letter indicates that the person really is serious about buying a home and not just wasting time. I Just hate having me time wasted and choose not to. Really its not rocket science, sort that out first.
9. Putting the price of the home higher then the market will allow.
As a seller agent, it's really important to do your research in order to come up with a realalistic sale price. I personally look up what comparable homes in neighborhood have sold for. I would see long did those homes stay on the market, what price reductions they might have had. I take in consideration the condition, timing, trend, market, location, basically everything except feelings. A person feeling on their home is important, but that does not help give a price. A buyers Agent is looking at a priced homes and doing the same thing to determine a fair price to they house and to protect their client from over paying too much. So you see, by putting the house price up way to high in hopes to bring it down to what you want is serving now purpose in today's market. Agree on a price that will Sell and net the seller the right amount. It is always better to price a home in a selling range than to start too high and have to reduce. Once you reduce, people start thinking that there is something wrong or it was overpriced to start.
Also Beware of Agents, REALTOR®, that come in and says that they can get more price for your home then maybe you had been told before. I have seen this happen were one agent list the house, terminates a contract for whatever reasons because their best friends agent said they could get a higher price. After listing with the new agent the price was reduced in price to below what it was before. I hate these tactics and have zero respect for the agents that use them. It's basically to get a listing, that is all.
10. Buying the home because you love the set up.
Well you might want to remember that you are buying the house, not the stuff inside of it. Look past all that stuff and try to envision your things in the home. Staging is wonderful but they take it all away at the end. Make sure you measure the rooms and that everything you have will fit in the rooms and get through the door ways.
Timothy S. Butterworth
Oregon Realty Company
215 SE 102nd Ave
Portland OR 97216
timothybutterworth@comcast.net
Cell 503-960-4589
Office 503-254-0100
Fax 503-252-6366
VM 503-493-6711
Licensed Realtor in Oregon
The winter is getting near and all I can think of right now is getting back up on the mountians to snowboard and ski. Well the last 13 years has been more snowboarding then sking.
If your new to the area or interested in visiting oregon and have an interst for the powder, check out some of these sites. You should find them useful.
Oregon has some wonderful Ski area's that should not be overlooked. Check out the Links below for more information.

If your thinking of moving to the area, give me a ring or drop me a line. You will be happy you did.

Have a great time in Portland Oregon, even if your funds are low.
Located at the corner or W Burnside and 10th Ave. Open
Daily 9 a.m. to 11 p.m. holidays schedules vary.
Its easy to get lost here, Powell's book store is the largest book store west of the Mississippi. More then a million volumes are housed with the store that takes up an entire city block and have many levels to it.
Powell's books website
•2. Tom McCall Waterfront Park
Located between SW Harrison St and NW Glisan St.
Along the west bank of the Willamette River is a beautiful green space named after Governor Tom McCall. There's also a paved trail for walkers, runners, or bikers, which connects to the Eastside Esplanade.
•3. Forest Park
The park is open to the public daily from 5 a.m. to 10 p.m.
Forest Park is largest city park in the United States with over 5,000 acres to explore. It has 50 miles of trails and 30 miles of gated roadways for mountain biking and horseback riding..
Sometimes The day can become too much and we have to take a step back. Every day we face new challenges. When things start to overwhelm us we can chose to try to refocus and think positive. Remember that the situation that is at hand will soon pass and another will take its place. "This too shall pass". Sometimes all we need is a little faith and believing that tommorrow will be a better day.
Cheers! Best to you and yours.

Youth was an easy road to travel
Short sprints
Sometimes we fell in the gravel
But soon we had to travel the road alone
Just a figure in the dark
Roller coasters having a new meaning
Choices and paths becoming overwhelming
Twist and turns
Surprise us each time
Hope, dreams and visions
Beacons to help us through
Rarely an easy path traveled
Joy and pain
Equally obtained
No journey to be duplicated
Each it's own unique destiny
In time we learn
Thoughtful steps lead us
Lessons learned
An easy path
May not always be the best
The hard road
May not always be the worst
The challenge is not to give up
Not to loose sight
The vision and the dream
Bumps will slow us
But should never be something
To bring one to a dead stop.
Visions ,dreams, hopes
help overcome
Trials and tribulations
Roads and paths
We can change at our discretion
Believing is all that is needed
(c) Timothy Butterworth

As a Realtor® in Portland, Oregon that has lived here all my life I can say that I have seen worse times then what we are going through now. Many people and news media have put the current economic crisis as being the worst in history. Well if History has much to say for itself I would say that there have been harder times in our past. Do not get me wrong, I do feel that people are going through a horrible time and things are not as good as they were just a few years ago. Many people are losing their homes, jobs during these difficult times and my heart does go out to them.
Let us take a small little trip back in time.
1979, I was a freshman in high school attending Canby Union High. My Father worked as a local truck driver and was putting in long hours, but we were able to afford a custom built home that was purchased in the early 70's. Inflation was up just past 11% at the end of 1979 and stayed high for the next few years with the average being close to 11%.
1980, in the middle of my freshman year of school I moved to Portland and started to work full time at Salty's , a restaurant in Sellwood. I did this while attending high school fulltime. I was lucky to have a job so young when others needed it. I heard of interest rates being above 14%, some say that it hit near 21%in the Portland Metro area at one point, Talk about credit card interest rates. I went on about my business and it was not a concern to me. I was living with my Grandparents that had paid off their home decades before during the depression. I worked hard, studied and did not really feel much of what was going on. I did do one thing. I listened to people then. As a bus person I was able to meet people and listen to them talk. People were not happy. The cold war was still in full swing, John Lennon had been killed and President Reagan was shot that year. I knew my dad was starting to go through some money issues and refinancing was not an option with the way things were looking. Unemployment was in the double digits, roughly half of what today's rate is.
Real Estate Transactions had to be done with cash, lease options or purchases, or land sales contracts. It was not unheard of to require 20% down or more when buying a home through a conventional loan or banks. More G.I. and V.A. loans were being used at the time. I do not believe that there were any programs with NO MONEY down at this point.
Liar loans were something I never heard of until much later, but we called them no document loans at that time.
1982 by September of that year I was a senior in high school and interest rates were starting to go down past 7% but we still had high unemployment and companies starting to close down. Homes would sit on the market for 6 months to 18 months. Nothing was moving. Nobody had any money to buy or could not get a loan that they could afford.
Real Estate has always been and always will be a great long-tern investment for people. Yes it has slumps from time to time and goes down but in the long run it has only gone up. Those times that the market has gone down, have been times that others have came in and bought up property at deals. People that make money in Real Estate do not do it while the market is on a constant rise, but rather when the opportunity allows a window to get in at a lower price and hold.
The 1980's also had mortgage delinquencies hitting above 6% and foreclosures around 2%, sound anything like what is happening now? The Real estate market is very cyclical and more then likely will always be that way.
1983 I started college and by 1987 was in my first home. This home was on a double lot, built in the 1950's, 3 bedrooms, 1.5 baths, a double garage with a one bedroom apartment above it. The Cost? Just under 60k
Twenty-five years ago, the average price of a new home in the U.S. was just over $76,000. That was a tough market. Those that rode out the storm, bought and held did very well as times changed.
Be Smart and think things out, but by no means is this market the first we have ever had, nor shall it be the last. Things will get better and prices will stabilize and home values will go up.
The home that was bought in 1987 is now valued at just under $400k in this market; a few years ago it was near $475k. Yes it went down nearly $75k with the crisis but it also went up in value $340k over the last 20 years. That is still an average increase of $17,000 a year growth.
Sorry I had some odd math error do to the time I decided to post this I think, I have made changes :)
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