| The
Listing Agent - Marketing Your Home to Homebuyers
Advertising in General
Every home seller likes to be assured
that their listing agent or the real estate company will run ads
featuring their home. Newspaper ads could be large display ads with
lots of listings or small classified ads featuring just your property.
Ads may also appear in local real estate magazines and your listing
will also show up on the Internet.
Of course the agents and companies will
run ads featuring your house, but not for the reasons you expect.
You see, the main job of advertising is
not to sell your house directly. Advertising creates phone calls and
some of those callers become clients of the agents answering the
calls. This builds up a pool of homebuyers looking for property in
general, all represented by selling agents. Multiply this by all the
agents and companies who also advertise homes, and there is a large
pool of homebuyers in the market at any given time – all of whom are
represented by selling agents.
The agents representing those
homebuyers know about your home because it is listed in the Multiple
Listing Service, has been on office and broker preview, and because
your agent may have also sent flyers to all the local real estate
offices.
The agents match up their clients with
available homes, one of which may be yours. Then they show the homes
to their clients, who eventually make an offer on one. That is how
your house gets sold. Ads create a pool of clients, one of which buys
your home. Ads do not usually sell your house directly.
Real Estate Office
Advertising
As mentioned previously, advertising
your home in newspapers and magazines rarely sells your home directly.
More likely than not, the buyer who eventually purchases your home
will have called on a totally different house. The same thing happens
with buyers who call on your house. They will probably buy something
else.
You still want to be certain the real
estate company selling your house runs ads in the local and major
newspapers, whether they feature your house or not. The ads generate
phone calls to the real estate office, and if those agents viewed your
house on the office preview, they will be familiar with it. This is
how your property is sold.
Or you could be one of the lucky ones –
someone calling on your house may actually end up buying it.
You should also realize that when a
company advertises the homes they have for sale, there is more than
one objective. Sure, the real estate office wants to generate phone
calls and sell houses, but the advertising also shows home sellers how
effectively they market properties. This impresses not only you, but
others who may be thinking of selling their home.
The advertising brings in more
listings, which generate more ad calls, which produces more
buyers….and that is how real estate advertising really works.
Individual Agent
Advertising to Homebuyers
Individual agents may advertise your
home for the same reasons as companies do. They usually advertise in
classified ads or in specialty magazines featuring houses available
for sale.
As in other types of advertising, these
ads rarely sell your home. Once again, the main goals of advertising
are to accumulate homebuyers as clients, and to impress you and future
home sellers with how well they market their listings. Some agents
actually do sell their own listings, but not that often.
It is much more productive and
beneficial if your listing agent directs most of his or her marketing
efforts toward other agents. Since this is "behind the scenes"
marketing that you don’t actually see, it is often difficult for you
to measure how hard the agent is working for you.
It is a mistake to measure your agent’s
effectiveness solely by counting the number of newspaper and magazine
ads featuring your property.
Neighborhood Announcements
When you first list your home many
agents send "announcements" to all of the other houses in your
neighborhood. This can be done in the form of postcards, a letter, or
flyers left hanging on the front door. These are important because
your neighbors might have friends who are looking to buy a house.
The announcements create "word of
mouth" advertising, which is the best kind.
Open Houses
An open house when your property is
first placed on the market can be very important, but not for the
reasons most homeowners think. Just like with advertising, most
visitors to open houses rarely buy the house they come to look at.
They may not even know the price of your home when they stop by to
visit – they probably just followed an "Open House" sign to your door.
An open house performs a similar
function to the neighborhood announcements – it lets all of your
neighbors know that your house is for sale, and it practically invites
them to come "take a look." Being generally nosy, a lot of your
neighbors will take advantage of the invitation.
And they may tell their friends about
your house, creating more "word of mouth" advertising.
Of course, there are other reasons for
holding open houses, too. Listing agents who "farm" a particular
neighborhood use them as an opportunity to meet with other local
homeowners who will someday be selling their home. Your agent may hope
to list their homes in the future.
Open houses held after your home has
been on the market awhile do not usually serve a useful purpose in
selling your home. Most of the neighbors already know your house is
for sale and open house visitors rarely buy the homes they visit.
However, if you really want more open
houses, your listing agent may allow other agents to hold it open.
Open houses attract prospective homebuyers and agents hope to convince
some of those homebuyers to become their clients.
copyright 2000 by Terry
Light and RealEstate ABC
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