Saturday, January 31, 2009

Would You Care for Some Old Sushi?

What do sushi and real estate listings have in common?

The answer: Neither ages well. In Japan you can buy sushi in Wal-Mart. Japanese consumers are very demanding about the quality of their sushi, and although we're talking about a decidedly mass market discount vendor such as Wal-Mart, high expectations remain. Throughout the day the price of sushi in Wal-Mart is systematically reduced every few hours as the freshness of the fish fades. After a period of time, what hasn't been sold that day is tossed in the garbage. Everyone wants the freshest fish. It seems reasonable to me.

Who wants what everyone else has passed on?

Inevitably one of first questions buyers ask is "How long has it been on the market?" This question is so important that I am going to repeat it in big bold type:

"How long has it been on the market?"

Sellers, this is a seminal moment in the sale of your home. It has a tangible impact on the value of your property. Really, it does. Time on the market directly affects the amount of money you will receive for the sale, (or rental), of your property. Let's analyze the powerful fundamental psychological forces at work and how they affect the purchase decision.

The subconscious impulse to ask the question basically has it's root in either fear or aggressiveness. The fear motivation stems from the comfort we all feel to varying degrees from being like everyone else; belonging to a nice safe group. Real estate transactions are among the largest investments/expenditures one usually makes in a lifetime, and there's a palpable fear of being taken, cheated or swindled. Asking how long it's been for sale is akin to asking "Is this safe?". If months have gone by and hordes of presumably intelligent buyers just like me have passed on the property, there must be something wrong with it. Do I want to be the fool that gets hoodwinked into buying a lemon? This trepidation is not simply a matter of concern over money spent unwisely, it is in a very large part a basal fear of not conforming to the group -- of announcing ones' commitment to an "unpopular" or flat out bad decision.

The question is more literal when coming from aggressive buyers. They're driven to varying degrees by the desire to reduce the asking price. Note that I said "reduce the asking price" and not "save money". There's a subtle difference. Ironically, for those buyers who exhibit extremely aggressive behavior the quest to "get a great deal" often reaches the level of obsession, and they will never actually buy.

MORAL:
If the answer to the question "How long has it been on the market?" is some variation of "a long time" it doesn't bode well for the seller. Buyers will either walk away from tainted goods, or they will feel they have the superior position when it comes to negotiating price.

Friday, January 30, 2009

Birth of a Blog

I am a real estate broker in New York City. It should come as no surprise that I deal with real estate professionals, buyers, sellers, landlords and tenants on a daily basis. What may surprise you is that a large percentage of these people are utterly clueless as to what they are doing and why they are doing it.

The dirty secret is that virtually all buyers, sellers, landlords and tenants – and most real estate “professionals” – don’t have the faintest idea of the underlying forces at work shaping and directing the course of all transactions.

So what?

The “So what?” is money. A lot of money. Wasted money. Your money. The saddest thing is that ignorance is bliss, and for the most part the people who have lost the most money either don’t realize that they have indeed squandered their hard earned capital, or if they do, their understanding of why or where it went is misguided and they are doomed to repeat their mistakes time after time.

I am going to change this. I want my business to be run smoothly, and frankly I want to deal with people who are prepared. This makes everyone’s life easier, and smiles all around are what’s best for me. Yes, I said me. I count too, and I will cover exactly how and why your broker is vitally important to you and your wallet in agonizing detail here.

I hope you’ll stick with me as I disect "conventional wisdom" in what I promise to be a brutally honest insider’s look into one of the most misunderstood processes we all participate in one way or another.

Reach me at michael.sussilleaux@gmail.com