Monday, July 30, 2018

REAL ESTATE - A NEW PATH TO HOME OWNERSHIP

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REAL ESTATE - A NEW PATH TO HOME OWNERSHIP
Home Partners of America Creates New Homeownership Opportunities for Consumers While Creating New Business Opportunities for Agents.​

Not surprisingly, renting skyrocketed in the U.S. in the wake of the housing crisis—and whether it’s due to continued financial restrictions, misinformation about options or other reasons, a decade later, a large swath of the population is still choosing to rent.

However, many of today’s renters would likely opt for homeownership given the proper guidance and the right circumstances—and this is exactly where Home Partners of America comes in. Founded in 2012 with the ambitious yet simple mission to make homeownership a reality for more people, the Chicago-based firm offers a simple solution to put people on the path to buying a home.


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FREE HOUSES - INSANE THINGS PEOPLE WILL DO OR WON'T DO FOR A FREE HOME

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FREE HOUSES - INSANE THINGS PEOPLE WILL DO OR WON'T DO FOR A FREE HOME

From fast food only to zero communication, most would give up plenty for a free dream home.

Unlike buying a car or paying for a vacation, home buying is clearly an emotion-fraught enterprise.​ There's always a catch.

​For instance, someone offers you your dream home — whether it's a villa in Tuscany or a Palm Springs mid-century ranch — at zero financial cost to you.

But you'd have to give up a beloved pet, or turn down a fantastic job. Or cheer for the Cleveland Browns, who didn't win a single game in 2017.

Here's what people will and won't do for that opportunity, according to a survey from United Wholesale Mortgage. To get an idea of how much Americans value the idea of a dream home, the residential lender surveyed 1,002 homeowners and non-homeowners online in June.

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Saturday, July 28, 2018

REAL ESTATE: WHAT BUYERS SHOULD KNOW ABOUT SELLERS

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REAL ESTATE: WHAT BUYERS SHOULD KNOW ABOUT SELLERS


The following information is provided by the Center for REALTOR® Development (CRD).

NAR has been administering its annual Profile of Home Buyers and Sellers survey since 1981. The survey has grown from 59 to 131 questions, and gives us great insight into the trends, wants and needs associated with the most significant financial decision of most people’s lives: purchasing a primary residence for themselves and their families.

In this article, we’re going to dig in a little deeper into the findings from the 2018 version of the survey to focus on sellers:

Sellers Are Staying in Their Homes Longer
In the last 30 years, sellers have remained in the same home for longer periods of time. From 1987-2008, sellers stayed in their homes for a median of six years, with the only exception being 1997, when the median tenure bumped up to seven years. After 2008, the median tenure began to increase by one year each year.

By 2011, the median tenure reached nine years, where it remained for three consecutive years, and jumped up again in 2014 to 10 years. It decreased to nine years in 2015, but rose in 2016 to a median of 10 years, where it remained in 2017, effectively doubling since data collection started three decades prior.

It’s not necessarily clear why sellers are staying in their homes longer, but one possibility for some is that they are waiting for their equity to increase, especially given the economic downturn.

Seller Relationships With Agents Are Steady and Strong
Eighty-nine percent of home sellers worked with a real estate agent to sell their home. In addition—same as last year—90 percent of sellers listed their homes on the Multiple Listing Service (MLS), which is the No. 1 source for sellers to list their homes. Only 4 percent opted not to list on an MLS.

Client referrals and repeat business are the predominant ways sellers find their real estate agent. Most sellers—85 percent—said that they would definitely (67 percent) or probably (18 percent) recommend their agent for future services.

Sixty-two percent of sellers were “very satisfied” with the selling process; 26 percent were somewhat satisfied. Only 13 percent were dissatisfied with the process.

Key Skills Sellers Want in Their Agents
Sellers place high priority on the following five tasks: market the home to potential buyers (21 percent); sell the home within a specific timeframe (20 percent); price the home competitively (18 percent); find a buyer for home (15 percent); and help fix the home to sell better (15 percent).

The reputation of the real estate agent was by far the most important factor when sellers selected an agent to sell their home (34 percent). Sellers also place value on the agent’s trustworthiness and honesty (18 percent) and whether the agent is a friend or family member (16 percent).

FSBOs Are Decreasing
In 1981, FSBO home sales accounted for 15 percent of all sales, and agent-assisted sales accounted for 85 percent. FSBO sales have declined over time, and in 2017, FSBOs accounted for 8 percent of total home sales again for the third year in a row. This is the lowest share since data collection began.

FSBOs typically sell for less than the selling price of other homes. For FSBO sellers, those who know the buyer tend to have higher median household incomes compared to those who did not know the buyer. Where FSBO sellers knew the buyer, the time on market for the home was usually a week, and sellers received 100 percent of the asking price.

To learn much more about sellers and seller representation overall, please consider checking out the education, benefits, and resources offered by CRD and its SRS Designation. In July, the featured 25% OFF course at the Center for REALTOR® Development is the Seller Representative Specialist (SRS) Designation Course, which is the basic requirement toward obtaining this credential.

For more information about other courses and programs, please visit the online learning portal from NAR’s Center for REALTOR® Development (CRD) and the Learning Library. Here, real estate professionals can sign up for online professional development courses, industry designations, certifications, CE credits, Code of Ethics programs and more. NAR’s CRD also offers monthly specials and important education updates. New users will need to register for an account.




Jason Grace is AZ Social Realty's content editor. Email him your real estate news ideas at jason@cashbuyerslists.com.







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Real Estate Industry and the New Normal

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Real Estate Industry and the "New Normal"


This month’s National Association of REALTORS® (NAR) Power Broker Roundtable discusses the evolution of the industry’s “new normal.”

 MODERATOR: ​​​Christina Pappas, District Sales Manager, The Keyes Company, Miami, Fla.; Liaison for Large Firms & Industry Relations, NAR

 PANELIST: Sherry Chris, CEO, Better Homes and Gardens Real Estate, Madison, N.J.

 PANELIST: Joan Docktor, President, Berkshire Hathaway Home Services Fox & Roach, REALTORS®, Devon, Pa.

 PANELIST: Long Doan, CEO, Co-Founder, Realty Group MN, Coon Rapids, Minn.

________________________________________________________________________________________


Christina Pappas: Everything old is new again. The saying comes from the lyrics of a Peter Allen song originated nearly 40 years ago, but the words were never truer than they are today, especially in the real estate industry, which has changed and reinvented itself over and over since the term “REALTOR®” was first coined way back in 1916.

So what exactly is traditional real estate? Is it relevant in today’s world? What do we mean by “the new normal”—and where is the industry heading? For answers—and some very well-informed interpretations—we’ll be speaking with three industry leaders who are positioned on the forefront of change. Sherry, you’ve been a real estate innovator through several cycles of change. What do you see as today’s new normal?

Sherry Chris: Well, I can’t go back to 1916, but I have been around long enough to see how the industry has turned upside down with the advent of modern technology. In the early days of technology application, consumers would search our websites on their own and perhaps eventually call an agent. Today, we can give our agents the edge through the use of predictive modeling. We can use Smart Bots. We can match up artificial intelligence (AI) with a treasure trove of deep, rich data to determine the habits and patterns of potential buyers and sellers, so that the agent can be the first to reach out with exactly what that consumer is looking for. That’s the direction we are taking, and we’re investing heavily in the effort. But to speak to your “everything old is new again” reference, Christina, the truth is that regardless of the impact technology is making, the agent was, is, and should be the trusted advisor at the center of every transaction.

Joan Docktor: I agree. Today’s new normal combines the best of traditional real estate—that is, building relationships and giving every consumer the best possible buying or selling experience—with everything that technology can offer to accommodate and advance those goals. We are using AI to make our agent CRMs smarter—to give our agents more and better information and to keep them front and center with consumers. We’re also in the process of developing Chat Bots, or Smart Bots, to reside online and answer consumer questions 24/7—and, more important, to connect online searchers with knowledgeable, live agents.

Long Doan: Of course, technology has dramatically changed the way real estate is practiced today, but that’s only one piece of the puzzle. In my new normal, keeping the agent front and center means more than providing tools; it means creating an environment where the broker works for the agent, and not the other way around. Our goal is to provide a business platform that includes technology, as well as marketing support and coaching, to help every agent become the CEO of his or her own business—and we are turning the traditional commission structure on its ear with a 100 percent commission and a flat fee. In my view, that’s the way to produce dedicated and competitive agents who perform at peak levels.

CP: There’s another way the industry is changing, and it has to do with physical footprint, both in terms of space and layout. Shrinking office space was a natural byproduct of the last industry slowdown, but what may have begun as an economic need is giving us a new-normal benefit. In our offices, for example, cubicles are becoming a thing of the past in favor of open spaces—almost like a Starbucks atmosphere—that are flexible and that definitely create a more congenial business setting.

LD: I think that back when cell phones went viral, and everybody became mobile, many agents seemed to want to skip the office in favor of working from home. But now, agents are coming back because they miss that interaction. Part of my approach is making the office environment so valuable, so compelling in terms of support, sharing and mentoring, that agents want to be there whenever they’re not out selling real estate.

JD: That’s a good thing, because real estate is first and foremost a people business, both in terms of office culture and in building client relationships. But as more business is transacted online, the new normal also means we need to be more focused than ever on security. Hackers become more wily every day, and many consumers don’t realize just how vulnerable they are. As brokers, we need to have two-step email authentications and other online security measures in place to help keep consumer information and all our data as safe and secure as possible.

SC: And yet all of that is in the background, as far as consumers are concerned—security, data-mining, even Smart Bots. All most consumers want to know—even millennials, who are the most tech-savvy and who make up the largest segment of homebuyers today—when the rubber meets the road is that their agent is there for them, face-to-face, throughout every phase of their transaction. In that way, traditional real estate hasn’t changed…and I doubt that it ever will.



For more information, please visit www.nar.realtor.





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