Tuesday, December 27, 2011

I love photography and so do buyers!

I guess I inherited my "shutterbug gene" from my dad. He takes pictures of EVERYTHING...lol.  So, one of my favorite aspects of my marketing career has been developing (pardon the pun) my photography skills.  People buy with their eyes and at no time in real estate history has the buyer's eye been more sharp.  So this week's post continues on my last post (before my annual Xmas Lindor Truffle binge) on the importance of photography when marketing your property.  Here goes:

Picture Taking Tips


What a buyer sees on a real estate web site will make the difference between being a saved listing or one that sends potential buyers to the next listing. So here are some tips when taking and selecting which pictures to use in your online listing.

1. Make sure each room is clean. Dirty dishes in the sink, full trash cans, unmade beds, all these make the house less appealing to buyers. When taking your pictures think of inviting guests into your home and put your best foot forward. Remember you're asking someone to BUY your home, not just visit for a few hours.

2. Balance your pictures. You have a beautiful lot, a stunning kitchen or an awesome master bedroom, which is great and you should show them off. But show off equally other areas of your home. Pictures focusing on one or two features of your home will leave buyers thinking there is nothing really special about other areas.

3. Curb appeal. Take pictures of your home's exterior in spring or summer, when trees, lawns and flowers are in full bloom. Pictures taken during winter make the property look depressing.

4. Let The Sunshine In. Buyers want a house that's bright and sunny. Take pictures on a sunny day when the sun is at its peak. Pull back window treatments and move large pieces of furniture away from windows.

5. The Full Monty. Get your mind out of the gutter! I mean full pictures of the rooms in your home. Taking pictures of only a window or the floor or the crown moulding doesn't add anything to the home's online "portfolio." Use these pictures to zero in on design features as a supplement to full scale pictures.

Did I leave out something? If you've got a tip, please share it!

Friday, December 16, 2011

Picture this!!!

I'm on the subway this morning, my Droid phone "ker-plunks" at me.  I check my email. My friend Tara, a realtor, sends me a new listing from her agency.

I quickly glance at the listing summary. I'm thinking, "great, right price, right location, right size lot, right interior specs."  I'm excited, "could this be our dream house?"  I click to the listing's page with baited breath and and behold--the dreaded "image not available" where at a minimum an exterior shot should be.

This is not acceptable, people!!!!  We live in the digital age!  Borrow a friend's camera, buy a single-use digital camera from Walgreens for $20.  Hell let your listing agent take pictures with his or her camera,if need be. But never, ever, ever, ever list your home on the internet without images.

Buyers are using the internet now more than ever when shopping for homes.  This isn't 1996 when everyone had one desktop PC and it was the only way to access the internet.

With the advent of laptops, tablets and smartphones, we literally carry the internet with us whereever we go. On any given day I'll have two out of the three with me.  So shopping either for a car, a pair of designer boots or a house will more likely than not involve the internet.

So, my colleagues, what reasons (read: excuses) have you heard from sellers for not being prepared for the selling process on what I think is the most rudimentary level? 

Sound off!!

Misnomer?

Ok....maybe "Sell It Like It Is" might be a misnomer, but my intentions are to get sellers to SELL their homes and I guess in the process, I will have to TELL it like it is...and no we don't want to sell the listing as it is...that's the problem!!

I have been shopping for a home for the last two years (well, off and on).  In doing so, I've run across so many mistakes sellers are making and will probably continue to make when selling their properties.

So during this search it hit me!  I could take my marketing background and my real estate background combine the two and turn it into a business...VOILA!  I think my (not so unique) perspective will allow me to help not only sellers, but sellers' agents get their listings to closing fast.

I look at a listing, not from the view of a designer, realtor, marketer or photographer--my primary view is that of a buyer.  What would make me want to buy this home or more importantly, what would make me NOT want to buy this home....

So, here goes....