An UNREPRESENTED SellerI was working with a great young couple a few months ago, and they were looking to buy a new home for their soon-to-be growing family. After meeting with them for a buyer consultation about buying real estate in the Portsmouth area, we began emailing them listings on homes for them to look through that had potential to meet their needs.
In the process of getting the listing agents' contact information on each of these houses that they wanted to see, I came upon the instructions on one of them to deal directly with the seller instead of the agent. What? Ugh! Sure enough, when I pulled up the full internal MLS sheet, there were these instructions, "Please contact Owner directly at 603-xxx-xxxx for showings, property information, negotiations and closing without the participation of XXXX Real Estate."
Great - just what I wanted was to have to deal directly with a seller instead of a listing agent, when I'm working as a buyer's agent. I have to think I'm not the only agent who feels that way when we encounter an UNREPRESENTED SELLER like this one in the Statewide New Hampshire MLS. My mind was running around, thinking if this is THE house my buyers want, that means I'm the one who, while representing MY buyers, will have to deal directly with this seller every step of the way, instead of the agent they paid to get into the New Hampshire MLS.
BIG sigh from the other end of the phone, and then I'm told that she just really does NOT want showings except during very tiny windows of time on 3 days during the week. I didn't really say anything at that point, and then she finally said, "Well alright, if they REALLY want to see it, I guess it won't get sold if they can't look at it. Right?" She actually asked me that question! So Saturday arrives, and we stop by this UNREPRESENTED SELLER's house. She sees us pull up, and she comes out onto the front entryway, waving her arms all over the place. As we walk up to the entryway, she acts like we're her long lost friends that she hasn't seen in ages. This, after acting like she didn't want us there at all when talking to me on the phone! We go inside, and are greeted with a very nice and inviting beautifully remodelled living room with the double-sided fireplace with a fire burning in it, and along with a spacious eat-in kitchen. My buyers and I all remark about how lovely these rooms are, and they really were. At that point, this seller starts talking so much, we could hardly see the rest of the house. Goodness, I just wanted to turn to her and ask her to please stop talking, but I didn't nor could I have made myself say that either. The rest of the house left MUCH to be desired, almost like it was part of another house. No work done to the bedrooms or bathroom at all - peeling paint, nasty carpet, tiny bedrooms, etc. And she's still yakking so much we just wanted to escape. Have you ever been on a showing where the listing agent just talks so much you just want to scream at them to shut up? I have, and it's terrible, for me and for the buyers. They just CANNOT see the house because of all the yakking. This seller was just like that....I kid you not! We finally escape the confines of the house with her, and head out to the porch and back yard. She's still We proceeded to hear all about the "idiotic neighbor" on one side and the troubled kids down the road a couple of houses. Then she told us about the neighbor who rides his riding lawn mower up and down the road at various times of the day and night. Oh, and don't forget about the roosters in the back that crow at all hours and never stay in their own yard, which she just thinks is so cute. Good grief!! As we turned to leave, I thanked her for the showing. My buyers had already given me the eyes and the body language saying, "Get us the heck out of here!", I knew this was not the house for them. So, I did just that, for them AND for me. The seller called me the next day to see if my buyers were going to buy her house, and she wanted to know when I would be bringing her an offer. She said all that in about 20 seconds, before I could say a single word. You think she's a tad bit anxious?? I gave her my buyers honest feedback - they felt the house was too small and the price was too high for what the house had to offer, especially compared with the other homes we saw that same day. I didn't even mention the concerns they had about the neighbors. What she said next and how she said it really caught me off guard. She literally YELLED at me over the phone and said to me, "how dare you bring a buyer to my house who had no intentions of buying it!!" Silence on my end....and more silence from me. Then she proceeded to say, in a slightly calmer voice, "after all I told them about my house and the neighborhood and all the work we did fixing it up, they have NO interest in buying it?" She also, for some reason, decided to tell me that she knew "she could do a better job than any agent could because she knew her house better than anyone, and she also knows the neighborhood better, too". And on top of that, she "knew she'd be able to save on the commission, too - so why on earth wouldn't everyone try to sell their houses on their own?" Very calmly and softly, I said to her, "No, Mrs. Seller, they don't want to buy your house." Then she told me that Yes, her house is still listed for sale, with those same instructions and at that same overpriced price point. Does that surprise you? Not me, not after the way she treated me and not after experiencing the way she "showed" her house. Not one bit..... My guess is she has treated every other agent that same way, and who knows what she does to the buyers who call her direct. I just don't understand why sellers want to go it alone. I know some sellers are fortunate enough to sell their properties on their own, and that's great. But the vast majority of sellers who try to go it alone really don't know all the work and effort that goes into marketing and selling homes for those sellers who hire us to represent them and their property. ![]()
Helping buyers and sellers in the Portsmouth and Seacoast areas of Maine and New Hampshire is one of the greatest jobs in the world!!
http://www.newhampshiremainerealestate.com/0066DF
Posted on November 13, 2007 14:12:39 by Ann Cummings
Posted in Real Estate - Buying and Selling
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I was working with a great young couple a few months ago, and they were looking to buy a new home for their soon-to-be growing family. After meeting with them for a
So, okay, I do a quick attitude adjustment, pick up the phone and call this seller directly to set up a time to see this house that found its way into the MLS with no real representation. Ring - ring - ring......answering machine picks up, and I leave a message saying who I am and what company I'm with, and that I'd like to show her house on Saturday late morning, and ask her to please call me back to confirm.
timing for her to have showings on her house. Couldn't they please look at it some other day? I very nicely explained that I'm working around my buyers' work schedule, that they've already driven by the house, and that they'd really appreciate being able to see it that Saturday late morning.
yakking up a storm, but at least being outside we felt like we weren't so trapped. I asked about the lot lines, and she told us where they were. And she didn't stop there, oh boy, no she didn't. She SHOULD have though!
"HER AGENT" had told her "that would happen, and that he'd be surprised if she got any showings at all". I thought about telling her she really doesn't have "her own agent", that she is an UNREPRESENTED SELLER with no one working FOR her but her, and that even she is not working for her. But I just did not want to get into that with her, because her manner and her attitude told me that she could care less about all of that, and I'd be wasting my time.






