“Why Selling with A Real Estate Agent or privately are both highly risky…
6 REASONS WHY YOU’LL NEVER ACHIEVE THE HIGHEST SALE PRICE FOR YOUR HOME WITH EITHER
If you want to achieve the highest sale price for your home, then the two biggest mistakes you can make are to sell with a real estate agent or to sell privately.
Both of these options will guarantee that you will leave tons of money on the table by missing out on the highest sale price possible.
There are three reasons why selling with a real estate agent is irrational and three reasons why selling privately is just as bad.
No Real Estate Agent Can Ever Care As Much As You Do About Your Sale Price
The simple and undeniable fact is that nobody other than the owner of a home will ever have the same vested interest in achieving the highest sale price.
Nobody will care as much about how much you sell for as you do. NOBODY!
This includes ALL real estate agents, irrespective of how experienced, helpful and friendly they are.
You cannot outsource your vested interest or care factor to anyone else.
This fundamental truth doesn’t require much explanation, whether you’ve thought about it before or not.
If you believe that a private sale is the answer, you are mistaken, and there are three reasons for this, which you can read about later in this article.
Most home sellers who accept the fact that no real estate agent will ever care as much as they do, mistakenly believe that the incentive created by the agent’s commission will make up for this.
They wrongly believe that a real estate commission incentivises agents to achieve the highest sale price.
Let’s look at this a little closer.
Why Real Estate Commissions Discourage Achieving The Highest Sale Price
Assume that you had a home worth $1M, which you wanted to sell.
If you engaged an agent who charged 2.5% commission, you would pay $25,000 in commission if they sold for $1M.
What is the agent’s commission on the last $100,000 of the sale price?
If your answer is $2,500, you’re correct.
The agent’s commission on the first $900,000 of the sale price would be $22,500.
Do you think that the last $2,500 in commission is as important to the agent as the first $22,500?
Do you think that the last $2,500 in commission is as important to the agent as the last $100,000 is to you?
Does the last $2,500 in commission provide enough incentive for the agent to strive for all of the last $100,000 of your home’s value?
Does it give them enough incentive to show you ALL the ways in which to boost the emotional appeal, perceived value and ultimate sale price of your home?
Do you really believe it gives them enough incentive to negotiate hard for the last stretch?
There are four common symptoms ignored by many home sellers, which scream that an agent is underselling a home. You can read about them here.
Scientific studies have proven that a real estate commission incentivises agents to sell quickly, even at the cost of underselling.
This makes sense considering that agents make most of their commission from the first 90% of the sale price of a home.
The small increase in their commission from the last 10% of a home’s value is simply not enough to encourage them to squeeze the most out of a sale.
This is why two independent scientific studies have found that percentage based commissions lead real estate agents to undersell homes by about 3% on average.
(Levitt, S.D. & Syverson, C., 2005. “Market Distortions when Agents are Better Informed: The Value of Information in Real Estate Transactions,”) (Gautier, P. & Siegmann, A. & van Vuuren, A., 2017. “Real-Estate Agent Commission Structure and Sales Performance,”)
For a more detailed explanation of why real estate agents undersell, click here.
So far, we’ve established two things: Firstly, real estate agents can never care as much as you do about your sale price because they don’t share your vested interest.
Secondly, this is made worse by the fact that they don’t have an incentive to strive for the highest sale price.
Let’s look at another danger of selling with a real estate agent.
There Is Zero Transparency In Selling With A Real Estate Agent
Private sellers believe that a property sells itself, and all you need to do is advertise it.
This belief comes from the valid experience of almost every person who has ever bought a home:
Their decision to buy their home had nothing to do with the real estate agent.
It is true that nobody buys a home because of a real estate agent, however, a property doesn’t just sell itself.
Having said this, anyone with a heartbeat can sell a property.
The only question is what result they will achieve.
In the case of such a large transaction the potential difference in the sale price can easily be a staggering 10% – 20%.
Most private sellers are really happy to save $20,000 in commission, without ever knowing how they’ve easily left three times as much on the table by underselling their home.
So what determines the difference in the final sale price?
The correct execution of a certain, immutable formula. The 5 P’s:
- Preparation – MUCH more than just decluttering and cleaning
- Presentation – MUCH more than just what buyers see
- Pricing – MUCH more than just determining the value of the home
- Promotion – MUCH more than just advertising
- Parleying – MUCH more than just communication and negotiation
It is never a person who sells a property, but rather the correct execution of the above formula that makes a home become BUYABLE and for top dollar.
As you read earlier, real estate agents don’t have the vested interest (care factor), proper incentive or enough transparency and accountability to execute this formula well.
Private sellers have no idea that there is a formula in the first place, let alone how to execute it well.
Even if they’re happy with the sale price, it’s only because they have no idea that they’ve undersold or how much better they could have done.
This is the first reason why it is not wise to sell on your own.
Private Sellers Don’t Know What They Don’t Know (The Dunning Kruger Effect)
Other than not knowing about the formula that achieves the highest sale price, and how to execute it well, the Endowment Effect is the next biggest danger for private sellers.
It is even more dangerous, considering that most private sellers haven’t even heard of it.
Even for those who have, they hardly ever realise when they are under its influence, and when, or how it is impacting on their sale.
The Endowment Effect is a term used in psychology and behavioural economics.
It is a phenomenon whereby we overvalue our posessions, regardless of their objective market value.
Furthermore, the longer we own something, the less objective we are about its value and the more we are likely to overvalue it.
This is a simple bias that impacts almost every human to some extent.
When it comes to our homes, most of us have this bias to some degree and this impacts on the three most critical aspects of a sale.
Firstly, how we price our homes, secondly, how we prepare and present our homes, and thirdly, how we negotiate and manage offers.
Let’s briefly look at each of these:
1. How private sellers price their homes
Due to our connection with our homes, we often fail to see flaws and buyer objections that are obvious to others – even if these are quick, easy, and affordable to fix.
For this reason, private sellers are blind to incredible opportunities to explode the perceived value of their homes in the eyes of potential buyers.
We assume that others see the same value we see in our homes.
In other words, we think that our home looks better than it does and we assume that others will see it the same way we do.
This is why most private sellers don’t see what changes they should make to the presentation of their home to maximise its emotional appeal, perceived value, and sale price.
For this reason, even if they sell, most of them easily sell for 10% less than they could have, without ever knowing it.
3. How private sellers negotiate and manage offers
The fact that private sellers don’t know of the formula that achieves the highest sale price, combined with the distorting bias from the Endowment Effect, leads them to taking huge risks with their sale.
Even if they sell, they are destroying their chances of achieving the highest possible sale price, without realising it.
This is why having an independent, unbiased, and objective expert is essential if you want to achieve the highest sale price that is possible for your home.
Fortunately, this expert doesn’t have to be a traditional real estate agent, with the three fatal flaws you read about earlier.