July 26, 2010
Real Estate Selling | Open Houses Can Be Very Effective At Selling Your Home
Open houses, long considered the corner stone of real estate marketing, have lost some of their glamour since the wide spread of the internet and MLS listings. Is all the effort that is required for an open house a clever use of time and energy?
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5 Comments on Real Estate Selling | Open Houses Can Be Very Effective At Selling Your Home »
June 7, 2011
Nova Lox @ 1:05 pm:
You've got to give it to the publicists for the activist groups that have managed to propagandize illegal migration to where now it's seen as some kind of inborn condition like race or disability rather than a conscious choice to break the law. We're doomed as a nation.
July 4, 2011
Scotsman @ 4:17 am:
RE: Jonness 15 –
August 11, 2011
falsi fiable @ 1:10 am:
Probably means withdrawn from sale. If it is still showing up in listings, it may be due to some sizeable issue that is being worked on, repair, asbestos or lead remediation, divorce settlement, zoning, taxes, title, etc., before being put back on the market.
The listing agent may be able to provide information about the situation.
Usually home sales go through "For Sale," some kind of pending ("Active" still accepting back-up offers), "In Escrow" and then "Sold."
So a home with the sale gone bad is put back on the market, and moves from some kind of pending to "For Sale" or even "Back on Market!"
September 22, 2011
Brendan @ 1:04 pm:
Approach with extreme caution, sounds very insecure to me. Get a lawyer to advise you before doing anything
October 14, 2011
BrokerPro @ 9:40 pm:
I was sued for mold in a similar situation. I disclosed plumbing repairs… they found mold elsewhere in the house!
Ultimately, the buyer got a settlement paid off the by the listing agent. Coldwell Banker has deeper pockets than me, and that's what they were going for.
Your completely filled out SPDS (seller property disclosure statement) and your listing agent's E&O policy will be your saving grace…
Best of luck!