Agents admit that few sales traditionally come from open houses.
And now the Internet is making them
even less valuable.
By Melinda Fulmer

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Should you hold an open house? 5 questions
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5 tips for a better open house What
to do if your home isn't selling Los Angeles real estate agent Liz Johnson loves open
houses, but not because they move her properties. The real reason
Johnson holds them is because they bring her more business. Prospective home buyers walk through and ask what other
listings she has. "They've always been better for agents than
sellers," she says. The proliferation of Internet listings and other online
real estate information is quickly making open houses more of an option,
rather than a requirement for selling a home. In 1995, just 2% of home
buyers used the Internet to look for a home, according to the National
Association of Realtors. Last year, 77% of home buyers shopped online. Indeed, only 2% to 4% of Johnson's listings sell from open
houses. "It's not a necessity," she says. Agents, sellers question
effectiveness Many agents now refuse to hold open houses, considering
them a waste of time, and a security threat. And many sellers now prefer
to open their doors to serious buyers only. "They're not effective," says Daniel Fellars, a
29-year-old software engineer from the San Diego suburb of San Marcos,
Calif., who recently put his four-bedroom, two-and-a-half-bath home on
the market. A series of open houses did little to move Fellars' former
house, which sold about a year ago. "We had an open house five
weeks in a row and never got a single person to come to our house,"
he says. This time around, Fellars has decided to forego scheduled
open houses and simply give potential buyers private tours of his house
as needed. He has posted 30 pictures on his home blog,
linking it to Google, Craigslist
and other popular Web sites. In the next week, he will add a video tour,
showing every nook and cranny of the house, much as an agent would. So far, the blog has brought in about 20 interested
buyers, but he has received no offers. Fellars says he knows he faces an
uphill battle, given the slowing housing market and the other four
houses for sale on his street. But a few of Fellars' neighbors recently
had open houses and he says, "I haven't seen any cars in their
driveways." Open and shut "Many sellers are just a little bit leery of having
an open house," says Pat Vredevoogd, agent and broker-owner of AJS
Realty in Grand Rapids, Mich., and incoming NAR president. Some, she says, are worried about letting complete
strangers roam freely through their house, with access to electronics,
jewelry, prescription drugs and personal information. Others just don't want their neighbors and a host of other
so-called "looky-loos" wasting their time just for a look at
their décor. And many agents won't do them for security reasons, as a
number of their fellow Realtors have been attacked and some even killed,
as they sat in an empty house alone and vulnerable. Vredevoogd, herself, isn't keen on them. While they have
proved helpful over the years on some of her more expensive listings,
most didn't produce a sale. "Over the past year, maybe two or three
of the 50 houses I sold were from an open house," she says.
"Personally, I think it's a waste of time. It's one of those things
that has gone by the wayside." Before jumping into an open house, Vredevoogd counsels her
clients to put the house up on the local MLS and other Web sites, with a
lot of pictures and perhaps a virtual tour if the home has a lot of nice
features. She sends out a barrage of e-mails to other agents and makes
some calls. If the house isn't getting a lot of interest, only then will
she go through with an open house. Online house hunting Home buyers, he says, don't want to spend a day in the car
with a Realtor like they did in years past. Many people want to spend an
hour or less, and zip out on their lunch break to see a house. While this may inconvenience sellers, who have to show
their house more often, Sambrotto says it's worthwhile because these
parties are more serious. "They're not looky-loos," he says.
"They've done their research." When open houses still make sense But an open house can be a valuable opportunity to get
feedback about what is and isn’t attractive about a house, Meer says.
He cautions buyers against holding them too often, however. "It can
send a signal that (a house) is a little bit market worn and a tough
property to move." In Meer's opinion, an open house is only worth having if
it's done properly. That involves sprucing up the house and its
landscaping and advertising it well in advance. "Over the past
couple of years, people got spoiled by being able to throw up a sign and
get lots of traffic," he says. Desperate measures In many markets, that includes hiring a professional
stager to make your home look brand new, or at the very least,
tastefully appointed. Gail Mayhugh, a professional home stager and owner
of GMJ Interiors in Las Vegas, said she has seen an uptick in her
business as the once-hot housing market has cooled. "All of a sudden the agents are calling me for open
houses," she says, and many are willing to spend part of their
commission to make their property stand out. "There were 19 of the
same floor plans for sale in one neighborhood," she recalls. And while open houses may be declining in many parts of
the country, some neighborhoods are finding them effective ways to raise
the profile of an entire community, if they are all done at the same
time. Recently, four neighborhoods in the Grandmont Rosedale area of
Detroit teamed up for a joint open house with 35 of the area's homes
open for viewing on a single day. And developers in Long Beach, Calif.,
showed 2,300 housing units in that city's downtown on May 20, in an
attempt to stimulate sales. See-it-to-believe-it homes Their house, they say, is the kind you have to see to
believe. "It has a unique sensibility," Teixido says, with
spacious rooms and a large amount of built-in furniture that was done by
hand, including the master bed and nightstands. The photos on the MLS didn't do these features justice.
And getting people in from her surrounding neighborhood did help. She
has now accepted an offer and has a back-up offer just in case. "Part of the reason for having an open house,"
she says, "is you do just want to find someone who falls in love
with it."
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© 2006 Microsoft
©
2006 Microsoft