Elizabeth Weintraub • Sacramento Short Sale Agent • Land Park

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How Much Does it Cost for an Agent to Write an Offer?

I've very cognizant of time management. That's because there are only so many hours in a day. When you get to a certain level of success, that success requires even more time management. An agent can't be available to anybody for any reason at any time. That's bad time management.

For example, an agent called yesterday afternoon to say her buyer was about to cancel a short sale. She was very apologetic. Launched into a convoluted story about money transfers overseas, and threw in how much she admired my work. But I had stopped listening after the word: cancellation. I was busy writing an email to put the short sale home immediately back on the market.

Some guy emailed yesterday to ask if I would spend a few hours before the Sacramento Board of REALTORS to talk about short sales to other agents. I asked him to give me a reason to share that kind of time. Instead of giving me a reason, he thanked me for answering him, said he understood why I would say no. I wasn't rejecting him; I asked why I would do it. Apparently, there was no reason.

As a Sacramento short sale agent, I do about 14 hours of concentrated / focused work a day, 5 days a week. That's a 70-hour work week right there in itself. It doesn't count the hours I put in on the weekends, even though I do not book appointments for a Saturday or Sunday. It's generally intense during the week. Some days it is brutal: trying to answer hundreds of emails, handle phone calls, generate paperwork and balance my workload, but I am very organized.

That's why I was astonished yesterday when an agent called to ask about a new listing and didn't seem to value his time. He wanted to know if I had any offers. When buyer's agents ask if the listing agent has any offers, that's because they're trying to figure out two things. How low they can go and whether the seller is close to accepting an offer. There is not a big benefit to the seller for a listing agent to answer that kind of question, because it's very one-sided.

I shared that two of my team members refused to write an offer. I was a little concerned, actually, because I did not want to be in the middle of that decision, if it came to that. Lucky, it didn't. It didn't come to that because my team members are intelligent. They have their fingers on the pulse of the market. They know multiple offers are common right now. They can spot a good listing when they see it. Neither of their investors would offer list price because neither of the investors would listen.

These buyer's agents decided it was not worth their time to put that kind of offer on paper. They were right. And I conveyed that message to the agent who called. He said that it didn't cost him anything to write an offer -- even if that offer was worthless and not about to be accepted. I told him my team members disagreed -- and I disagree -- but every agent goes about time management differently.

I suppose that's why some of us are successful in real estate. And some of us are not.

sacramento short sale agentcerfified hafa specialist

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Certified HAFA Specialistelizabeth weintraub

 

equator certified platinum reo elizabeth weintraub

Elizabeth Weintraub reviews My Sacramento Real Estate Listings

Elizabeth Weintraub is an author, home buying columnist for The New York Times-owned About.com, a Land Park resident, and a Land Park real estate agent who specializes in older, classic homes in Land Park, Curtis Park, Midtown and East Sacramento. Weintraub is also a Sacramento Short Sale agent who lists and successfully sells short sales throughout the four-county Sacramento area. Call Elizabeth Weintraub at 916.233.6759. Put 35 years of real estate experience to work for you. Broker-Associate at Lyon Real Estate. DRE License # 00697006.

The Short Sale Savior, by Elizabeth Weintraub, available at Amazon.com.

Lyon Real Estate is not associated with the government, and our service is not approved by the government or your lender. Even if you accept this offer and use our service, your lender may not agree to change your loan.

Photo: Unless otherwise noted in this blog, the photo is copyrighted by Big Stock Photo and used with permission.

The views expressed herein are Weintraub's personal views and do not reflect the views of Lyon Real Estate.

Disclaimer: If this post contains a listing, information is deemed reliable as of the date it was written. After that date, the listing may be sold, listed by another brokerage, canceled, pending or taken temporarily off the market, and the price could change without notice. It could blow up, explode or vanish. To find out the present status of any listing, please go to elizabethweintraub.com.

 

Making Good Use of Your Time is Never a Waste of Time, in Any Profession

sacramento short sale agent elizabeth weintraubSometimes Sacramento buyers ask me how much I make on a transaction. I don't know why because the number is in the buyer broker agreement. But I tell them anyway, explaining how the commission is typically divided between the listing brokerage and selling brokerage. Then that percentage is paid out in part to the agent with the remaining to the brokerage.

Agents also often pay other fees on top to the brokerage from their commission split, not to mention overhead, federal and state taxes, and the expense of doing business. So, the actual cash in hand to the agent is often far less than a consumer believes.

And this is just on the transactions we get paid on. We do a lot of work that is not compensated, and not every buyer or seller we initially work with leads to a closing.

Yesterday, I had an appointment with sellers with whom I've had several phone and email conversations. They definitely wanted to list their home for sale. I prepared all the paperwork, studied their neighborhood and market conditions. Put together net sheets and Trendgraphix reports. But when I met with the sellers, it was obvious to me they were not ready to put their home on the market.

I'm not in the real estate business to convince anybody to buy or sell. That's not my job. My job is to assist those who have a goal to obtain it. I listen not only to what people say but I gauge how they react to suggestions or advice.

I came home and my husband asked me how the appointment went. When I told him, he lamented it was too bad that I had wasted my time. That's not how I view it, though. I did not waste my time. I saved my time. I could have invested hours and days and weeks and months to aggressively market a home that the owners did not truly want to sell.

sacramento short sale agent

The Short Sale Savior, by Elizabeth Weintraub, coming in June 2009.

Photo: Big Stock Photo

sacramento short sale agentcerfified hafa specialist

---

Certified HAFA Specialistelizabeth weintraub

 

equator certified platinum reo elizabeth weintraub

Elizabeth Weintraub reviews My Sacramento Real Estate Listings

Elizabeth Weintraub is an author, home buying columnist for The New York Times-owned About.com, a Land Park resident, and a Land Park real estate agent who specializes in older, classic homes in Land Park, Curtis Park, Midtown and East Sacramento. Weintraub is also a Sacramento Short Sale agent who lists and successfully sells short sales throughout the four-county Sacramento area. Call Elizabeth Weintraub at 916.233.6759. Put 35 years of real estate experience to work for you. Broker-Associate at Lyon Real Estate. DRE License # 00697006.

The Short Sale Savior, by Elizabeth Weintraub, available at Amazon.com.

Lyon Real Estate is not associated with the government, and our service is not approved by the government or your lender. Even if you accept this offer and use our service, your lender may not agree to change your loan.

Photo: Unless otherwise noted in this blog, the photo is copyrighted by Big Stock Photo and used with permission.

The views expressed herein are Weintraub's personal views and do not reflect the views of Lyon Real Estate.

Disclaimer: If this post contains a listing, information is deemed reliable as of the date it was written. After that date, the listing may be sold, listed by another brokerage, canceled, pending or taken temporarily off the market, and the price could change without notice. It could blow up, explode or vanish. To find out the present status of any listing, please go to elizabethweintraub.com.