Category: Marketing Strategy

  • Setting the Stage: Sell Your Home to a Standing Ovation

    Setting the Stage: Sell Your Home to a Standing Ovation

    My maternal grandmother was truly something else.  A rebel in her youth that grew to appreciate the finer things in life.  Her cedar-lined walk-in closet was wall to wall with coordinating outfits, accessories, and most importantly a shoe collection that rivaled Imelda Marcos. Car rides with her included deep cultural discussions while classical symphonies cascaded in the background.

    My favorite memories with her are when she invited me along to enjoy one of her personal favorite cultural expressions, the theater.

    My first theater experience with her wasn’t some small-town, playhouse production of Oklahoma.  She got us front row seats at the Pantages theater for Phantom of the Opera.  Seriously front row seats.  I was so close I could literally hear the footsteps of the actors as they made their way across the stage.

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    Being only in 5th grade my young mind wasn’t ready to process the complex themes of the true nature of love, but I couldn’t help but be drawn to the seamless production, the unforgettable music, and the unifying feeling of experiencing all of this together with a group of strangers in a beautiful, historic building.  Safe to say I was hooked.

    My approach to helping my client’s sell their home has definitely been inspired by this production which has now grossed over 6 billion in sales.  It is the perfect blend of scenario, process, product, and audience.  Your home must accomplish the same balance to appeal to the right buyer who will appreciate it as much as you did when you first bought it and like any good story will be passed along for any future buyers to come.

    Here’s how I use the elements of a successful theater production to sell your home, also known as, setting the stage.

    Setting the Stage: The Scenario

    Think of your favorite play, book, or movie.  There is a foundation to everything that happens in the story.  It is a mixture of time, conflict, and aesthetic.  Period pieces are perfect examples of this as they must execute the vision in every last detail to how the characters look, sound, and interact with one another.  This is referred to as the scenario.  In other words, how the picture will be painted.

    Tragedy theatrical mask on wooden background

    When selling your home you have your own scenario at hand.  It is the reason you are selling.  This will cast across everything you do, the choices you make, and the people you choose to help you.  It is quite often the question I get asked most as a real estate agent. “Why are the sellers moving?”.  The answer to that question literally sets the stage to how the rest of the transaction will go.

    Reasons to sell show in many different forms.  Sometimes it is a very happy and exciting like cashing in on your equity in your current home to ‘move up’ to a home in your dream neighborhood.  Maybe you’ve finally received that job opportunity of a lifetime, however it is two states away.  On the other hand selling can be a more challenging affair due to a family member passing or a family going through a divorce.

    This scenario may be the driving force to the transaction but if you aren’t careful it can also be a distraction from its success.  If you spend too much time ogling the intricate detail of the actor’s costumes you might miss a critical piece of the story right?  Whether the end result of your sale it to bring joy or solace, it is important that you don’t lose sight of your scenario.   A long list of repairs, termite infestation, or a buyer who simply doesn’t seem like a well adjusted person are just some of the many ways this experience will throw you off your game.  Rather than running for the exit, I always remind my clients to focus on the ‘why’ (their scenario for selling) and, like clockwork, all the other factors fall into place and the next act of your life can begin.

    Setting the Stage: The Process

    If you step back and really dissect a theatrical performance you really see that it is one of the best examples of a successful process.  Director, actors, designers, technicians, dancers, and musicians come together and perform live in front of an audience who will know the second one thing is out of place.

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    The process of selling your home is no different.  Just as many moving parts, just as much on the line, and one letter out of place can put everything in a pool of tossed tomatoes.

    As director of the ‘show’ I’ve developed a comprehensive system that allows everyone to do what they are asked to do, but collaboratively.  Everyone works together, but in full respect of what each other brings to the transaction.  This starts before we put one buyer in the seats.  From pricing your home to marketing (see Audience below) there is much that has to go right before the curtain raises.  Once the show begins enters many more parties crucial to the close of the transaction like your buyer, escrow & title, and the biggest wild card, the lender.  I work tirelessly to keep everyone on track, working together, and at closing, the big finish, ready to take that final bow together smiling and breathing heavily.

    Setting the Stage: The Product

    Have you heard of the production called Hamilton? Chances are you have.  Not because you have seen it, even though you really want to, but because it has one of the most critical elements to a play’s success, buzz.  It has captured the hearts of theater junkies and pop culture jockeys alike and demand for a ticket has reached heights unheard of in recent years.

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    What makes this such a great ‘product’?  Is it never-before-seen special effects?  A big name actor assuming the title role?  Nope.  It is a perfect balance of sight, sound, and story that everyone wants to see, so guess what?  You probably want to see it too.

    To generate the same excitement, be it on a smaller scale, for your home we must take the same approach.  Your home is the product and we need to generate buzz.  Here’s how we do that:

    1. Sight: If your home has some small flaws that can be fixed up before going to market, do them.  It is amazing how much impact tree trimming, fresh paint, and a good deep cleaning will have on potential buyers making it to the 2nd act.  Also, make sure that you de-clutter and de-personalize your home.  Buyers are easily turned off by towering stacks of your stuff or too much personal tchotchke spread across every surface.  Simple things like swapping out your strawberry remnant covered blender with a few bottles of Pellegrino water on your kitchen counter can transform a buyer’s perception from no-go to must-have.

    2. Sound: Creaky floors, doors, and cabinets.  Dripping faucets.  Clanking furnaces.  Barking dogs (your dog).  These are all sounds that will distract buyers from falling in love with your home.  Think of every performance you’ve been to that featured a hot microphone and hair-parting feedback.  That shrill, piercing moment had you less interested in the plot twist and more interested in covering your ears to prevent further hearing damage.  Eliminate the annoying squeaks and creaks and you will enjoy the squeals of adulation from a buyer who is ready to make an offer.

    3. Story: In this case the story of your home is the floor plan and its flow.  How you experience a home is very similar to how you experience a story.  It begins with the entry, moves along the living areas and kitchen and typically finishes in the master bedroom.  Your home must tell a story to prospective buyer.  Most importantly you want it to be your story, not leaving it up to them to create their own.  This is why I believe that home staging is so important.  Vacant homes experience this struggle even more as many buyers out there lack the vision to define the space appropriately.  I can’t tell you how many times I’ve shown a home and have the buyer ask, ‘What is this room for?’ or ‘What do I do here?’.  Vacant or not, an expert home stager will create a complete story that will include guide the buyer from room to room, experience to experience, and help them define if your home’s story could become their story.

    Setting the Stage: Audience

    Watching a theatrical production live with a full house is a connecting experience.  Moments of awe, laughter, and emotion are better shared.  The cast and crew feed off of the audience in a way that you can’t replicate in other media.  It is that same connective tissue I use when finding a home’s audience.  Using innovative tools paired with careful research of your home’s target buyer I create a marketing strategy that puts your home in front of them, even when they don’t know they are looking for a home.

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    Suddenly, while chatting with a friend or catching up on the day’s events there is your home that is in a neighborhood or has a feature that they crave.  Without knowing it they have become interested in seeing it in person, finding a way to make it their own, and willing to compete against others for a seat closer to the action.  Just like Broadway’s hottest new play somehow suddenly inserts itself into every dinner party conversation, so will your home to the friends and family of those who see it.  Before you know it there will be a packed house, open house rather filled with adoring fans and tastemakers ready to do whatever it takes to meet you backstage.

    All About Presentation

    What seemed to be a very short while after our afternoon at the Pantages my grandmother became very sick.  On one of the last days of her life she asked that I come to see her at the hospital.  She excused the rest of the family out and asked me to come to her bedside.  She could see that I was not very pleased to see her this way and even in her painful condition, she tried to comfort me.  She said that she had been having dreams about me and that I was going to do something very big when I was older and to keep working hard to make sure that would happen.  Seeing that made me feel a bit better she reached to her side table and pulled out a gift.  Seriously, she’s the sick one and I’m getting a gift?  I opened it, and being the appreciator of the finer things she had been, it was a personalized manicure kit with gold plated tools.  Not knowing what to say in a moment like that she put her hands on mine, winked, and said ‘No offense’.

    Whether it be a your home, a Broadway play, or a manicured set a nails it is so important to set the stage properly for success.  In honor of my grandmother and my clients I always set it to the highest bar possible.

  • FSBOMG: 4 Reasons to Reconsider Selling Your Home Yourself

    FSBOMG: 4 Reasons to Reconsider Selling Your Home Yourself

    I got a call from a very old friend a while back to let me know that he was going to be selling his home without the help of a REALTOR®.  The fact that he called to let me know was appreciated as I usually found out the hard way.

    The hard way being just sitting down with a cup of coffee, pulling up Facebook and scrolling through the morning friend update.  Wedged in between the birthday wishes and Mannequin Challenge videos is a post from one of my friends announcing the sale of their home, without an agent.

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    Of course I go through the appropriate 5 stages of grief.

    1. Denial: This isn’t happening!
    2. Anger: How could they do this?
    3. Bargaining: If I had only talked to them a few weeks ago, everything could have been different.
    4. Depression: Multiple visits to Krispy Kreme
    5. Acceptance: I’m sure it will all work out for them.

    And yes, sometimes it does.  500,000 people sell homes themselves every year.  The results of those sales however may vary.

    My long time friend was convinced that he had everything he needed thanks to the internet and as much as he loved and respected what I do for a living he was all set.  I told him that I would be happy to accept his decision if he gave me the opportunity to present some key points to consider.

    As friends will do there was a wager involved, mainly involving the release of some very embarrassing information to my wife. Safe to say a lot was on the line. I put my REALTOR® hat on and went to work.

    1. Pricing

    This is where the journey begins and it could not be important. The price you set for your home sets the tone for the entire transaction. When you are selling your own home you have the unfortunate bias and emotional connection to what is being valued. This can cloud your judgement (surprise, surprise) on what your home is truly worth.

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    A REALTOR® will take a more strategic approach to coming to your home’s value.  Study recent sales and using more comprehensive metrics on how those homes compare to yours requires experience and courage to be done right.  This is something good agents do every day and with that comes applied knowledge that they take to every property they evaluate.

    This is even more crucial when a more unique home is the subject.  Yes, a tract home is going to have a ‘model match’ that has sold recently to give you some solid ground to stand on.  However, when taking a stab at figuring the value of a custom built home, maybe one on some land, that can be a lot more complicated and if done wrong could leave a lot of money, your money, on the table and in the pocket of your buyer happy to buy it at ‘your price’.

    2. Marketing

    The internet has definitely revolutionized the real estate industry.  It has brought a world of information to the fingertips of would-be-sellers.  This information can be powerful, but can lead to overload and get lost in translation.  It is very easy to get seduced with tools like Zillow, Trulia, Craigslist and think that with a simple post of your home on these sites with pictures shot with your iPhone straight up and down that you can find the perfect buyer for your home.

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    In some cases it can be this simple and it does happen, however if you’ve not priced your home well (see reason 1 above) or have a home that requires a more aggressive or targeted marketing approach to find your buyer you might be selling your home short.

    In my experience it requires a comprehensive marketing strategy that includes leveraging social media, networking with other agents, professional photography and videography, and sometimes very creative ideas to get a home sold to the right buyer for top dollar.  These services are at no extra cost the seller, but come at an incredible value to attract potential buyers.  Marketing being one of my specialities I treat every home I represent as its own storefront that needs to stand out from the competition and build a strategy unique to it.  Putting your home online might get you a lot of looks, but not a lot of bites.

    3. Negotiating

    There are many tense moments in the life of a real estate transaction, none tenser than when it comes time to negotiate.  Whether it be find a sales price to agree on, haggling over repairs, and the feared appraisal not coming in at value (see Turn 7 on my post about the home buying process).

    One of the first rules of negotiation is to free yourself from emotion.  If you have too much invested in the outcome it can cloud your judgement and get in the way of you reaching a beneficial compromise.  When the buyer starts using your choice of granite countertops or your patchy electrical work as a reason to pay less for the house you can see how that discussion might not be free from emotion.  The truth of the matter is that you might not really like your buyer personally, but they are the ones who want to buy your home and trying to find a way to bury those negative feelings during a high energy negotiation might not bring the best result.

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    Working to keep all parties calm, focused, and with their best interests at heart is what skilled agents do every day.  It is very easy for a deal to go from good to yelling match in the driveway with a single word.  Aside from that, sellers might be so focused on just closing the sale that they might not stand up for themselves at the right time and regret doing so when they get their closing check.  It helps to have someone on your side, negotiation skills in hand, that will keep your stress level low and your closing check high.

    4. Escrow/Closing

    This is the scary part.  The legal ramifications of a sale going wrong in a legal sense are terrifying.  It is why, every few months, the series of forms that we use for transactions get longer and full of more legalese because of the many lawsuits that transpire every year.

    As a seller there is a legal responsibility to fully disclose everything you know about the property.  If this is not done correctly or to the appropriate detail a buyer has the grounds to sue you and without the proper documentation to protect you, you will lose.  This could sound like the opening to a twisted Stephen King novel involving a clown who likes to invest in real estate and terrify his victims with baseless lawsuits, but unfortunately this happens more often than not.

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    My closing team consists of a transaction coordinator and two full-time compliance officers.  They work with me to review every single document for accuracy during the course of the transaction.  I can’t stress how important these additional sets of eyes are.  We know the steps and guide our clients, providing protections from the clowns out there.  This careful review can be the difference between selling your home successfully and a gavel dropping not in your favor.  A risk that only you can decide if worth taking.

    Hire A Professional (Always)

    When presented with the above 4 reasons my friend thankfully reconsidered and sold his home in record time at a great price.  During the transaction he even mentioned a few of these points, thanking me profusely for saving him from the potential pitfalls.

    When it comes to my taxes, a business contract, or even my haircut I’m very happy to hire a professional to make sure it is done right.  The consequences can hurt your pocketbook, reputation, and your ego.  Even if it isn’t me, make sure you hire a REALTOR to sell your home.  You won’t regret it.

  • A Don Draper Character Study: Selling Your Home in Today’s Market

    A Don Draper Character Study: Selling Your Home in Today’s Market

    Unless you’ve been living under a rock over the past 10 years, I’m sure you’ve come across an episode or two of AMC’s Mad Men.  In my opinion, this show is one of the most prolific in recent television history.  Set in 1960s Manhattan the show is a well executed time capsule of its characters and our nation in a massive social shift.  Tackling topics like sexuality, civil rights, feminism, and even the perils of improper lawnmower operation Mad Men brings you back to a time when things were cheaper, but certainly not any simpler.

    The show’s polarizing, disturbed, and gifted main character is the incomparable Don Draper.

    Yes, we eerily enjoyed watching him twist in the wind on many occasion as he attempted to navigate his tumultuous past, multiple scorned lovers, and clients and colleagues plotting against him at every turn.  For me, however, it is the scenes that show Don in his element, the pitches, that have stuck with me over the years.

    This post is dedicated to the man formerly known as Dick Whitman as when presented with the difficult challenge of marketing a home in today’s real estate market I can honestly say I’ve sought the Lucky Strike smoke soaked wordsmith for a helping hand of inspiration.  A moment commonly referred to in the marketing game as the “What Would Draper Do?” moment.  In honor of this I present to my top 3 Don Draper campaigns and how I think they can help you sell your home.  So, go ahead and pour yourself an Old Fashioned and read on.

    1. Mark Your Man

    There is a scene in the first season of AMC’s Mad Men that sticks with me to this day.  Fictional Manhattan based advertising agency Sterling Cooper is pitching the heads of Bell Jolie Lipstick on a very different approach from what they have done in the past.  Rather than parade the hundreds of lipstick shades available, they are focusing on one powerful idea that differentiates them from anyone in the lipstick business.  A campaign centered around three words, ‘Mark Your Man’.  The Belle Jolie guys aren’t immediately impressed as you’ll see in the clip below.

    Every woman wants choices, but in the end none wants to be one of a hundred in a box.  She’s unique, she makes the choices, and she chooses him.  She wants to tell the world he’s mine…you’ve given every girl who chooses your lipstick the gift of total ownership.

    Those words literally hit home to me.  Was I marketing homes in a way that would generate that kind of feeling to a potential buyer?

    I couldn’t help but feel that the current state of real estate marketing was falling into the Belle Jolie category.  Sticking to old guns, re-running the same work, and following a sort of unspoken template handed down from generation to generation of real estate agent.  It is thought leaders like Don Draper, or more accurately the Mad Men creators that have inspired all of us to look at things differently.  We will have some fun in this post delving into the troubled, yet genius mind of Don Draper, and pulling some very poignant parallels to selling your home in today’s market.

    Ask anyone and they will tell you that the market has changed.  We’ve officially moved into a buyer’s market.  The days of quickly ascending prices and homes flying off the shelves is gone.  Competition is stiffer, buyers are pickier, and you need to sell your home.  A climate like this calls for inspired marketing, creative thinking, and plenty of Canadian Rye.

    2. It’s Toasted

    If you don’t like what is being said, change the conversation.

    One of Draper’s most transcending phrases he makes over the course of the show is this one.  It was only appropriate that is first said in a smoke filled room, which suddenly clears as the words are being uttered.  The tobacco tycoons of American Tobacco are trying to weasel there way around new surgeon general restrictions on how they can advertise their Lucky Strike cigarettes.  Don asks Lee Garner Sr. to go back to basics and run him through how their cigarettes are made stopping him at ‘we toast it’.  And just like that ‘It’s Toasted’ campaign is born.

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    Interesting thought isn’t it?  Instead of playing in the weeds with the rest of the cigarette companies who were trying to dance around surgeon general warnings and push doctors smoking or promoting a safer cigarette.  Using ‘It’s toasted’ focuses the attention away from the negative.

    Now, I’m not comparing real estate to cancer causing cigarettes, but the campaign concept is one that we need to remember today.  Too often agents focus on the outside challenges a house might present, not highlighting the benefit enough.  We apologize for the home rather than sell it.  There are always going to be homes and specifically neighborhoods that have unique features that don’t appeal to a large general audience, but it could be that feature that ultimately finds you a buyer.

    Every home is going to present you with a list of reasons of why it might not sell.  Tough location, odd floor plan, you name it.  Rather than spending time on things you can’t change, I zero in on what makes the home unique and build a buyer profile that would overlook or maybe even find the home’s challenging features as  benefits

    It could be a urinal.  Maybe it’s a raised bathtub in the middle of the master bedroom.  How about a Pepto-Bismol pink oven?  What might be a turn off to you could be an ‘It’s toasted’ to someone else.

    3. The Carousel

    Kodak has created the ultimate slide projector and are looking for a campaign that will get people to buy projectors that already have projectors.  This new device allows you to load numerous slides and advance them using the original technology, the wheel, but how can an old technology be sold as something new and exciting?  Don knows.

    This is, without a doubt, one of the most personal and powerful pitches Don delivers.  It comes at a critical turning point in his life as he is yearning to have the family that is projected on the screen and for the first time we get a chance to see him in fragile, yet tender Norman Rockwellian moments.  We see images of his wedding day, Don draped over his pregnant wife’s belly, and finally, sharing a New Year’s Eve kiss.

    Technology is a glittering lure. But there is the rare occasion when the public can be engaged on a level beyond flash, if they have a sentimental bond with the product. Nostalgia.  It’s delicate, but potent.

    Home ownership has long been part of the American Dream.  In recent years some of that allure has been lost.  We have the crash of 2008 to hold responsible.  Many buyers are slower to move, their lives hanging in the balance, and unsure if buying a home is the right thing to do.  Shall they get on ‘the Carousel’ or not?

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    The circumstances of the market may change, interest rates may go up and down, but the fundamental foundation of home ownership endures and when selling a home to this audience there is nothing wrong with pulling a heart string or two.  Memories are made in homes and maybe your home could provide those memories for a new buyer.  Isn’t that what we envision them doing when they move in anyway?

    Yes, the home has a kitchen with stainless steel appliances, but why not paint a picture of what great events can happen in the nerve center of the home?  The backyard might have water tolerant landscaping but how many imaginary Super Bowl winning touchdown passes will be thrown on the newly laid artificial turf?

    It isn’t manipulation, but rather providing motivation and inspiration of what your home could provide that has little to do with square footage.  Yes there are numbers involved and they have to work, but that isn’t why people buy homes.

    With every home I get the opportunity to sell I tap into that nostalgia, creating a deeper bond, and it is then, and only then, can a home purchase be made.

    Make It Simple, But Significant

    Yes, Don was ordering a drink when he uttered these words, but I apply them to every marketing campaign I present to the real estate world.  There are so many gems like this throughout the show that can’t help but make me think that the creators of Mad Men purposely used the show as an opportunity to teach just as much as it has entertained.  I sure hope you found this entertaining as well.

    Should you want a pitch of your own on how I can help you sell your home faster than you can say ‘Zou Bisou Bisou‘, please contact me.