I have been brewing up a rant for a while now about
something that is at the top of my list of professional pet peeves: terrible
pictures of listings. It is bordering on an epidemic and I honestly can’t take
it anymore. The time has come to say what few have the guts to say. YOUR AGENT
IS TERRIBLE AT TAKING PICTURES. It doesn’t matter you say? Keep reading.
Picture yourself in a position of needing to sell your home.
You don’t know who to call, so you ask some friends for referrals and call
around to a few local offices. You take the time to meet with more than one
agent to pick just the right person for the job. After much deliberation you
choose one- they come over and sign the listing paperwork with you- then THIS
happens: Out comes their phone to take pictures of your house. That you just
signed an agreement to pay them TENS OF THOUSANDS of dollars to sell.
Ruminate on that for a bit, and let’s back up for a second.
Our market is changing. We have more inventory than we did a
year ago, so we are returning to a much more normal market. People have equity,
there are more regular (equity) sales than there are not, and there are more
homes for buyers to choose from. Where are buyers looking for the homes they
are deciding to look at? The internet. What are they looking at to determine if
they want to see a certain home? THE PICTURES!
Ok so back to you and your house for sale. A six percent commission on a $200,000 home is $12,000. TWELVE. THOUSAND. DOLLARS. And for your money, you get this. 15-20 sideways, poorly lit, blurry pictures of your house all over the internet.
And by all over- I mean ALL OVER. Trulia, Zillow, Realtor,
Movoto, Redfin, plus all of the individual local company websites and their
international franchise websites. Your sideways pictures are viewable by the
family relocating from Calgary to Ceres (that actually happened to us
recently). Pictures are important to those people!
Now let me be clear on a few things. First, bad pictures
will not cause your house to NEVER sell. It will sell eventually- but maybe not
for the price you originally thought it would, or it may take longer to the
extent that it affects your ultimate goal you are trying to accomplish in
moving. Secondly, bad pictures do not indicate that your agent is inept at
representing you. All I am saying is that they are inept at marketing your
home, and, in my opinion, lazy and therefore more apt to cut corners later. Lastly I feel it important to note that all
of these pictures were found in one short browse through our local MLS of
active listings. It took me about 30 minutes and I ended up with way more
photos than I had room for in this blog. This leads me to my next point.
EVERY SINGLE BUYER we have worked with in the last six
months has complained to us on a regular basis about the (lack of) quality of
the property photos available to them. They are not expecting professional
photographer grade photos- all they want is for them to be straight, well lit,
clear (not blurry), and not of just the occupants furniture! I promise you with
100 percent certainty that if your pictures met the (simple) criteria mentioned
above, buyers would not pass up seeing your home before they look at all of the
other homes available that have far more appealing pictures.
And before you say anything, I know what you’re thinking. Your agent is
thinking the same thing. “Well my iPhone 5S has the best camera… yada yada yada”.
Sure it is great at taking pictures of your latte, your fancy dinner and your
kids baseball practice with that cool sunset in the background. You know what
it is not good at?
This.
Or this.
And, to be perfectly honest, I have absolutely NO idea what
this picture is. The garage? A laundry room? Your guess is as good as mine.
So after you sign that listing agreement- and the cell phone
comes out for pictures- ask yourself if you trust that the agent you are hiring
for the job has the right marketing strategy for your home, and will not
continue to cut corners throughout the process. Or better yet- before you sign-
while you are interviewing agents ASK them how they will take pictures, and ask
to see other listings they have or that have sold recently so you can see what
they have done for other clients. After all, you are HIRING someone to do a JOB
for you, so why would you want to sell yourself short by choosing someone who
is not willing to do the job correctly?