Archive for Uncategorized

5 Pro Tips Designed to Help You Move

By Nara Schoenberg RISMEDIA, June 16, 2009-(MCT)-

How hard is it to move all your worldly possessions from one home to the next? So hard that even Clive Pearse of HGTV can get it wrong.

“I’m a bit of a hoarder, and-spectacularly-when I moved from England in 1997, I packed up an entire house of rubbish and brought it with me across the Atlantic,” says Pearse, who hosts “Designed To Sell.”

“I should have got rid of it and saved money.”

Also in the bad news column: “The average American will move 12 times in a lifetime. A lot of people feel like they’ve moved 12 times after doing it once.”

But enough with the doom and gloom! Our favorite trans-Atlantic trash-hauler is here with five ways to lighten your load, both literally and figuratively. Or, as he puts it, “A man gives tips after he’s learned the hard way, huh?” Hey, whatever works.

1. Don’t move it if you don’t want it. “People pay a lot of money to move all the clutter they don’t want or need,” Pearse says. Instead, identify the unwanted items and get rid of them in a garage sale. If that’s too much work, consider donating the discards to a charity.

2. Packing material at your disposal. Save money and environmental resources by using free and recyclable packing materials. Many large supermarkets will give away boxes for free. If you have time, start hoarding newspapers and junk mail. Use the newspapers to wrap fragile items. Shred the junk mail to make a great green replacement for bubble wrap.

3. Surf for techno help. Let someone else figure out which cable, telephone and Internet service to get at your new home. “As someone who is terrified of technology, this is my favorite tip,” says Pearse, who recommends a site created by cable companies, Cable Movers Hotline (cablemover.com.) Also available is Movearoo (movearoo.com), a site offered, in part, by telephone companies.

4. Moving advice for your possessions. If you use a professional mover, pick a reputable company by means of a referral rather than an advertisement. And avoid stress by setting aside your precious knickknacks and important paperwork and moving them yourself.

5. Start with a list. Don’t know where to start? “Take a long, hard look at each room very quietly and make a list of what has to go, what has to stay,” what has sentimental value and what doesn’t, Pearse says. Go room by room, item by item. “Once you get going, it’s very easy.”

©2009, Chicago Tribune.
Distributed by McClatchy-Tribune Information Services.

Source:  http://rismedia.com/2009-06-15/5-pro-tips-designed-to-help-you-move/#ixzz0J9xf2YAG&D

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Short Sales

I tend to work heavily with short sales both as a buyer and sellers agent.  I think today you can get a better deal on a short sale than you can on a foreclosure.  When a foreclosure comes on the market priced right almost everyone will bid on it (except those that believe it is stigmatized) and the price will be driven up.  A short sale will have fewer buyers considering it because not everyone can wait 45 days to 6 months to get an answer.  Yes, I have had two short sales take 6 months and heard horror stories of others taking 10 months.

When making an offer on a short sale, understand the bank is going to send out an appraiser or another disinterested agent to give them an opinion on the true value of the property.  It is imperative these individuals go into the property to determine price.  I have a property listed today at $500,000 that was appraised at $860,000 in Jan. of 2008 with a drive-by.  If anyone had walked inside they would have realized this property was not worth that kind of money.  There was so much work left to do.  In the process of doing the short sale the bank again sent someone to ‘drive-by’ and give them an opinion of the price and they came back with $560,000.  If the property is listed at $500,000 and I can’t sell it for that how is the value $560,000?  Now the bank has sent someone out to actually step foot inside to give them a real idea.

All of these little steps take time.  I love when buyer’s say, “I am going to pull my offer if I don’t get an answer by Tuesday.”  The banks don’t care.  You can’t threaten them.  You can’t motivate them.  I have had success one time motivating a bank to give us an answer.  My buyer had two offers out and her second choice came back and accepted her offer.  We called the listing agent on her first choice (who had said they should have an answer within a week) and told them the situation.  They were able to get an answer back within 2 days that they would accept the offer. 

When it comes to short sales you must be patient and work with a good agent who knows the short sale process.

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