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Boards/Posters Are there bulletin boards where you
work? In neighborhood shops and restaurants? At your church? Any
place you, or members of your family, frequent that has something
like a bulletin board is a good place to post notices of your
property’s availability. If you have the use of a digital camera and
a computer, you might want to do a one-page poster with several
photos of your house, a description and contact information.
Consider having tear-off strips at the bottom with your phone number
repeated on each strip.
Magazines & Community Publications
You may want to check the cost of putting an ad
in “For Sale By Owner” type magazines. Most communities have such
magazines and you don’t have to be a realtor to buy an ad.
Brochures
Brochures or one-page flyers can also be a useful
method for marketing your home. You can use the same one you made
for bulletin boards or you can expand on it a bit. Use more photos,
have captions under them identifying the rooms, garden areas, tennis
court, community club, pool and other benefits to buying your home.
There are several things you can do to get your
brochures in front of the public. You can buy a brochure holder
(typically, a plastic box with a hinged lid on a stick which gets
“planted” in the ground near the curb in front of your home) from
the hardware store. Plant it in a prominent place in front of your
home and keep it stocked with brochures.
Don’t get annoyed when “noisy neighbors” pick up
your brochures. Your neighbors can afford homes priced similarly to
yours. They probably have family and friends whom they’d enjoy as
neighbors who can afford this price range, too. Smile when you see a
neighbor picking up a brochure; another marketing ambassador is on
its way.
Also keep a supply of brochures in your home to
give to prospective buyers who come to look at it. People looking
for a new home usually look at a more than one property, and can get
overwhelmed with too many properties. “Is this the one with the
built-in book cases or was it the one across town?” The house whose
best features go with them via a brochure with color photos and
salient information is memorable. Buyers tend to write contract
offers on properties they remember and can visualize.
Consider taking your brochures to your peers at
work. After all, you find it convenient to live in your home and
work there; might your associates know someone who’d find it a
similarly pleasant arrangement? Ask them.
Internet
There are several Internet sites on which FSBOs
may list their properties for sale. Some of these permit sellers to
include photos, information about “Open Houses” they’re holding,
etc. Prices for this service varies. Try fsboamerica.org or go to
your favorite search engine and check out a few.
Open Houses
That brings up the notion of “Open Houses.” In
many areas, sales frequently take place because of an Open House
attended by potential buyers. If you are in a location with good
traffic, an open house can be an excellent tool. You can promote
your Open House in any, or all, of the venues we’ve discussed above.
It’s also often effective to install an Open House sign with helium
balloons tied on with bright ribbons on the day of the Open House.
Whether you use a realtor or sell your home on
your own, marketing it is going to be the key to getting a quick
sale. It takes some time and access to a few tools, but most sellers
can put together a successful marketing program.
Raynor James is with
http://www.fsboamerica.org/ -
providing FSBO homes for sale by owner. Visit our "sell my home"
page at
http://www.fsboamerica.org/seller.cfm
to list and sell your home for free for one month. Visit
http://www.fsboamerica.org/buyer.cfm
to see homes for sale by owner.
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