by ROFLCatDown » Thu Jul 08, 2010 7:23 pm
You know, last time I sold a house I found the realtor's input to basically be non-existent. Honest guiding information on pricing, where we were market-wise, and actually having her show up for her scheduled open houses was a problem.
Eventually we just took the whole thing on ourselves, listed with a flat fee broker and did our own open houses every week until the damn thing sold... And I do mean damn thing. It took two years.
Now I'm looking to buy again, and I've found our current agent to be extremely helpful, knowledgeable, frank, and honest about whole process what he thought of the home prices of what we were looking at, and issues we could expect to encounter for varying property types (Inland vs island vs well vs septic vs waterfront) and who we should call for each type of inspection in each area. My wife and I are perfectly capable of flipping through Redfin or Zillow or any other MLS system on a daily basis to see what changed, what's new, what sold, and make detailed lists of what we want to see, what we don't want to see, and why to coach our agent to make recommendations based upon that.
At this point I feel we've run him so ragged looking at places, asking questions, and simply pestering him about various things we need advice on that even after we close on a house we'll likely end up tipping him when we're done.
People work for a living, and somehow we have it in our heads now that it's a bad thing to pay people to do good quality work, let alone tip them when they come through above and beyond what you expect.
If you want to do the work yourself up front, then do the work up front. If paying the 7% holdback for the agents hurts your ability to buy that much, you probably shouldn't be buying that much house to begin with.