by Paul Slaybaugh | Jun 4, 2009 | Scottsdale Real Estate, This & That
We Realtors are a self-important bunch. Just ask us, we’ll tell you.
“I don’t only sell homes. I sell dreams!”
“You need professional help for the most important investment of your life!”
“I have planted more behinds in houses than McDonalds has in cardiologist offices!”
In most any arena, quiet confidence is the hallmark of ability. The lowest common denominator of puffery, in turn, is an underlying insecurity about the quality (or need) of the service being rendered. You sometimes can’t help but wonder if the egocentric assertions are for the benefit of the braggart’s audience or the braggart’s own sense of worth. I, for one, would sooner enlist the legal assistance of my two year old than the “experienced, aggressive” attorneys who snarl their ways through 30 second local TV spots. Is it too much to ask for a “smart, competent” one?
Look at the business cards we agents pass out with palsied fervor. You have to wade through 6 lines of superfluous designations and production awards before you can even find a phone number. I have been sporting the same cards for the past seven years with much the same obnoxious verbiage. The deeper I get into my Real Estate career, the more I realize that performance is the only thing that matters. No longer in a position where I feel the need to stand on a bar stool with a megaphone to capture my share of the market, it is a liberating thing to let go of the pompous demand for respect for simply selling a home. Certainly, ours is an important job, but then again, show me one that isn’t.
When challenged on the role of the Realtor, and whether we really are the drain on society that most public surveys reveal us to be, I no longer attempt to shout down the vocal detractors. My clients respect what I do and the assistance I provide, and that is all I require. We aren’t curing cancer. We aren’t utilizing an unparalleled skill set and education to launch unmanned crafts on Mars. Assessing value, assisting with purchasing decisions, marketing a home, navigating a Real Estate transaction … all are skills that can be readily learned. It outwardly seems like an easy gig. Show a few houses, collect a fat check. That is why there are more licensed Real Estate agents than 6 foot tall Cher impersonators at a midnight screening of the Rocky Horror Picture Show.
While there are few intrinsic skills that the average non-drooling citizen can’t acquire and ply successfully in the realm of Real Estate, the real value of working with a professional is the “been there, done that” factor. It’s all about the learning curve. Most everything in this world is doable, but more to the point, done well through practice.
Two very good cases in point occurred just yesterday amidst a very long day of showing property to two sets of buyers. My first set of clients were highly intelligent buyers relocating from Northern California. Tech savvy and coming to me with a month’s worth of research on the properties they wished to see, along with a spreadsheet full of notes, pros & cons, online value estimates, etc for each home. This couple was fully dialed in and very capable of successfully purchasing a home with or without my assistance. Much to their credit, they recognized where their knowledge gaps were, and allowed me to fill in the remaining 10-20% that can only be gained by doing something day in and day out. Armed with their research and my local acumen, where we deviated from script was when we stopped in to look at a house that wasn’t on their list. Brand new on the market, and an exceptional value for the school district, size and condition, it was a home that would have slid under their radar because of a few discrepancies with their original criteria.
We submitted an offer on that home and are awaiting a response.
My second buyer was another sharp, and highly educated guy. We had been looking at property for about a month somewhat laconically, but have now really dialed up the urgency as he recently received notice that his Naval reservist status is about to be bumped to active duty. He deploys in late July. Highly motivated to secure a home for his family before he shoves off, we have been hammering new listings in the Southeast Valley virtually every other day for the past two weeks. He mentioned to me last night how many part time agents he works with in the medical field that have solicited his business (are you happy with your current agent?). What a commercial I could have made out of his quote. Paraphrasing, he essentially brushed off the come-ons with the response that not only was he happy with my performance, but that I have done this all day, every day for the past 10 years. In the area where I was born and raised to boot. With the short fuse he has to get his family situated, he requires the attention and knowledge of a full-time Realtor.
You the man, Mike!
See, I told you we Realtors are a self-important bunch. Even this purported piece of anti-puffery has morphed into a promotional effort … but I digress.
When you scythe through the hyperbole that thrives in the fields of Real Estate marketing, the underlying value that a solid agent provides is readily evident. We simply obscure the benefits at times via the bombastic claims that occasion the rolling of eyes and heavy groans from those whom we would deem to impress by overstating our linchpin status to Western civilization. A good agent is worth far more than his/her fee, but a poor one is worth a great deal less. The trick is deciphering the difference between the two.
As you contemplate that sobering thought, I’ll get back to my task for the day of adding the following accomplishments to my already bloated business card.
“Outstanding Achievement in Reading” – Cochise Elementary School: 1980-1982, 1984 (I was shafted in ’83).
“Super Citizen Award” – March 1982, September 1983
“Blue Ribbon in Long Jump” – Field Day 1985
“Eating All of My Crust Award” – Grandma Slaybaugh, 1983
“Junior Assembly, Fox Trot, 1st Place” – 1987
Hmm … I think we’re gonna need a bigger boat card.
by Paul Slaybaugh | May 29, 2009 | Scottsdale, Scottsdale Neighborhoods, Scottsdale Real Estate
Got floor plans?
There aren’t too many extra copies of old floor plans floating around for some of the more established communities in Scottsdale. Fortunately, we happen to have a file drawer filled with original builder plans. Included in the mix is one of the more comprehensive collections of floor plans for McCormick Ranch homes that you will find anywhere. Whether you are a buyer admiring McCormick Ranch from a distance or a resident looking for a plan for renovation purposes, etc, you came to the right place.
Click on model names to view floor plans (Those without model hyperlinks are still to be added) or on subdivision names to view the neighborhood synopsis.
Unfortunately, a few builder plans have walked off over the 30 years that we have maintained these files. Have a copy of a floor plan that is not represented here? By all means, shoot it over to us and we’ll add it to the database.
Bear in mind that several subdivisions, such as Palo Viento I, Vista Del Lago, Estados De La Mancha and Los Tesoros, in addition to pockets of Paradise Park Trails and Palo Viento II are comprised of custom homes with no readily available floor plans.
Interested in owning a McCormick Ranch home? Scroll to the bottom of this page for live streaming results of the latest McCormick Ranch Real Estate listings to hit the market!
Visit our McCormick Ranch Home Page for a comprehensive community overview
Learn more about the McCormick Ranch Subdivisions
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Camelot Homes
Subdivisions: (Vista De La Tierra, Palo Viento II, Playa Del Sur, Estate Los Arboles, Paseo Village, Paradise Park Trails, Tierra Del Norte)
Models: The Embassy | The Lancelot | The Chateau | The Windsor | The Monarch | The Regal
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Camelo Vista
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Casa Dia Festivo
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Cavalier
Subdivisions: (Paradise Park Trails)
Models: The Briarcliff | The Chartercrest | The Frontera | The Whethersfield
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Dietz-Crane
Subdivisions: (Carriage Square, Villa La Playa)
Models: The Barcelona | The Hermosa | The Valencia | The Vallarte
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Dix
Subdivisions: (Tierra Feliz, Paradise Park Manor I & II)
Models: Dix-7600 | Dix-7604 | Dix-7605 | Dix-7700 (Tierra Feliz)
Dix-7901 | Dix-7902 | Dix-7903 | Dix-7904 (Bainbridge) | Dix-8001 (The Valencia) (Paradise Park Manor)
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Evans Wythycombe
Subdivisions: (Meridian at McCormick Ranch)
Models: The Apollo | The Aries | The Bella | The Gemini | The Juno
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Gateway
Subdivisions: (Paradise Park Trails)
Models: The Avanti | The Casa Rica | The Sierra | The Tempo | The Vista
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Geoffrey Edmunds
Subdivisions: (Cuernavaca)
Models: Casa Baja | Casa Redonda | Casa Rica | Casa Santiago | Casa Viejo
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Golden Heritage
Subdivisions: (Heritage Terrace, Heritage Village, Paradise Park Trails)
Models: Plan 40 (Heritage Terrace, Heritage Village 1)
Plan 243 | Plan 253 | Plan 263 | Plan 273 | Plan 283 (Heritage Village 2 & 3)
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JA Smith
Subdivisions: (Villa Hermosa)
Models: Plan 1675 | Plan 1953 | Plan 2380 | Plan 2600
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Jaeger
Subdivisions: (Country Horizon)
Models: CH-100 | CH-200 | CH-300 | CH-400 | CH-500 | CH-600
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Key West
Subdivisions: (Suggs Rancho McCormick)
Models: Casa Rica | Hacienda | Posada | Posada (Alternate)
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La Mariposa Villas
Models: Plan A | Plan B | Plan C | Plan C (Option)
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Lakeside Villas
Models: Atwater | Edgewater | Huntington
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Las Palomas
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Malouf Bros
Subdivisions: (El Paseo)
Models: La Elegancia | La Estancia | La Miranda | La Torre Alta
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Metropolitan
Subdivisions: (Villa Hermosa)
Models: Plan One | Plan Two | Plan Three | Plan Four
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Palm Cove
Models: Plan 1 | Plan 2 | Plan 3 | Plan 4 | Plan 5 | Plan 6 | Plan 7
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Pleasant Run
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Riggs
Subdivisions: (Mountain View East)
Models: Model A | Model B | Model C | Model D
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Santa Fe Construction Co / Ballard
Subdivisions: (Santa Fe)
Models: The Barcelona | The Coronado | The Domingo | The Montego
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Sandpiper
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Spanish Oaks
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Suggs
Subdivisions: (Paseo Village, Suggs Rancho McCormick)
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Tarrantini
Subdivisions: (Paradise Park Trails)
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The Villages
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The Villages Five (Starfire)
Models: The Aurora | The Bella | The Covington | The Desert Star
Latest Homes to hit the market in McCormick Ranch
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No one knows McCormick Ranch Real Estate like Ray & Paul. Whether Buying or Selling in the Ranch, we’re your guys.
(480) 220-2337 | paul@scottsdalepropertyshop.com
by Paul Slaybaugh | May 29, 2009 | Home Buying, Scottsdale Real Estate
So I’m enjoying one of the myriad HGTV Real Estate shows the other night. First time home buyers were the focus of this particular program. Unable to watch without properly entertaining myself with my own sarcastic commentary (did that agent really just say that?), this has become one of my favorite pastimes.
There is the Realtor who feels the need to point out the backyard or the front door to the dumbfounded buyers. The agent who demands to know “if this is a house you can see yourself living in” within seconds of stepping through the front door. It’s a carnival of overselling that I can only hope has more to do with the camera than the standard practices of my erstwhile colleagues.
There is one particular practice that repeats itself ad nauseam on these shows, though, that truly makes my blood boil. I’m speaking of the agents who seemingly forget that their job description as a buyer’s agent is to protect the interest of their clients. It’s awfully hard to do that portion of the job correctly when you push every property that you look at as the greatest thing since canned yams.
Homes have flaws and some are fatal. While it is ultimately the burden of the consumer to make that determination, these silly shows raise my ire when the response to the buyer’s observation that there is a train running through the back yard is, “Hmm, let’s go back inside and look at that wonderful kitchen again!”
Or my personal favorite brand of exchange:
Buyer: “This only has 2 bedrooms? We need at least 3.”
Agent: “Yes, but look at those hardwood floors!”
Buyer: “The floors are nice …”
Agent: “And remember that this is your first house. The first house is never the dream house. You can always move up to the bigger house in a few years.”
Timeout! This is the worst brand of advice, and I simply cannot tolerate it. No, the first house will not be the dream house, but to advocate making sacrifices on the aspects of the home that will impact resale potential the most is unconscionable. You don’t eliminate the third bedroom and 75% of future buyers, you eliminate the hardwood. You don’t purchase the stigmatized property with the highway behind it just to get the kitchen with the stainless steel appliances. Those are poor purchasing decisions.
If I had a nickel for every time I heard that a first time buyer should not worry about some major feature of a house, I would be a piggy bank. While it is always important for a buyer to discern the future value potential and ability to resell a property he or she is considering, it has somehow become cliche that it is not as important to the first time buyer. As if the lower dollar value of the investment or the knowledge that he or she will only be in the home for a couple of years would somehow mitigate the importance of due diligence.
I maintain that future value concerns are even more important to first timers than most. For the very reason that they will likely enjoy a shorter stay in the home, they need to be especially cognizant of resale capability. The retired couple who is buying the home they envision for spending the duration of their golden years can more afford to make a purchasing decision with their specific needs in mind than the couple that is just getting started and will use their first property as a springboard to their ultimate home. They don’t want to get off on the wrong foot by making a poor initial investment.
You can more afford to screw up your purchase if you never plan to sell it. If this is the house you plan to die in, by all means, buy the one on the ancient burial ground with the sweet discount and benevolent (hopefully) spirits. Otherwise, buy something that someone else will want to buy from you.
So first-time home buyers, you will have to make sacrifices, especially if you are looking in a higher end market like Scottsdale. That does not mean you should settle for having a power plant next door or the funky one bedroom house with the garage converted to a recording studio. Eliminate the properties that have unfixable or expensive structural/locational problems. Remember, you can always replace the vinyl flooring and the laminate counter tops.
Not so easy to re-route the Amtrak.
by Paul Slaybaugh | May 24, 2009 | Daily Listing Updates, Scottsdale, Scottsdale Listings, Scottsdale Real Estate
Brand New to the Scottsdale Market!
Congratulations, it’s … a home!
Check back here for daily updates to new Scottsdale Real Estate listings as they hit the market, or sign up to receive email alerts to properties of your own personally crafted criteria.
Search by city, zip code, school district, price point, beds, baths, specific features … you name it!
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No hardcore salesmanship here at the Scottsdale Property Shop. Come back and search for homes as many times as you like. Trawl through the MLS catacombs in search of housing treasure without being bombarded with solicitations. You have the option to sign up to view full listing details, receive listing alerts via email or reader, save personalized searches and your favorite properties, make notes about specific listings, etc, but it is purely voluntary.
If you do so choose to register to utilize these fantastic tools (not just for buyers, homeowners can keep tabs on neighborhood activity and prices), you have our scouts’ honor that we will not treat your contact information as an invitation to barrage you with spam. We don’t like junk mail either. If you should ever need our assistance or our services, there is no shortage of contact information on this site to get a hold of us.
Thank you for visiting ScottsdalePropertyShop.Com … let the house hunt commence!
by Paul Slaybaugh | May 23, 2009 | Home Selling, Scottsdale Real Estate
Real Estate agents are largely responsible for the massive housing inventories of the past two years.
That bears repeating.
Real Estate agents are largely responsible for the massive housing inventories of the past two years.
This is a conclusion that does not please me to reach, but my conclusion nonetheless after continuing to see overpriced home after overpriced home hit the market. You can blame banks or non-paying homeowners for the glut of foreclosure inventory, but guess what? Bank owned homes sell. By and large, they are priced appropriately and adjusted regularly until they sell. Compare this to the unrealistic seller/listing agent tandem with the home down the street that enters the marketplace grossly overpriced, and just sits there while the days on the market pile up without mercy.
You can blame the banks again for the short sale listings that take forever to work their way off the market because of all the bureaucracy and idiocy involved. In many instances, I would agree with you, but I find ample fault with the listing agents who do not take the time to learn the process and requirements involved for the institution(s) that hold the lien(s) against the property. Even though many banks seemingly select the files they will actually review via a no holds barred game of inebriated backgammon on the first of every month, too many agents simply throw a short sale listing on the market at a completely unrealistic price (compared to what the bank will be willing to accept) and hope that they can make it stick. Buyers get frustrated with the process after several months of inaction and often exit the transaction before getting a response from the bank. Even if the home eventually sells prior to the looming trustee’s sale, it has contributed to the bloated inventory level for months instead of weeks. Some banks will not negotiate with a seller at all until an offer is in hand, but that doesn’t mean that the agent can’t have all of the documentation lined up in advance. Many short sale listing agents that I have encountered have been a bit lacking in the communication department as well. Buyers are more likely to hang around and wait for a response if they are receiving regular feedback and updates from the seller’s side of the table as to the progress with the bank. A phone call or an email update every week or two would go a long way to keeping some of these deals together and clearing out these negative equity weeds that are choking out the resale lawn.
Inventory levels have dropped considerably in the last couple of months, but we have a long way to go before we reach a nice healthy balance of buyers and sellers. While everyone is currently focused on stimulating demand, we professionals bear a large portion of the responsibility for the supply. Every time an agent in our ranks takes a listing for 100k over the property’s current value, or even 10k for that matter, he/she is contributing to the stasis that has plagued our Valley since the equity and credit bubbles burst in 2007.
We all want your business, and are generally eager to please. As such, it can be a temptation to tell a prospective client what they want to hear when it comes to the value of their house. Less charitably, it can also be a temptation to “buy the listing” by quoting an unrealistic price to sway a seller to list the home with us versus the agent quoting a considerably lower asking price. A good agent will ensure you command a top of market price for your home, but not a one of us has a secret stash of magic beans that will grow the value of your digs above and beyond what a buyer will be willing to pay. We can advise you as to how to make your home more market ready, and how to improve its value, but we can’t fit a $750,000 peg into a $500,000 hole.
Ray and I vow to give it to you straight. It does neither party, nor the market, any favors to cram yet another overpriced listing into the protesting pair of lycra pants that is the MLS. Nope, no more glazed doughnuts on our watch. It’s time for an industry-wide low glycemic carb / high saleability diet.
As I tell my clients when we sit down to review the data, I would rather tick you off with my evaluation up front than 6 months down the line when your home hasn’t sold. Better to lose business truthfully than be complicit in the further swelling of our hemorrhaging housing market.
A home should be priced accurately, or it should not be priced at all.
We don’t list homes to practice. We list them to sell.
by Paul Slaybaugh | May 19, 2009 | Home Buying, Scottsdale Real Estate
“There sure is a lot of crap out there.”
This from a buyer who by all practical measure has been bound and determined to see every single one of the 37,000 active listings currently on the market in the greater Phoenix area.
“Yep, there sure is.”
This from the weary Scottsdale Realtor who is barely suppressing the I-Told-You-So urge.
Throw out the tighter restrictions on financing. Forget about the would-be buyers who can’t buy because they are tied to a house they can’t sell. Pay no mind to interest rate surfers and bottom seekers. If there has been one under-reported factor influencing the purchasing habits of home buyers in the past six months, it has been an overabundance of choice. Believe it or not, but many of the folks fortunate enough to be in a position to buy in this market are being held hostage by … themselves. Give a person too many perceived options and watch the latter half of Newton’s first law of physics take hold.
The buyer at rest tends to stay at rest unless acted upon by a 1% interest rate and a crowbar.
As our inventory has slowly contracted in the last few months, however, so has the rationale for delaying the purchase that you want to make.
Now, before I go any further, repeat after me: “I want to buy a house.”
Sometimes, it can be helpful to remind yourself of the penultimate objective. It’s easy to get so wrapped up in the allure of winning a negotiation or the status of the current global economy that you forget what you are actually trying to accomplish.
I told people when there were 55,000 properties on the market, and I tell them today, the overwhelming majority of the homes I see are either overpriced or in deplorable condition. The sheer volume of the listing inventory has convinced buyers that they will have thousands of viable options and that they will basically get to name their price for the home that they want, but a rude awakening often awaits.
While conditions are ripe to secure a terrific value, those who expect hundreds of impeccable options for their specific criteria will be disappointed. The good properties and the good values still come and go with lightning speed, leaving the dawdling buyer to sift through the rest of the damaged goods that have been on the market for 300 days.
Want to make a steal? You can. But you have to be fast and you have to be well qualified ahead of time. Matter of fact, the last two bank properties that I went after with clients had a total of 25 offers between them. I went 1 for 2 in my pursuit, and the prices were bid up substantially in each instance because the list price was so far below market value.
It’s like 2005 with greatly reduced prices for this segment of the market. There is an armada of cash laden buyers looking for the same turnkey property at the same bargain basement price.
As such, not only may you have to pay over full price for that hot property, but you will likely purchase it “as is” with no seller warranties or disclosures if it is a foreclosure listing. That’s just life in the big city when you are dealing with a bank. Given the pricing, it is often worth it.
There will be those buyers, though, who still believe they can knock 100-200k off of any price due to the “buyer’s market” about which they have been hearing.
Newsflash: You only knock that kind of coin off a price when there is no demand for the product. In other words, the home must be overpriced or under-maintained significantly enough that it attracts no suitors.
I don’t know about you, but this doesn’t sound like the home I’d be after.
Don’t become one of the zombie house shoppers that turns into a hobbiest through unrealistic expectations. You know the type. At some point along the way, they go from being active home buyers to tourists when they fail to match up the reality of the marketplace with their preconceived notions. They wander around aimlessly every weekend looking at open houses and half-heartedly seeking sustenance for their undead pre-qual letters.
Realtor: “So, can you see yourself living in this home?”
Zombie Buyer: “Brains!”
You have to be ready to move when the right home comes along at the right price, lest you be resigned to thumbing through the stack of also-ran listings while the more pragmatic consumers eat up the good values.
Inertia, it’s a fickle thing. If you recognize value when you see it, you will be successful in securing it. Keep missing the good ones by submitting unrealistic offers or waiting for the magical unicorn to appear with the million dollar home and $100,000 price tag, and the sedentary buyer will seep further into the earth.
It’s a great time to be a buyer, but you have to separate the hype from your purchasing decisions. You might even find that some of the better values are found in the resale market now that sellers have begun to wise up and price more competitively with the banks, but that is fodder for another post.
Now, do you want to go speulunking, or do you want to buy a house? I’m up for either, but I need to know which shoes to wear.