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Archive for the 'Bloomfield Hills MI Real Estate' Category
Stage Rooms for Their Intended Purpose When Selling a House
When potential buyers view a house for sale, they need to see rooms presented as they were intended. The master bedroom shouldn’t be an exercise room, the bathroom shouldn’t be a pet station, the garage shouldn’t be a storage unit, and unless you have more than 3 bedrooms, resist the urge to make one an office.
This is especially important when it comes to dining areas. People want to see where they will gather for meals and entertain their loved ones.
I recently staged a 900 sq. ft. house for a client who was using her dining room as office space. As you can see (amongst the considerable clutter), a desk definitely does not belong there. Aside from being the wrong use of the space, it was also the first thing visitors saw when they came in the front door … NOT a good first impression.

After completely clearing out the area , I moved the table and chairs that were overwhelming the small kitchen and created a proper dining room.

Visitors can now see that there is room for a full size table and 4 chairs at the very least. Showing a dedicated dining room, the intended purpose for this space, adds value to this petite house and answers an important question for the buyer.
Short sales successes
When we started selling homes in 2001, short sales were unheard of in Metro Detroit. Foreclosures were rare in Oakland County. But times have changed and this year we have had an enormous uptick in our short sale business.
Short sales are taking place in every price range. In the last 30 days we’ve helped buyers and sellers to close on homes with list prices between $110,000 and $999,000 in communities like Bloomfield Hills, Royal Oak and Orchard Lake. We’ve got 5 other short sale homes in the pipeline right now, all with offers on them and in to the bank for evaluation.
Some scenarios can make a short sale even more challenging to handle successfully. Dmitry recently navigated treachorous waters with a short sale that involved private lien holders in addition to the banks. Three individuals had made personal loans to the owner and did not really want to accept anything less than payment in full. The banks were offering a few grand to them to scram. If the home and gone to foreclosure they would not have seen a nickle. In the end there was intense drama for a few weeks but Dmitry got everyone to the closing table. The buyers got a great house and the seller got out of a bad situation.
Buyers, you can get a deal with a short sale, but it comes at a price. If you have the time and the patience you could be rewarded handsomely.
Home Sellers Top Questions About Home Staging
As I head to Florida for a much-needed vacation and annual Spring Training game (Go Tigers!!!), I leave you with an excellent Q & A reblogged with permission from my staging colleague Cindy Bryant of Redesign Etc, Inc. in Houston, TX. Her post on Active Rain is spot-on and truly reflects the most common questions that I am asked by potential staging clients. I apologize for starting my vacation early and taking the easy way out. Truth is, I couldn’t have said it better myself.
Take it away Cindy …
“There is so much information on home staging, that home sellers are on overload. With advice coming from all kinds of sources and areas of the country. Yes, it is confusing, where do you start? If you watch tv, you may get the impression you can have your home staged for under $2000. Or another show may stage a home for around $20,000. Big difference! Another show has strangers coming to your house picking it apart, to the point that you’re thinking, no way am I going to let someone do that to my home. You can read articles or books on the internet from people that may be experts or just people with an opinion. You can also read a book on ”How to Cut Hair”, but would you actually trust yourself to cut your hair or someone else’s? I wouldn’t! So, where do you start? Sure, you have questions … who wouldn’t?
Here are a few questions home sellers have when thinking about staging their homes.
1) How much does it cost? Reasonable question … as a matter of fact it’s the #1 question. It’s the big mystery. This is why. I wish I could say every home stager could give you a standard answer, but we can’t. Every stager should be their own business entity, and provide different services. Some charge an hourly rate, by the square foot, per room, a percentage of the list price or a flat fee. As every property is different, we really need to see the home to assess it and give you a solid number. Some stagers can estimate it, but shouldn’t be held to that number until the property is viewed. There are too many variables that go into it. Is is vacant? Do furniture and accessories need to be brought in? Or is it occupied, and you just need a redesign of existing furnishings? These are just a couple of examples.
2) Who pays for the staging? The 2nd most popular question. The home seller is ultimately responsible for staging services.
3) Why doesn’t my Realtor pay for home staging, they are making the commission? Again, ultimately a homeowner is responsible for staging costs. Some, but not all real estate agents will pay for a Home Staging Consultation, as a value-added service, but the actual costs associated with staging (furniture rental, actual hands-on staging) is paid for by the home seller. It is not the responsibility of a real estate agent to pay for home staging costs.
4) Can I pay at closing? This is up to the stager. Most, do not do this as we do not know if a property will be on the market for 1 day or 3 months. Again, we all do it a little differently, some ask for 1/2 upfront, and some charge a monthly fee.
5) What do you do? Again, each home stager is their own entity. Some offer redesigns only, some offer accessories only, and some offer furniture and accessories. Some don’t have the inventory to do a vacant home so they will have to use a third party source, and some use their own inventory. Different services can be offered, such as paint color consultations, personal shopping, organizing, curb appeal, recommendations on cost-effective cosmetic changes such as flooring, counters, lights, fixtures, etc. The ultimate goal is to help a seller get their home sold faster and in the most cost effective manner.
6) How long does it take? It depends on how much you want done and to what extent. It can take a few hours or a few days, or maybe longer if there are some cosmetic changes that need to be taken care of.
7) When should I have my home staged? As soon as you decide to sell. Call a professional home stager and get a Home Staging Consultation. Once necessary recommendations are completed from your stager’s list, your house is ready to be listed. Don’t make the mistake of putting up that “For Sale” sign in the front yard before your home is ready. The first 20 days a home is listed will be when it will get the most interest and traffic. Make sure your house is show ready.”
Don’t Underestimate “The Neighbor Factor” When Selling a House
We know that the three most important factors for a successful real estate sale are location, price and condition. While the seller can make changes to the price and condition of a property to hasten a sale, no one can amend the location.
What happens when the location of the house itself is desirable, but the neighbors are not? 
Everyone has a story. The neighbors who don’t mow their weed-infested yard. The RV parked in the driveway year-round. The garbage cans left out for days after pick-up. The home improvement project that was never finished. The incessant barking dogs. The company van. The boat. The used cars for sale. The dumpster. The broken garage door. The loud parties.
The smart buyer will scope out the neighborhood before making an offer. If a house isn’t selling, it may be “The Neighbor Factor” at work. Here’s where a home stager can help.

In this photo, furniture placement (specifically, a strategically-placed tree) help to block the view of the neighbor’s backyard, so it’s not the first thing a potential buyer will see when they enter the space.

It’s only upon closer inspection, or in this case zooming in, that you become somewhat aware of the Tiki Bar in the neighbor’s yard and the novelty signs that are plastered all over his garage. Home staging assured that the focus was on the great sunroom itself, and didn’t allow the neighbor’s yard to be a distraction.
As the home stager on this project, I was fully prepared to have a little chat with the neighbor and charm him into toning it down by removing the signs from his garage. We home stagers go to extraordinary lengths to make sure our clients’ properties show in the best possible light, and that includes talking to unruly neighbors. Unfortunately in this case, I never found the neighbor home to speak to him. It turns out, however, that I didn’t have to. This house sold 7 days after being listed on the MLS.
While there isn’t a silk tree large enough to camouflage an RV in an adjoining driveway, a home stager can do wonders to increase your property’s marketability. We have a large arsenal of tricks at our disposal, including the power of persuasion and the desire to use it!
Metro Detroit’s Super Luxury Real Estate Sales are UP

- Image via Wikipedia
Would you be surprised to know that a house in Metro Detroit sold for nearly $10,000,000 this summer? That’s a whole lotta cash, by just about anyone’s standards. According to information from Realcomp II, 21000 Turnberry Lane in Novi, sold for $9,800,000 in August. It wasn’t even officially on the market when it sold.
The Metro Detroit area had a total of 6 sales so far in 2008 that had listing prices over $4,000,000 when they sold. I noticed that SKBK Sotheby’s was involved in half of those sales, something not approached by any other brokerage. Our presence in the high end is very firmly established.
The most expensive house on the market today is 730 Vaughan Road in Bloomfield Hills. I have written about the house before. When we last checked in on it in March 2008, the price was at $9,900,000. Today it is at $8,690,000.
I find it interesting to note that there were twice as many homes sold in 2008 over $4m as there were in 2007.
Bloomfield Hills Sales Up in October
This GOOD REAL ESTATE NEWS just in from Metropolitan Consolidated Association of Realtors. Note the great numbers in Bloomfield Township:
Home sales again increased in both Oakland and Macomb counties compared to figures from last year. In Oakland, sales rose 23 percent; in Macomb, they rose 26 percent.
Affordability helped make Southfield Oakland’s top-selling municipality: the median sale price there was $56,000, boosting the year-to-year increase 75 percent.
Other Oakland municipalities with 15 or more sales that experienced year-to-year increases in October sales included:
* Commerce Township, up 46 percent
* Bloomfield Township, up 44 percent
* Pontiac, up 43 percentMacomb’s Eastpointe also benefited from affordable housing, with a median sale price of $45,000 that undoubtedly helped spur a 97 percent increase in sales, year-to-year.
Other Macomb municipalities with 10 or more sales that experienced year-to-year increases in October sales included:
* Roseville, up 46 percent
* Macomb Township, up 40 percent
* Sterling Heights, up 31 percentYou can get the Oakland County October Sales numbers here.
A Look Inside the Birmingham Bloomfield Real Estate Industry
Today I received a call from a salesperson from California who wanted to sell me the latest and greatest real estate lead system. She started off the call with, “Maureen, are you still selling real estate?”
I was leaving an open house and headed to an appointment to meet a new listing client. Yes, I am still selling real estate.
Every day.
It occurred to me that she has run into a lot of agents who are no longer selling real estate for a living on her list of prospects. There is plenty of evidence of agents leaving the business.
In our board of Realtors, Metropolitan Consolidated Associations of Realtors, membership is down to around 4,000 from its high a few years ago of 7,500. I’ve seen lots of agents pick up second jobs that are really first jobs, because they actually get paid at their ’second job’, and paychecks are something they were not seeing often as a Realtor.
I’ve watched, in recent years, as successful Realtors packed up their belongings and moved their families across the country in search of greener pastures. Even they could not have predicted what we are seeing today.
There is uncertainty for the brokers as well. One large local brokerage is in bankruptcy. It’s agents have been all over town looking for a new wall on which to hang their licenses. Another has large “For Sale” signs in front of it’s offices. Every day I drive by the For Sale sign on the Birmingham office and I wonder how it makes the agents and their clients feel. The broker does not own the building, from what I understand.
We feel fortunate. Dmitry and I had our best year ever in 2008. We were amongst the top producers in the company. And last I knew, SKBK Sotheby’s sales for 2008 were up significantly over 2007. We are lucky to be backed by a solid, stable brokerage.
We’ve heard similar stories of great years from other’s in the market. Austin Black II at Max Broock and Erin Keating Dewald at SKBK Sotheby’s also told us they were having their best years. Todd Waller from Team 366 at Real Estate One in Ann Arbor said his team has put record numbers on the books this year. I did not go out searching for this information, so I am sure there are many more who are having better than good years selling homes in Birmingham and Bloomfield Hills and surrounds. I would be happy to add names to this list if anyone just lets me know in the comments.
I don’t know what the brokerage landscape will look like this time next year. I think there may be casualties as we all adapt to the ever changing realities of selling homes in Metro Detroit. But I remain optimistic. Homeowners and buyers will always need innovative, exceptional advocacy and informed advice.
You Are Invited: BBRN Home for the Holiday’s Boutique Tour
Dmitry and I will be at our new listing at 1011 Stratford in the City of Bloomfield Hills. It is a beautifully updated ranch with a finished lower level, that we know you will enjoy seeing. The complex is right off of Woodward across from the main gate to Cranbrook. Please stop by!
Birmingham MI Home Sales 2008
I just ran a complete search of home sales in Birmingham MI for the first three quarters of 2008. There were 243 home sales (225 sold, 18 pending sales) between January 1st and September 30th, 2008.
I decided to create a pdf file so that readers could take a look at these sales themselves. Statistics about Birmingham home prices are always skewed by the high number of $1 sales, deeds that are recorded without the actual sales price. So far this year, I counted 48 $1 sales. So basically over 20% of the home sales data is incorrect or hidden.
Unfortunately, this leads to huge distortions in the statistics we receive from our MLS and our board of Realtors. These statistics are most skewed for Birmingham and Bloomfield Hills, where the practice is most common. The numbers are consistently skewed, so we continue to use them as we have nothing better to offer.
This PDF contains clean data about Birmingham MI home sales.
Oakland County Homes Sales, 3rd Quarter 2008
The Metropolitan Consolidated Association of Realtors released third quarter 2008 home sales statistics for Oakland County today, compiled from information they received from Realcomp, our mls.
We’ve highlighted the report for markets that we serve, like Birmingham, Bloomfield Hills, Royal Oak and Troy.
In the county as a whole, sales were up by 21.12% year to year, with the number of listings down by 12.82% and sales volume down by 5.5%. The falling number of listings, if broader economic conditions were more positive, would typically bode well for stabilization of prices. Obviously with today’s economic uncertainty, it is challenging to predict future prices, and it seems likely that downward pressure on prices will continue until Metro Detroit begins to create jobs. There, I said it out loud.
A few key stats from some local municipalities:
All is not dismal in these numbers. I think far more homes are being sold than people tend to believe. Dmitry and I continue to have our record best year, representing buyers and sellers in Oakland County. If you aren’t seriouslycommitted to selling your home, it should not be on the market. If you are a buyer, Oakland County is your oyster, with some exceptional deals to be had.




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