View
the SVAR MLS!!!
Without
the Hype: Why is the MLS truly Important
First,
MLS stands for "Multiple Listing Service." Before the web, not
everyone knew that.
Now,
most people do.
Imagine
you are selling your home by yourself, and that all you have to do is find a
buyer. You don't have to figure out the price, or hope you get a fair
offer, and there are no disclosures or paperwork and and you don't have to
answer the phone or be there to show the property and you don't have to worry
about getting sued and et cetera, ad infinitum...
Assume
the actual sale is easy.
All
you have is advertise in a way that gets someone to answer your ad.
And
of course, they make an offer.
How
long do you run the ad?
Let's
say you run it for a month.
How
many people are you going to reach with that ad?
The
first weekend day, you reach a few. Some will call. About eight.
Maybe. Since you described the property accurately, maybe a couple will come to
see the house.
The
second day, no one calls.
Nor
on the third day.
This
is a true typical example, believe it or not. After the third day, maybe a call
trickles in every once in a while. Maybe not.
Why
not?
Because
(pretty much) the same people are looking at the ads every weekend.
They've already seen your ad.
That's
how it works.
You
need to run a new ad, and running ads starts to get expensive.
So
why is the MLS different?
It's
a multiplier.
All
the companies, brokerages, teams and lots of their agents are
running ads all the time. The ads are not for your house, but
appear in the BIG newspapers, the small local newspapers, the Penny Saver, the
magazines you pick up at the grocery store. They have ads on television,
on the radio and on the Internet. The newspapers repeat the ads on the
internet. Agents all over the web have ads on their web sites. They
send cards out to houses by mail, they drop flyers off on doorsteps, and
sometimes...
...people
call or send emails. Maybe 8 people call on an ad, maybe not that many,
but LOTS of people are calling LOTS of agents on LOTS of homes.
And
sometimes they like the agent they talk to and they say, "Show me that
property."
But
hardly anyone buys the house in the ad.
Do
the agents show them just that one house?
No.
They don't.
The
agents find out what the folks are looking for, and they show them those other
properties, too.
Where
do the agents find these other homes for sale? Not in ads. They find
them in their computer. In the MLS.
And
if the buyers don't find a property that first day, the agent looks in the MLS
for more homes to show them next time.
The
MLS puts an army of local agents all to work. They're all running ads for
houses.
Not
YOUR house, but...
Any
one of them could sell your house to their buyers. In essence, all those
agents are working for you.
That's
the value of the MLS.
And
all you have to do?
Hire
just one.