Real Estate WTS Link

Comprehensive real estate and property listings. Includes information on buying and selling, tips on building, an auction timetable and other helpful.

Saturday, March 24, 2007

What real estate agents 'neglect' to tell you

Fair-housing laws prevent agents from talking about neighborhood demographics, and they often don't want to discuss other details, such as crime stats. Luckily, the Web picks up where agents leave off.

Steve Roddel was walking through a house in Fort Wayne, Ind., when he wondered aloud whether there were any sex offenders living in the neighborhood.

Instead of commenting on her own, the real estate agent showing the home quickly pulled out her cell phone, connected to its Web browser and brought up Family Watchdog, a national sex-offender-registry Web site. Little did she know that she was standing with the site's founder and CEO.

A real estate agent can be a wealth of information about a house. So a homebuyer who asks what crime is like in the neighborhood might be surprised when the agent defers the question, directing a client to the Web or local police instead.

"The Realtor will be the one that has the most contact from beginning to end. Because of that accessibility, the consumer feels that they can give them all the information that they need," said Alex Chaparro, the president of the Chicago Association of Realtors.

But there are some pieces of information that an agent simply can't speak about due to fair-housing laws, including demographic statistics. And they often prefer to leave some characteristics, such as the quality of the school district or crime stats, answered by other sources.

The conservative approach is often taken in order to avoid a lawsuit popping up in response to frank neighborhood talk, said Ralph Holmen, an associate general counsel of the National Association of Realtors. Agents are forbidden from giving information that could be considered "steering," directing a client toward or away from a particular property in a discriminatory manner.

Some of this information will make or break a decision to buy. The quality of school systems, for example, has long been of importance to home-buying families. Fortunately, there are a variety of sources buyers can use to get at the information on their own.

Checking on the schools

Unless a realty agent has hard data at his or her fingertips, the agent may decline to answer school-district questions. Even if the agent is willing to share some information, a prospective buyer might want to do additional fact-finding before deciding on a home or which neighborhoods to consider.

A national database of school demographic information can be found on the National Center for Education Statistics Web site. Click on the "School, College, & Library Search" tab at the top in order to view data including a particular school's student-to-teacher ratio or enrollment by race and ethnicity.

For a snapshot of academic performance and to compare schools, a prospective homeowner might browse the School Matters Web site, a service of Standard & Poor's.

"People who are really attracted to (School Matters) are people who are moving," said Susan Shafer, the director of marketing and communications for Standard & Poor's School Evaluation Services. "It's a good starting point," she said, but it still isn't a substitute for an actual tour.

Another site, GreatSchools, offers similar tools. Some school districts and state departments also post information online. It might be worthwhile to look at an individual school district's site, especially for large systems.

Crime matters

Roddel's Family Watchdog Web site allows users to enter a street address and pull up a map of the area that plots out where sex offenders live. Click on one of the squares that indicate an offender's home, and often an address and a photo are available to view.

Information is updated at least once a day and is culled from state registries, Roddel said.

The idea for the site came about a year and a half ago, after 9-year-old Jessica Lunsford was assaulted and killed by a convicted sex offender in central Florida in 2005, he said.

"(Real estate agents) tell me that their buyers tell them where they do and don't want to look for houses based on the density of sex offenders (in the neighborhood)," Roddel said.

He hopes to create another tool that will help people learn about other neighborhood crimes. In Chicago, there already is such a site: ChicagoCrime.org, which allows visitors to search for crimes by city block.

For now, he suggests that people scout out the neighborhood the old-fashioned way. "Talk to the police department and see if they've got any statistics," Roddel said.

Judging the environment

Another issue that comes up occasionally in a housing search is the environmental characteristics of a neighborhood, said Holmen, of the National Association of Realtors. The association typically advises members not to make judgment calls on the health of an area and to leave that to experts.

The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency's Web site has a tool that allows visitors to search a community by ZIP code for environmental facts about the area, including pollution statistics, the location of hazardous-waste sites and information about the area's watershed.

Another site dedicated to helping the public retrieve information about local environmental health is Scorecard, which generates a pollution report card at the county level, giving information on such topics as air and water quality.

Learning the demographics

If agents don't shy away from any other question, they most likely will when it comes to those regarding demographics -- and for good reason. Fair-housing laws forbid issues of race or ethnicity to be a consideration in the minds of real estate agents, who mustn't steer a client toward or away from a particular area based on the neighborhood's makeup.

When Anne Kennedy, an agent in Austin, Texas, turns down a question about neighborhood demographics, clients "completely understand," she said. She suggests searching the U.S. Census Bureau's Web site for statistics about an area's demographics; the bureau' Quick Facts page breaks down the information easily, by city and county.

"That would also show general socio-economic data," she said.

Walking the neighborhood

Finally, even though there's a wealth of information online, there are some questions best answered by walking around the area and making a note of your observations.

For example, in Chicago, sometimes a client will ask what parking is like on a particular block, Chaparro said. If the showing is at 10 in the morning, when many cars are off the street because their owners are at work, he doesn't have an answer to give them.

Several trips past the home at various points of the day, noting whether there are special parking restrictions marked on the street, will probably provide a more informed answer.


Source

Labels: , , , , , ,



Saturday, March 17, 2007

For Sale By Owner the next “big thing” on the Internet?



Obares.com enables you to find homes for sale by owner or advertise your real estate in over 900 metro areas in the U.S. and Canada. With local experts in over 200 of these locations, we are the largest network of FSBO experts in North America. With nearly half a million vistors every month, we provide National Exposure, Local Experts and free credit report.

Obares.com has teamed with over two hundred affiliates in local markets around the U.S. to provide the best For Sale By Owner service for home owners. These FSBO experts can assist you in many aspects of advertising your property. Local markets are provided exclusively to a local representative, for example, guidance using the real estate mortgage calculator. In certain markets where we do not yet have a local affiliate, you can still advertise your For Sale By Owner home - just click on the List A Home link in that market.

For Sale By Owner makes selling a home on your own easy. We sell the most houses for sale by owner, proving our house selling strategies sell more homes than any site in home selling. Moreover, your home's selling price is determined by you, not a real estate broker who takes a 6% fee for selling your home.

Mr. John says; “The FSBO techniques from Obares.com have been a huge aid. I just checked and I’m near the top of the search engines for some very competitive keywords and did it in less than a month. That’s out of over a millions indexed pages, so that’s pretty cool.” John adds; “FSBO will work for anything; any product, any service. This is a revolutionary way to develop online real estate and it is my opinion that some big money is going to be made.”

For more information about your dream condos and homes you can visit For Sale By Owner: http://www.Obares.com

Tag: homes for sale, FSBO, for sale by owner, For Sale By Owner Home, by owner, real estate, advertise, homes, condo

Labels: , , , , , , , ,



Monday, February 26, 2007

FSBO Real Estate Channels™ Reports Growing Buyer Activity

“Now is the time for FSBO sellers to get their homes listed on FSBO Channels™, Craigslist, and any other internet sites offering listing".

FSBO Channels™ reports today that they have experienced strong daily increases in visitors to their national network of For Sale by Owner sites which is being lead by Atlanta, New York City, Portland, Phoenix, Seattle, and Tampa channels. In these six markets, visitor traffic has doubled and tripled each week over the preceding week for each of the past three weeks, possibly signaling a turn around in the real estate market. They also report a dramatic rise in inquiries from buyers throughout the nation.

“Now is the time for FSBO sellers to get their homes listed on FSBO Channels™, Craigslist, and any other internet sites offering free listing”, says Bert L. Bill, COO. “Real estate had moved to the internet, so get your listing as much internet exposure as possible”, he added.

FSBO Channels™ is a national “For Sale by Owner” real estate network that offers free listings. FSBO Channels was launched on August 8, 2006 with the introduction of Tampa FSBO Channels. The popularity of free “for sale by owner” listings has resulted in FSBO Real Estate Channels growing to 27 blog sites in just 6 months. Thousands of homeowners have listed their homes on FSBO Channels making it one of the fastest growing internet real estate networks in the nation.

FSBO Channels™ is managed by BlogSpot™ Brands a leading internet developer of business, eCommerce, and social blogs with an active network of more than 60 blogs.

On January 17, 2007, BlogSpot™Brands launched CheapBuy™ Channels a “buy direct” virtual shopping mall. Upon the launch of this blog based mega shopping mall, they had attracted more than 1,000 brand name stores and companies such as Zales Jewelers, Rooms To Go, Lands’ End, and Starbucks.


Source

Labels: , , , , , ,