In a real estate market characterized by trepidation and confusion about whether this may be a good time to sell a home in Charlotte, it seems appropriate to discuss the reasons a seller of real property would be well advised to retain a competent licensed broker to represent him or her in the sale of such a valuable asset. Let’s begin by mentioning the consumer information brochure, Working with Real Estate Agents, published by the North Carolina Real Estate Commission. This document outlines the permitted agency relationships in North Carolina, and the important features of each. Every real estate agent licensed in the state is required to present this document to a prospective client when the parties begin discussions of matters substantially important to the interests of that prospective client, whether buyer or seller.
Licensed real
estate brokers are required to maintain a high level of professional and
ethical standards in dealing with a client and the public, and the failure to
do so can result in disciplinary action by the NC Real Estate Commission. But what are some the practical reasons a
seller would be well advised to retain a licensed real estate broker? After all, the seller might save some money
by avoiding such a relationship and going it alone, right?
One compelling practical
reason for retaining representation is access to the Multiple Listing Service
(“MLS”), a centralized database of information for homes in a given
geographical area. (You can access the
entire MLS database from the home page on my web site… FREE.) This
database is used very heavily by buyers’ agents, and a home that is not listed
in the MLS may very well go unnoticed by buyers who are ready, willing and able
to purchase it. Further, since most
buyers who become aware of a home via the MLS necessarily come with a buyer’s
agent, it is very likely that buyer’s agent has made sure the buyer is
pre-qualified for any financing the buyer will need to make the purchase. Otherwise, the buyer’s agent is likely
wasting everyone’s time, including his or her own.
Having a buyer who
is represented by his or her own agent express interest in the purchase of your
property is therefore a good thing because you can be reasonably assured that
the buyer is ready, willing and able to proceed to closing. But a represented buyer negotiating with an
unrepresented seller can mean that the seller is functioning at real
disadvantage. The buyer’s agent should
be well aware of current market conditions, including recent comparable sales
prices… the agent should be quite familiar with the contracts, documents and
forms approved by the NC Bar and the NC Association of Realtors… the agent
should be familiar with the processes and procedures for accurately
memorializing final agreement of the parties and taking that agreement through
to closing. However, if you read the Working with Real Estate Agents consumer
information brochure mentioned above, you understand that a buyer’s agent
represents the buyer, not the seller.
The buyer’s agent’s duty is to get the best deal he can for the buyer,
not the seller. So a seller who is not
intimately familiar with the current market… or the contract and legal
documents typically used in a transaction… or the procedures followed to take a
deal through to successful closing, is at a distinct disadvantage if he or she
is not represented by his or her own seller’s
agent—someone who owes all his or her own fiduciary duties to the seller.
A good,
professional, ethical real estate broker/seller agent can therefore not only
successfully market a home for maximum exposure to buyers who are qualified to
purchase the home, he or she can negotiate the best price possible (with the
participation and final approval of the seller, of course), has sufficient
familiarity with the legal documents typically used in a transaction to make
sure that the final documents the parties execute accurately reflect the deal
the seller has actually agreed to, and he or she should be fully aware of the
processes and procedures that take that agreement through to final, successful
closing. Most transactions in the Charlotte
metropolitan area
involve hundreds of thousands of dollars… and sometimes millions. It therefore seems wise to seek the
representation of someone who is truly familiar with, and can take reasonable
control over, all the variables described above, while being bound by NC law to
represent the seller’s best interests throughout the transaction. It’s really just common sense.
Abraham Lincoln
famously said, “A lawyer who represents himself has a fool for a client.” A
similar principle applies to the seller of property who decides to “go it
alone.” You may think you know the
current market, but may not be intimately familiar with the legal documents
that will protect you in the transaction.
You may have a good working knowledge of processes and procedures
typically followed to get your transaction to closing, but not have the ability
to get your property maximum exposure to people who are ready, willing and able
to buy it. Unless you are engaged full time in the real estate business, it is
very unlikely you possess all of the
current skills needed to successfully maximize the return on a very valuable—and
in most cases—your most valuable investment.

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