Sales Agent Selection
Selecting a sales agent for your Pinetop-Lakeside Arizona Real Estate, Show Low Arizona Real Estate, Snowflake Arizona Real Estate, and all other White Mountains Arizona Real Estate. The real estate profession is structured so that its practitioners will cooperate with one another in the buying and selling process. Through a system called the Multiple Listing Service (MLS), sales associates submit information about homes their companies have listed for sale so that all other sales associates, regardless of where they work, have the opportunity to sell those listings to prospective buyers. That way, you have access to almost all of the homes available for sale in your market. However, not all real estate companies participate in a MLS, so be sure to ask the sales associate you're working with whether they do. Although this system gives you wider access to listed properties, it also means that the sales associated you're working with may be acting as a sub-agent to the listing broker and is therefore representing the seller. You may also be surprised to know that not all real estate sales associates are REALTORS Most people know that sales associates are paid commissions, but not everyone understands exactly how commissions work. The listing broker generally splits the commission with the selling brokers, and the individual sales associates who work for those brokers receive a portion of the commission paid to their brokers. If both sales associates represent the seller, what kind of service can you, the buyer, hope to get? Plenty. As agents of the seller, real estate professionals fulfill that agency relationship by assisting buyers in all aspects of the home purchase. The law requires that all sales associates treat the buyer with honesty and fairness. In addition to the law, there is strong motivation to do so because buyer satisfaction means repeat and referral business. Sales associates want you to think of them the next time you or a friend is selling a home. If your REALTOR Above everything, good sales associates will put you in touch with the market. They will select neighborhoods with homes and amenities that best meet your needs and wants. By scanning the MLS books or computer, they should also be able to locate just about every home on the market that fits your price range and other buying criteria. To help you find a realistic price range, the sales associate will often "qualify" you during the initial counseling interview. The sales associate will ask a series of questions to determine what price home you can afford. When you do select a house and your offer is accepted, the sales associate can recommend financing alternatives. After the sales associate has determined you price range and type of house you want, you'll begin a series of house tours. Don't be discouraged if the first three days turn up nothing. A good sales associate will help you keep searching until you find your new home. Sales associates will also present any offer you make on a home. If you ask the sales associate you are working with, "Do you think the sellers will drop their price by $10,000?" the only answer the sales associate can give you is, "This is the price they're asking. The only way you can find out whether they'd accept less is to make an offer". Conversely, sales associates who are working as agent of the seller are required to tell their clients anything they know about your bargaining position, so be discreet. After you have found the home you wish to buy and you have negotiated a contract with the seller, the sales associate can also assist you with the selection of lenders, home inspectors and/or attorneys, and can assist you with the entire closing process. |
. REALTORS