Making a Price Reduction
Reducing an asking price can revitalise and speed up the sale of property.
If your property is on the market but there are few viewers and no takers then it
might be – and it’s hard for anyone to tell a seller this - that the price is too
high. It could be time to take the selling initiative that, for some odd reason,
dare not speak its name – R-E-D-U-C-E!
The very idea of a price reduction has a strange but rather understandable effect
on the part of many sellers. To them reducing the price somehow feels like losing
money – and what will the neighbours say? But of course without a buyer no money
is on the table in the first place, so it is impossible to have lost any. It just
feels like that. As for the neighbours, who cares? With the correct reduction you
won’t be neighbours much longer!
For buyers there is no such imagined stigma, stain or loss. For them a price reduction
is all about opportunity - the opportunity to purchase a property today that was
unaffordable yesterday.
But it’s also a very great opportunity for the seller. Reducing an asking price
brings many more buyers into orbit; it undercuts the competition; it saves time
in selling and it lets the seller move on instead of living in limbo. It also increases
the chance to buy another property at a beneficial price through being in a stronger
position to go ahead. Always remember that if your own property is under price pressure
then others will be also – including, most likely, the one you will eventually buy.
So for sellers a price reduction shouldn’t be seen as a sorry defeat or bitter retreat.
It is a positive and bold action made as a result of carrying out valuable market
research to establish true value and then, most importantly, acting wisely and ruthlessly
upon that knowledge.
If a retailer can’t sell some stock then it goes on sale. If the cost of oil or
gold becomes too high to attract buyers then prices will come down until they do.
These are market forces and the housing market is just as affected by these pressures
as any other area of commerce.
Selling property is rarely done in isolation. It is usually as a result of an overlaying
life wish or need. So if a price reduction is required to get things moving don’t
avoid it. Shout it from your rooftop and move on. Your new neighbours won’t care
less what you sold for - but they will be interested in what you bought for!
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