Tag: Land Pricing Strategy

  • Aggressive, Not Reckless

    Aggressive, Not Reckless

    I’m working on a deal involving some lake acreage in Fannin County. I have part of it under contract for a few of my clients.

    We’re under contract at a price we believe is solid relative to the market. Otherwise, they wouldn’t be buying it as investors. Even so, I’m always researching the area. I watch new listings and recent sales to make sure the numbers still make sense and that we’re doing the right thing.

    So far, so good.

    Yesterday a new listing popped up on a tract that’s fairly similar. Small parts of it are definitely better because it’s actual waterfront instead of just near the lake. A large portion of it, though, is very comparable to what we have under contract.

    The asking price on that tract is roughly twenty times what we’re paying.

    I like to think I’m a good negotiator, but I’m not going to claim I’m getting my guys in at 5% of market value. Our price is good, but this example is really about something else.

    It shows what a lot of listing agents will do just to get a listing. They’ll take it at almost any price the owner wants, no matter how unrealistic, and worry about walking them back later.

    I don’t operate that way. I don’t have the time, and besides it doesn’t make sense to spend money on signs, marketing, drone shots, professionally done brochures etc. for something that has no hope of performing as advertised.

    And if it does sell, it usually happens at a steep discount from what the owner was originally told, which leads to frustration and bad feelings.

    Of course this doesn’t mean I’m not aggressive, or I only list properties that are at no-brainer prices. Higher prices are good for me of course, partially because of commissions but more because the more I sell your property for the more likely it is your neighbors might want to sell too.

    So I push it as much as I can, within reason. But you’re going to hear what I think the market is going to bear before we do it, so you’re not surprised or upset.

    If you want an honest analysis of what a property might be worth, not a computer-generated estimate, you can reach out. Anything non-residential. I’ll do it for free and update it as needed within reason.

    PS – If this was useful, feel free to forward it to someone who might need it.

  • Embrace the Uncertainty

    Embrace the Uncertainty

    I’ve talked before about what happens in car dealerships. Not because cars and land are the same thing, but because human nature doesn’t change from one industry to another.

    Most people know about the “no-haggle” lots. CarMax, AutoNation, places like that. They advertise a clean, easy process.

    No back-and-forth. No discomfort.

    And people walk in convinced they’re getting a better deal. Reality?

    Prices at no-haggle lots are higher on average than old-fashioned dealerships.

    People don’t go there to save money. They go there to buy certainty and avoid the emotional friction of negotiation.

    Nothing wrong with that. Just be honest about the tradeoff.

    Real estate has its version: the iBuyers.

    They promise no showings, no repairs, no timing problems.

    What they don’t say as loudly is that you’re going to make less money going that route.

    Still not a bad option for some people.

    I’ve even used an iBuyer myself in the past. (Don’t tell the other agents.)

    The pattern is simple:

    More certainty = less money.
    More uncertainty = more potential upside.

    Doesn’t happen every time. But on average that’s how the real world works.

    Now let’s talk land.

    The iBuyer model doesn’t work here. Not well, not consistently, and usually not at all.

    The groups who even touch land have to pay extremely low prices. And if they offer something reasonable, the timelines are unacceptable. Because they’re not “buying.”

    So if you own land, the nice tidy “certainty option” doesn’t really exist.

    Which means you have one path: You embrace the uncertainty.

    You price it reasonably based on real comps and activity. You put it out there. And then you let the market talk back to you.

    How fast will a buyer show up?
    Don’t know.

    What will they offer?
    Don’t know.

    How long will they need for feasibility?
    Don’t know.

    Will you have to pay for a new survey?
    Maybe. Sometimes it actually helps you get the number you want.

    It can get a little messy.

    But when you have the right people on your side (hello), it usually turns out better than you expected when you started.

    That’s the good news.

    The other good news?

    Anyone who pretends they “know exactly” how a land deal is going to unfold is either blowing smoke to impress you or doesn’t understand land.

    Either way, that’s not the person you want representing you. And they’ll show you that if you’re paying attention.

    PS- I offer a free, no-obligation look at any non-residential property you’re considering selling. You’ll get info including:

    • real comp sales
    • current development activity
    • utility info
    • market conditions
    • what’s likely… and what’s possible

    Ask me what will happen?

    I’ll tell you the truth: I don’t know.

    That honesty annoys a few people at first.

    But by the time we’re done, you’ll know you worked with someone who was trying to get you the right outcome — not just “work you.”

    Click below to get started.