Tag: realtor

  • The Cheapest Way to Leave Money on the Table

    The Cheapest Way to Leave Money on the Table

    What looks cheap now can cost you big later

    Flat-fee MLS listings sound like a good deal — especially if you’re selling land. Pay a few hundred bucks, get your property on the MLS, skip the big commission. Easy, right?

    Not quite.

    Unless you’re highly experienced in real estate, especially land sales, this is the cheapest way to leave serious money on the table.

    What Is a Flat-Fee or Limited Service Listing?

    It’s exactly what it sounds like: you pay a small, upfront fee to get your property listed on the MLS. Maybe you get a yard sign and a few forms. After that, you’re on your own.

    No pricing strategy.
    No marketing plan.
    No negotiation help.
    No contract management.

    If something goes sideways (and it often does), there’s no one there to back you up.

    Why It Doesn’t Work for Land

    Land is a different animal than residential homes.
    It takes longer to sell, the buyer pool is smaller, and pricing is less straightforward.

    You can’t just plug in comps and wing it. You need someone who knows:

    • How to price based on location, use, and local growth patterns
    • What kind of buyer is most likely to care about your lot
    • How to present it in a way that gets attention and builds confidence

    Flat-fee brokers don’t do that. They list and leave. And when land sits too long or is priced wrong, it gets stale fast — and buyers assume there’s a problem.

    The Risk Isn’t Just the Time — It’s the Money

    I’ve had landowners come to me after wasting 6–12 months on a limited listing. By then:

    • Interest has cooled
    • Buyer agents have stopped showing it
    • They’ve missed the window to catch the right buyers at the right time

    And worst of all? When we finally do get offers, they’re often lower — because the listing has been bruised by poor presentation or pricing.

    When It Does Make Sense

    If you’re a seasoned land investor or flipper who knows how to market, negotiate, and navigate contracts — sure, a limited listing might work for you.

    But if this is your first or second land sale? Or your property has unique features, zoning questions, or development potential?
    Then trying to “save” a few thousand bucks usually ends up costing you a lot more.

    The Better Option

    When you hire someone like me, you’re getting more than a listing. You’re getting:

    • Local pricing expertise
    • Marketing tailored to land buyers — not just a generic MLS post
    • Direct outreach to active land agents and buyer networks
    • Strategic negotiation to protect your bottom line
    • Guidance through contracts, contingencies, and closing

    And that’s not theory — I do it every day, across North Texas.

    If you’re serious about selling land, don’t leave money on the table to save a little on commission. Let’s do it right the first time.


  • They’re Not Buying — They’re Betting

    They’re Not Buying — They’re Betting

    Don’t get hustled. Get the facts first.

    In the letters I send out (you’ve probably seen a few), I often point out how most unsolicited offers you get to buy your land are disappointing. A recent client sent me a couple of letters she’d received — perfect examples of what I’m talking about.

    One didn’t mention money at all. Just a vague line:
    “I’ve got someone wanting to buy another lot, are you interested in selling?”

    I reached out to the guy, but I can almost guarantee that if he replies, the offer will be well below what’s reasonable. Maybe good for a laugh, but not much more.

    The other letter actually named a price — and it wasn’t too far off the mark.

    But (there’s always a but)…

    The rest of the terms were weak:

    • Just $500 in earnest money
    • A 180-day closing timeline
    • Fully assignable contract

    That’s not a serious buyer — that’s a flipper running a low-risk bet. Here’s how their model works:

    They tie up your property for 6 months at a low (but not unreasonable) price, hoping to flip the contract to someone else for a profit. If they find a buyer, great — they make $10K to $20K. If not, they might come back to you last minute and say, “We’re still interested, but need to lower the price.” You can agree or walk — either way, they only risked $500.

    From their side, it’s a smart little hustle.
    From your side, it’s a waste of time.

    So if you get one of these letters and want a second opinion, just scan and send it to me. No charge — I’ll tell you if it’s worth your time or not.