Can We Practice Kindness In Real Estate?

One of my pet peeves in the industry I’ve worked in for the past 18 years is the lack of empathy or compassion when negotiating a real estate sale. I believe that we should always strive to be nice for the sake of being nice. Real estate comes with heavy emotions, on both sides. As an agent representing either side of a deal, you can position yourself to keep a level head, show enthusiasm, check your ego, be like-able, honest and show integrity before you answer your phone and say “hello”.

A little reminder for us agents —-

If you are a buyer’s agent wishing to make a bid on a seller’s home remember: the home your clients wish to buy might be the sellers “baby”. They may have purchased it when it was a dump, given up weekends and holidays to get it done, and sweated blood, tears and have gone through multiple marriage counseling sessions to bring it to market. Don’t be the asshole agent that barks orders to accept an offer within 12 hours of them listing the house. Try instead to be more kind; more empathetic, because being rude will get you nowhere. Show that you are an organized, likeable and patient agent, one that understands that the sellers might want a couple days of market time, and your buyers aren’t going anywhere — they really want the house.

As broker’s we have a vested interest in pairing clients with a buyer that will make a good offer and a fair deal. If a broker feels as if you are difficult to work with, that you’re waving a red flag at day one, they will worry what the rest of the negations might bring. Don’t be an asshole (something I tell my 15 and 18 year old children- practice kindness).

If you are a seller’s agent bringing a new home to the market remember: Most homes are not perfect. You may have hired the painters to help your clients pre-list and stage the home, it’s looking very dialed and swanky (especially the coffee table), but upon closer inspection, the roof is three layers and the sewer is broken. In our current market, it is often the case for seller’s agent to call a buyer’s agent and say, “I have 10 offers in hand and while yours is the highest and the best, and my sellers really do appreciate that you went 100,000 over asking, they do not feel the need to credit you $5000 for the sewer repair. You must take it as-is or we will go to the back-up offer. First, threats don’t feel very nice. I implore all listing agents to have the courage to talk with their sellers not only about the deficiencies in the systems of the home that a buyer would be taking on, but how they would feel in the buyer’s shoes. As a listing agent if you know that the sellers roof is shot, get a couple of roofing bids prior to listing the home so your seller has opinions from professionals. Educate your sellers so they can be prepared to make decisions before you are at the end of your inspection period. Educating sellers makes them feel less blind sighted. My job as an agent is to bring as much finical security to a seller but it’s equally important that I ask my clients to stretch towards a place of fairness and compassion.  Its one of the way we can change the world.

Never underestimate the power of practicing kindness in real estate. Try to see both sides, that’s where the goodness lies. Being kind doesn’t make you a sucker or less business-like in real estate, it allows you to be in a place of integrity.

Last Weekend I Got Married….

 

One of the most endearing things about our wedding were the number of friends whom attended that had started as past clients and morphed to close friends.  I have been lucky enough to have folks that I have helped over the years stay in my life. It’s pure magic.  It’s much of the reason I like my job so much, it helps me find buddies. I want to share of of my dearest friends wedding toast which is a tribute to how old homes connect us.   Mark Halpern and Noelle Crombie happened to have trusted me 20+ years ago with their old home. Here we are, years later, celebrating life transitions and LOVE. They will tell you I still give advice and help with their house projects; which was why at I at was at their house this morning. Now to Mark’s toast:

 

For Tracy houses have bones. Wood, color, light and space. They breathe. Their history, their story is her passion. It is no coincidence that my friendship with Tracy started with a house: the house my wife Noelle and I bought, our first house. The home where we are raising our

daughters is imbued with the spirit of the Dau. Lights, colors, the attention to period detail, all gifts from Tracy – from the spirit of one of the most loyal, generous, and kind people we have ever known. Her giving is boundless. All you have to do is drive around inner Southeast. Look for

the colors, her colors, her palette, on the houses, her homemade chairs on the porches. Little bits of Tracy — of beauty — left for others to take in and enjoy.

What an honor it is then for me to give something back to her in this toast. How touched I was when she asked me to speak. Last fall when she asked if I could

help with Liv’s college essay, I tripped over myself rushing to the computer to help Olivia. And of course what a delight to see her mother’s values reflected in

her essay: She told the story of Johnny, a friend who was down on his luck. Tracy took Johnny in. She provided the thing we all take for granted: a home. And her delicious pies, of course.

The essay beautifully told the story of Johnny’s effect on Liv and likewise her effect on Johnny. But it was also a testament to that most difficult and rewarding

job that Tracy has done with such grace: mothering. Mothering while attending to the passion of her work. She is a hero.

So let us lift our glasses to toast my dear friend, Tracy, and her wonderful husband Darren.

While we know your home will be beautiful, let it also be filled with kindness, grace and joy. May your marriage, like your home, have good bones. Tracy, we all love you. Good luck on this next adventure.

 

A+ Grandparents Make A Move

Dennis and Eve new exactly where they hoped to find a house when we first met with them, something close-in Portland. They had a grandchild in inner NE and their biggest wish was that we help find them a house walk-able to their dearest little.

It took just about a year of house hunting, the pandemic halted meeting for awhile, but our young-at-heart adventures stuck with it and found a house only blocks away from family.

They will be leaving a backyard pond and nesting woodpeckers for a more urban landscape.  They couldn’t be more excited for their new adventure!  Their old house will list soon and becomes another persons backyard sanctuary.  A win-win.

 

 

This One Went $87,000 Over Asking

Chris and I are what we call ‘full service’ agents. We put in our own sweat equality on 90% of our listings prior to listing them for our clients.  We do this for our standard listing fee with no “up charge”. The main purpose is to make the client more money so that the house sells for above list price which then pays for the cost of hiring us.  Secondly, I am an artist and working on a client’s home gives me an outlet for my visions of what a space can become. If you lend me your home I can work magic for you. House listed at $600,000 – Sold for $687,000.

Here is an example of a home I did and what I did to it:

  • I took of all cabinet door/drawers re-sanded them to remove all lacquer. Removed old hardware, patched holes, primed lower cabinets which I painted blue. Lacquered upper cabinets with new product.
  • New butcher block counters. Left raw so new buyer could either oil them or stain them.
  • Wiped down all wood trim throughout home- window sills, baseboards, door jams and doors and applied Restore A Finish to hide scratches.
  • Removed all lighting. Bought new lights for client and had handyman re-hang them.
  • New kitchen tile that I picked up at Home Depot ($200 in tile)
  • Painted front room, bedrooms, hallway and bathroom.
  • Hung draperies (purchased linen Ikea drapes)
  • New bathroom cabinet paint + new hardware
  • Cleaned floors in home
  • Brought some items from my home to add to the staging but hired out the rest of the staging through Arbor and Co.
  • Took multiple dump runs for client
  • Hired heating company to install new gas line for the new stove. Hired landscape person to clean up the backyard. Hired additional painter to paint what I didn’t get to.

    Looking for a listing agent?  Give us a ring and let us go to work for you!

 

That’s One Big-Ass Water Heater You Got There

 

If you are buying a home, you need to be aware of the fact that sometimes when a seller moves out of the home they will often leave things behind that you will then be forced to do something with. The things that get left behind are often things that the sellers may not have realized would be a big deal to leave behind, or they left them because they were simply too lazy to deal with it.

These items could include a pile of wood for the fireplace or a garden hose outside. Maybe a few old paint cans, light bulbs, or cleaning supplies, you know – that sort of stuff.

But when my client Molly purchased her home a few years ago, the sellers left us with a 400 pound steel water heater in the basement. Smart sellers – they wrote it into the contract that it had to stay as part of the deal.

So here we are in 2020 and Molly’s house is being handed to a new home owner.  That buyer didn’t see the ‘historical significance’ of letting the 1940’s beast (time capsule) sit in its quiet tranquil space. Fast forward to a weekend of being stood up by multiple crews from Craig’s List that promised to remove the item, “don’t you worry Tracy, our middle name is responsible.  We will be there on Saturday”, said one junk mover that never showed, to finding a 20 something year old man named Corey, again on Craig’s List, whom possessed a machine/welding background that did the job.

Four hours and six grinder wheels later and the beast was cut in half and loaded into a truck. And get this —  They sell as antiques for $500 bucks on Ebay. Corey came through and I couldn’t be happier.

N Kerby goes to the Queen of Moon Rock

Chris couldn’t be happier that our clients fixer house and detached plywood palace has been sold to the creator of the Moon Rock.  Maybe you’ve seen Ruth’s glow-in-the-dark ceramic glazed rocks in the pet aisle of Wallmart that offer fish a day-glow place to escape?  If not, check them out.  Navigating the often bumpy waters of a rehab loan, Ruth and her buyers agent took my partners lead in helping them through their purchase. This is what a true ‘win-win’ looks like in the real estate industry.  All parties in alliance, rooting for a buyers/sellers success.  This deal took patience and trust on the part of the seller, who was incredible to work with, a tenacious buyer with just the right quirks to see the potential in this space and then Chris.

My business partner often blows me away at how good he is at his job.

Aquarium creations will soon be sculpted inside the shop on the right.  Once it’s fixed up of course.

A Feel Good Story

A 72-year-old woman was quietly living in a dilapidated house. Then an electrician sparked a community to help her rebuild

Gloria Scott looks on as her house is being repaired.

(CNN)When electrician John Kinney walked into Gloria Scott’s home, in Woburn, Massachusetts, he quickly realized it was not going to be a quick job.

Scott had called because sparks were shooting out of one of her light fixtures. Once Kinney got the lights on, he realized it was just one of many issues plaguing Scott’s home.
“There was extensive plumbing damage, there was holes in the ceiling, raccoons were getting in,” he said.
She also didn’t have proper running water in the house. Her kitchen sink was broken and would spew boiling water, so Scott would shut off the home’s water supply turning it on only every couple of days to flush toilets. Scott, 72 and living alone, told Kinney she couldn’t afford the repairs.
“It was definitely a hazard. It was a rough condition she was living in and I noticed immediately.”
After leaving Scott’s house, Kinney couldn’t stop thinking about the woman alone in her run-down home. So the following Monday, he came back, pulled out his tools and got working — for free.
“I knew she needed help and I knew she wasn’t going to ask for it.”
Gloria Scott is surrounded by members of the "Gloria's Gladiators" team that is rebuilding her home.

Building hope

Kinney and some friends started helping out Scott with yardwork. But in order to make all the necessary fixes, Kinney needed more people to help. He started a fundraiser page titled, “Nice old lady needs help.”
The community answered, loudly.
Within 24 hours, people had donated more than $3,500, and the amount has since topped $100,000. The money paid for skilled professionals to work on the house, but volunteers also showed up along with donated materials and supplies. And local restaurants are sending over meals.
“The project kept growing and support kept pouring in,” Kinney said.
For Scott, it wasn’t just her house that was changing, but her whole life.
“She’s been here by herself for over 10 years, so I’m sure it’s a big change for her, but she’s warmed up to everybody,” said Kinney. “She’s so happy, she’s got all types of new friends. She’s out here making lunch for us, laughing, joking. It’s just a miracle to witness.”
Electrician John Kinney, right, helped spark a movement to rebuild an elderly neighbor's home.

Now, over a month into the repairs, the electrical fix has turned into a full home renovation. Workers have installed a brand-new electrical system, plumbing system, new roof, new windows, new insulation, a fresh paint job, a new back porch and even new grass in the backyard.
Kinney thinks the repairs should take another few weeks “at least,” but the work has sparked a movement: Gloria’s Gladiators. The Gloria’s Gladiators Facebook page currently has more than 6,000 members. Kinney said he hopes that chapters will start popping up around the country to help other elderly people in need.
“It’s about getting the whole community to be gladiators and fighting for people who can’t fight for themselves.”
The work on Scott’s house may be close to finished, but Kinney said the two of them have built an enduring bond over this project.
“She reminds me of my grandmother. My daughter has bonded with her, my wife has bonded with her. It doesn’t stop here. Gloria is a part of my life.”
What started around a broken electrical fixture has lighted up both of their lives.

Getting Her Done For Our Clients

 

Pandemic …. Smoke …. Gresham speed traps ….

Chris and I are not letting anything stand in our way to meet a deadline for a clients home.  This fixer is due to hit the market in a week.  Our workers haven’t been able to get as much done during the 3 week time frame as we were given. That’s when we pull out our BIG brushes and get to work. Here is my dearest work partner painting away along side of me. Our clients don’t know that we are the one’s painting the exterior of the home and we don’t plan on telling them.  When you give someone your word that you will make it to market on a chosen date, then you suck it up and do whatever is needed to make that date.  I love how Chris and I work together.

He truly is the best work buddy.