Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Most agents, myself included, want to see what is best for our clients. That said, what we think is best and what they believe to be best can sometimes vary. What your goals are as a Seller should always be part of the discussion and be used to guide the listing, however there are times that my experience and understanding of the market says that that "low-ball" offer may in fact be the best combination of terms and price that we can expect in given market conditions.
Your agent is the GPS & you are the driver... we're going to lay out what we think is the best roadmap to successfully get you to your destination. You're not required to follow those directions, but it will force us into "recalculating" potentially multiple times to avoid roadblocks you didn't expect. On occasion we can also just be outright wrong
LOl! This is not true at all. I haven't met one agent in my life that care of his/her clients. They just want to push on a quick sale and then forget about the client unless there is a chance of more business. This is one profession where peoples' trust is as low as cars salesman or a politician.
How many agents have you worked with? 1, 5, 10? I guess that makes you an expert on the behavior of all realtors. lol.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Most agents, myself included, want to see what is best for our clients. That said, what we think is best and what they believe to be best can sometimes vary. What your goals are as a Seller should always be part of the discussion and be used to guide the listing, however there are times that my experience and understanding of the market says that that "low-ball" offer may in fact be the best combination of terms and price that we can expect in given market conditions.
Your agent is the GPS & you are the driver... we're going to lay out what we think is the best roadmap to successfully get you to your destination. You're not required to follow those directions, but it will force us into "recalculating" potentially multiple times to avoid roadblocks you didn't expect. On occasion we can also just be outright wrong
LOl! This is not true at all. I haven't met one agent in my life that care of his/her clients. They just want to push on a quick sale and then forget about the client unless there is a chance of more business. This is one profession where peoples' trust is as low as cars salesman or a politician.
How many agents have you worked with? 1, 5, 10? I guess that makes you an expert on the behavior of all realtors. lol.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Most agents, myself included, want to see what is best for our clients. That said, what we think is best and what they believe to be best can sometimes vary. What your goals are as a Seller should always be part of the discussion and be used to guide the listing, however there are times that my experience and understanding of the market says that that "low-ball" offer may in fact be the best combination of terms and price that we can expect in given market conditions.
Your agent is the GPS & you are the driver... we're going to lay out what we think is the best roadmap to successfully get you to your destination. You're not required to follow those directions, but it will force us into "recalculating" potentially multiple times to avoid roadblocks you didn't expect. On occasion we can also just be outright wrong
LOl! This is not true at all. I haven't met one agent in my life that care of his/her clients. They just want to push on a quick sale and then forget about the client unless there is a chance of more business. This is one profession where peoples' trust is as low as cars salesman or a politician.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Most agents, myself included, want to see what is best for our clients. That said, what we think is best and what they believe to be best can sometimes vary. What your goals are as a Seller should always be part of the discussion and be used to guide the listing, however there are times that my experience and understanding of the market says that that "low-ball" offer may in fact be the best combination of terms and price that we can expect in given market conditions.
Your agent is the GPS & you are the driver... we're going to lay out what we think is the best roadmap to successfully get you to your destination. You're not required to follow those directions, but it will force us into "recalculating" potentially multiple times to avoid roadblocks you didn't expect. On occasion we can also just be outright wrong
LOl! This is not true at all. I haven't met one agent in my life that care of his/her clients. They just want to push on a quick sale and then forget about the client unless there is a chance of more business. This is one profession where peoples' trust is as low as cars salesman or a politician.
Anonymous wrote: LOl! This is not true at all. I haven't met one agent in my life that care of his/her clients. They just want to push on a quick sale and then forget about the client unless there is a chance of more business. This is one profession where peoples' trust is as low as cars salesman or a politician.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Most agents, myself included, want to see what is best for our clients. That said, what we think is best and what they believe to be best can sometimes vary. What your goals are as a Seller should always be part of the discussion and be used to guide the listing, however there are times that my experience and understanding of the market says that that "low-ball" offer may in fact be the best combination of terms and price that we can expect in given market conditions.
Your agent is the GPS & you are the driver... we're going to lay out what we think is the best roadmap to successfully get you to your destination. You're not required to follow those directions, but it will force us into "recalculating" potentially multiple times to avoid roadblocks you didn't expect. On occasion we can also just be outright wrong
LOl! This is not true at all. I haven't met one agent in my life that care of his/her clients. They just want to push on a quick sale and then forget about the client unless there is a chance of more business. This is one profession where peoples' trust is as low as cars salesman or a politician.
Anonymous wrote:Quicker sale/quicker $$ would be my guess.
Anonymous wrote:This has been my experience too. When interviewing agents and when selling our home, our seller agent acted more like they were on the buyer's side instead of working for us/getting us the best net.
Anonymous wrote:Most agents, myself included, want to see what is best for our clients. That said, what we think is best and what they believe to be best can sometimes vary. What your goals are as a Seller should always be part of the discussion and be used to guide the listing, however there are times that my experience and understanding of the market says that that "low-ball" offer may in fact be the best combination of terms and price that we can expect in given market conditions.
Your agent is the GPS & you are the driver... we're going to lay out what we think is the best roadmap to successfully get you to your destination. You're not required to follow those directions, but it will force us into "recalculating" potentially multiple times to avoid roadblocks you didn't expect. On occasion we can also just be outright wrong
Anonymous wrote:Quicker sale/quicker $$ would be my guess.