Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:That's a lot of effort when all you have to do is call that agent and be taken off of his marketing list.
Yes. You seem unhinged. That's not going to stop him from mailing you stuff, you know.
AroundTheBlock wrote:Working in the real estate world I know many real estate agents. Let me simply say 75% of them are crap. Now, onto the topic...
I receive real estate agent crap all the time in the mail. It's very annoying and I would NEVER HIRE ANYONE who resorted to "cold calling" to get business. Sorry, but any good agent DOES NOT NEED TO ADVERTISE. I know six amazing agents and they find their business through word of mouth and simply doing a good job.
There is one agent who keeps sending junk mail to my house (with my property info, photos, etc), even went as far as to use a return sticker from a pet adoption agency! Nice way to get my wife to open the letter. After 3-4 of them I decided to get even.
This is what I did:
1. I went online to the University of Phoenix and ADT and filled out all their "request more information" form and used this agent's information. Both of these companies will call 3-4 times a day regardless if you ask to be taken off the list.
2. I took his mailing address and registered a ton of junk mail.
Some of my friends say it's going overboard. Some say it's perfect. To me it's getting even. I don't need some real estate agent who can't hack it to be sending me nonstop junk mail with fake return addresses. Especially when he's sending me property tax information (yes, I know it's public information but still) or photos of my area and house.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Last night I found a postcard in my mailbox from the realtor who represented the sellers of the house I just moved in to 6 weeks ago. It had a picture of the exterior of my house on the front, with a quote from the sellers talking about how amazing their agent was, blah blah blah. It also screamed in huge font "14 offers!!! Sold for $xxx over list!!" Then on the back it had more pics of the house (pre-sale obviously). I am almost certain that I have no recourse here but isn't that a little effed up? Now all our neighbors know about the bidding war, and how much we paid. I know this is public information but how many people are going to actually go out and search for it? Not many. Of course if it's handed to them in their mailboxes then they'll have it and it just totally irks me. Am I overreacting? It just feels like a weird violation of privacy.
Is this some kind of humblebrag? "Look at me! I beat 13 other offers for my house!"
AroundTheBlock wrote:Working in the real estate world I know many real estate agents. Let me simply say 75% of them are crap. Now, onto the topic...
I receive real estate agent crap all the time in the mail. It's very annoying and I would NEVER HIRE ANYONE who resorted to "cold calling" to get business. Sorry, but any good agent DOES NOT NEED TO ADVERTISE. I know six amazing agents and they find their business through word of mouth and simply doing a good job.
There is one agent who keeps sending junk mail to my house (with my property info, photos, etc), even went as far as to use a return sticker from a pet adoption agency! Nice way to get my wife to open the letter. After 3-4 of them I decided to get even.
This is what I did:
1. I went online to the University of Phoenix and ADT and filled out all their "request more information" form and used this agent's information. Both of these companies will call 3-4 times a day regardless if you ask to be taken off the list.
2. I took his mailing address and registered a ton of junk mail.
Some of my friends say it's going overboard. Some say it's perfect. To me it's getting even. I don't need some real estate agent who can't hack it to be sending me nonstop junk mail with fake return addresses. Especially when he's sending me property tax information (yes, I know it's public information but still) or photos of my area and house.
Anonymous wrote:LOL -- you are funny. You better believe people checked out how much you paid and have been discussing.
Anonymous wrote:Last night I found a postcard in my mailbox from the realtor who represented the sellers of the house I just moved in to 6 weeks ago. It had a picture of the exterior of my house on the front, with a quote from the sellers talking about how amazing their agent was, blah blah blah. It also screamed in huge font "14 offers!!! Sold for $xxx over list!!" Then on the back it had more pics of the house (pre-sale obviously). I am almost certain that I have no recourse here but isn't that a little effed up? Now all our neighbors know about the bidding war, and how much we paid. I know this is public information but how many people are going to actually go out and search for it? Not many. Of course if it's handed to them in their mailboxes then they'll have it and it just totally irks me. Am I overreacting? It just feels like a weird violation of privacy.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Oh, trust me, everyone knew already. I also live in a neighborhood where a home just went into contract and then sold. I was checking the property records every day dying to know!
+1
+2
Anonymous wrote:That's a lot of effort when all you have to do is call that agent and be taken off of his marketing list.
AroundTheBlock wrote:Working in the real estate world I know many real estate agents. Let me simply say 75% of them are crap. Now, onto the topic...
I receive real estate agent crap all the time in the mail. It's very annoying and I would NEVER HIRE ANYONE who resorted to "cold calling" to get business. Sorry, but any good agent DOES NOT NEED TO ADVERTISE. I know six amazing agents and they find their business through word of mouth and simply doing a good job.
There is one agent who keeps sending junk mail to my house (with my property info, photos, etc), even went as far as to use a return sticker from a pet adoption agency! Nice way to get my wife to open the letter. After 3-4 of them I decided to get even.
This is what I did:
1. I went online to the University of Phoenix and ADT and filled out all their "request more information" form and used this agent's information. Both of these companies will call 3-4 times a day regardless if you ask to be taken off the list.
2. I took his mailing address and registered a ton of junk mail.
Some of my friends say it's going overboard. Some say it's perfect. To me it's getting even. I don't need some real estate agent who can't hack it to be sending me nonstop junk mail with fake return addresses. Especially when he's sending me property tax information (yes, I know it's public information but still) or photos of my area and house.