Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I live in a "hot" upper NWDC neighborhood and have received several of these letters. I do find them both flattering and slightly bothersome ("hovering over the table" is not bad analogy). I have to wonder what the people who write them are thinking - my neighborhood regularly draws bidding wars and over-asking sale prices, so if I were to sell, I'd definitely put my house on the market and see how high the bids go.
As someone who also receives these letters every few months, I have wondered too. When there are no listings it makes sense. But sometimes I get these letters are there are several listings on the market in our neighborhood. So what the letter tells me is that they want my house but don't want to pay market price.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I live in a "hot" upper NWDC neighborhood and have received several of these letters. I do find them both flattering and slightly bothersome ("hovering over the table" is not bad analogy). I have to wonder what the people who write them are thinking - my neighborhood regularly draws bidding wars and over-asking sale prices, so if I were to sell, I'd definitely put my house on the market and see how high the bids go.
As someone who also receives these letters every few months, I have wondered too. When there are no listings it makes sense. But sometimes I get these letters are there are several listings on the market in our neighborhood. So what the letter tells me is that they want my house but don't want to pay market price.
Anonymous wrote:I live in a "hot" upper NWDC neighborhood and have received several of these letters. I do find them both flattering and slightly bothersome ("hovering over the table" is not bad analogy). I have to wonder what the people who write them are thinking - my neighborhood regularly draws bidding wars and over-asking sale prices, so if I were to sell, I'd definitely put my house on the market and see how high the bids go.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think you are hearing naysayers from the burbs, where I guess this isn't as common. In desirable neighborhoods in DC, we get at least one of those letters a quarter. As a PP said, I find it flattering, show it to my husband, and then it immediately goes into recycling because we're not planning on moving. I don't actually think there is an harm in it if it's a neighborhood norm. That said, I pay slightly more attention to letters from the known handful of realtors who handle much of the traffic in our neighborhood. Random realtor who is sending a bad form letter is less interesting and seems scam-like. Along those lines, I'd definitely only use a realtor who specialized in the particular neighborhood. They are the ones who know the scuttlebutt and who might be moving and who is aging and who was tempted last year but didn't sell but might be ready this year.
I'm 13:41 and I live in the suburbs.
13:41, how many letters did your realtor send?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think you are hearing naysayers from the burbs, where I guess this isn't as common. In desirable neighborhoods in DC, we get at least one of those letters a quarter. As a PP said, I find it flattering, show it to my husband, and then it immediately goes into recycling because we're not planning on moving. I don't actually think there is an harm in it if it's a neighborhood norm. That said, I pay slightly more attention to letters from the known handful of realtors who handle much of the traffic in our neighborhood. Random realtor who is sending a bad form letter is less interesting and seems scam-like. Along those lines, I'd definitely only use a realtor who specialized in the particular neighborhood. They are the ones who know the scuttlebutt and who might be moving and who is aging and who was tempted last year but didn't sell but might be ready this year.
OP's looking outside the Beltway, so even if you are right, she's hearing from her target audience.
Our agent specializes in this town, has for 25 years, and she suggested it. Who knows.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:These responses are so interesting. I don't know that we need a miracle, just good timing. People do downsize, and some in the neighborhoods already have (there are a number of homes we'd love but were sold within the last 15 years, and we wouldn't send letters to them).
We're looking at 4-5 bedrooms homes, and many people don't want those once their kids are in their 20's/30's.
I hear you guys on the list serve suggestion. My only concern is that more than 50% of the homes are smaller than we want. I'd hate to offend anyone who contacted us.
Also, these areas are desirable to me, but they aren't "super hot". We're not looking in Chevy Chase or Old Town or anything. It's a family-friendly area outside of the beltway. I happen to like these neighborhoods because of the elementary school/walkable to an upscale (relatively speaking) shopping center combination. Target price is $800-900K. Many of these homes will go for $650K because they are so much smaller, and we are flat out not interested (would never want to say that to a potential neighbor!).
I'm not ignoring all those who are super, super offended. I just don't want to miss out on a dream home because they waited until June to put in on the market and we really wanted to make a decision before that. Because of our kids' ages, we want to get them settled before the next school year starts.
Can you give us a zip code? I'm the pp who will be selling in the spring. I want you to send me a letter.
We're looking for 2800-3000 sq ft above ground, with a basement. Smaller homes can be lovely, but I'd like a generously sized kitchen with plenty of counter space, because we like to all cook together.
Anonymous wrote:These responses are so interesting. I don't know that we need a miracle, just good timing. People do downsize, and some in the neighborhoods already have (there are a number of homes we'd love but were sold within the last 15 years, and we wouldn't send letters to them).
We're looking at 4-5 bedrooms homes, and many people don't want those once their kids are in their 20's/30's.
I hear you guys on the list serve suggestion. My only concern is that more than 50% of the homes are smaller than we want. I'd hate to offend anyone who contacted us.
Also, these areas are desirable to me, but they aren't "super hot". We're not looking in Chevy Chase or Old Town or anything. It's a family-friendly area outside of the beltway. I happen to like these neighborhoods because of the elementary school/walkable to an upscale (relatively speaking) shopping center combination. Target price is $800-900K. Many of these homes will go for $650K because they are so much smaller, and we are flat out not interested (would never want to say that to a potential neighbor!).
I'm not ignoring all those who are super, super offended. I just don't want to miss out on a dream home because they waited until June to put in on the market and we really wanted to make a decision before that. Because of our kids' ages, we want to get them settled before the next school year starts.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think you are hearing naysayers from the burbs, where I guess this isn't as common. In desirable neighborhoods in DC, we get at least one of those letters a quarter. As a PP said, I find it flattering, show it to my husband, and then it immediately goes into recycling because we're not planning on moving. I don't actually think there is an harm in it if it's a neighborhood norm. That said, I pay slightly more attention to letters from the known handful of realtors who handle much of the traffic in our neighborhood. Random realtor who is sending a bad form letter is less interesting and seems scam-like. Along those lines, I'd definitely only use a realtor who specialized in the particular neighborhood. They are the ones who know the scuttlebutt and who might be moving and who is aging and who was tempted last year but didn't sell but might be ready this year.
OP's looking outside the Beltway, so even if you are right, she's hearing from her target audience.
Anonymous wrote:I think you are hearing naysayers from the burbs, where I guess this isn't as common. In desirable neighborhoods in DC, we get at least one of those letters a quarter. As a PP said, I find it flattering, show it to my husband, and then it immediately goes into recycling because we're not planning on moving. I don't actually think there is an harm in it if it's a neighborhood norm. That said, I pay slightly more attention to letters from the known handful of realtors who handle much of the traffic in our neighborhood. Random realtor who is sending a bad form letter is less interesting and seems scam-like. Along those lines, I'd definitely only use a realtor who specialized in the particular neighborhood. They are the ones who know the scuttlebutt and who might be moving and who is aging and who was tempted last year but didn't sell but might be ready this year.