“Long experience has shown me that sellers and estate agents are likely to start blaming such aspects of the home as its position or orientation, its design, its neighbourhood, its appearance and condition in relation to its neighbours, its security – or a 101 other factors — but the one basic point, its wrong price, will tend to be overlooked."
“The plain truth is that virtually any home will sell if it is correctly priced. If the price makes allowance for the negative factors which the estate agent has identified and the price is in line with the achieved sale prices of other homes in the area, there is no reason why it should stick on the market.”
Quite often, says Clarke, the estate agent will be at least partially responsible for the unrealistic price because he has agreed to – or even suggested – the inaccurate price in order to get the mandate and he may now be reluctant to admit his mistake.
What can a seller do when he finds that his home, after being on the market for four to six months, has still not found a buyer?
“The answers may be painful,” says Clarke, “but there are really only two choices: the seller can drop his price to a new lower level and possibly change his estate agent. He must however be warned that at this stage the home is almost certain to have acquired an unfortunate reputation in the neighbourhood with buyers, many of whom would have rejected it due to its unrealistic price, and it will now have to find new buyers. This almost certainly involves lowering the price to below its true market value.”