Perspectives on North Shore Chicago's
Real Estate Market

How Photos Can Prevent Your Home from Selling

By now most of us are aware that home buyers start their search online. According to the National Association of Realtors that number is currently 87% and growing. And 80% of people using the Internet rate photographs as the most important feature of their online search. In fact, these days, with large supply of homes available, most people see online photos as the easiest way to filter all the listings down to a manageable number. Here’s how it works:

Does this photo entice you to buy?

Does this photo entice you to buy?

If I like the pictures, the house stays on my list.

If I don’t like them, I click away, never to return.

Common sense, right?

So…it baffles me why home sellers and their agents (who should know better!) continue to commit the three deadly sins of real estate photography:

1. No photos when a listing goes onto the MLS

Here’s a common scenario: an agent gets a listing and immediately puts it into the MLS, even before taking photos of the property, figuring that the pictures can be added later. Or, the sellers pressure the agent to get their property into the system as soon as possible, thinking that the sooner it’s in the MLS, the sooner they’ll have an offer.

A bathroom, I think

A bathroom, I think

Here’s why that’s a mistake: most people beginning  the home-buying process set up online searches with automatic daily alerts for any new listings that hit the system. So, in the case of the aforementioned new listing, they get the alert but, since there’s no picture, they immediately eliminate it from consideration. Later, when the photos are added, they don’t get another alert, so those buyers never see that property again. Yes, agents will show the home to their clients if it meets their search criteria, but the sellers have inadvertently cut their buyer pool in half. The sad thing is, they don’t even realize it.

Give your home its best shot at finding the perfect buyer. Make sure you have your photos, floor plan and virtual tour ready before your listing goes in the MLS.

2. Not enough photos

In the old days, each real estate listing had one photo of the front of the house. But then again, in the old days people relied on their agent to show them all the homes that met their search criteria. Now, since home buyers are ” touring” homes online first, they want to see as many pictures as possible. At a minimum they expect to see the main rooms: kitchen, family room, living room, master bedroom. So, if they notice that some of these rooms are missing, guess what?  They assume that the seller is hiding something…that there must be something wrong with those rooms… and poof! The house is eliminated from consideration.

Would you leave the kitchen like this for an open house?

Would you leave the kitchen like this for an open house?

Make sure your house gets on the “must see” list of every target buyer by including great photos of all the key rooms of the house.  Try to include at least 9. You can also include some photos of your garden, neighborhood or nearby parks, beaches and other local features. Remember, you are not just selling a house, but a lifestyle, so use the photos that can accomplish this.

3. Bad photos

Bad photos come in two flavors: photos that are  bad because they’re dark or blurry and photos that are bad because the rooms are not staged or properly prepped for photography. Heck, some people don’t even bother to straighten the room they’re photographing. I’ve even seen one MLS photo where there’s a dog in the foreground licking himself.

I am always amazed at some of the pictures that people will include, thinking that these will help sell their home.

Do yourself a favor. Make sure your agent hires a professional photographer to shoot your listing photos. Believe me, it is worth every penny. A professional photographer has both the equipment and the expertise to show a home off to its best advantage.  A good agent will often include the photography as part of his or her marketing package.

The bottom line: think of the Internet as your first “showing”.  Just as you’d make your house shine for an open house or a showing, make sure your photos shine for that first virtual showing.

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