Talk:For sale by owner
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[edit] WHY all these FSBO sites on the External links section?
Need for some agreed-upon policies:
What do editors think about how we treat this huge increase in regional websites?
- Have none, indicating that only national sites are allowed:?
- Limit them to one per state (then we could have 50):?
- Leave it as it is and allow as many as anyone wants to include:?
Take a look at Wiki policy of Wikipedia:External links#what should be linked to and let's discuss this. Vivaverdi 21:33, 9 August 2006 (UTC)
- Hi, I believe we should not have any links to sites offering FSBO services. This is because Wikipedia is not a web directory and it would not be fair to list any one particular site. So I removed the links. -- Barrylb 03:20, 11 August 2006 (UTC)
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- Even though I posed the question above, I AGREE none of the links need to be there UNLESS they are so general as to further explain aspects of the FSBO process and not just promote a specific business or area.
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- Vivaverdi 04:04, 11 August 2006 (UTC)
This page seemed to me to be a web-advertisers dream. All the external links listed were commercial (and mostly US-only), and had no encyclopedic content that I could find. I took the liberty of removing them for that reason. Also there is nothing on Commons, so I took out that link as well. --RobertG ♬ talk 13:35, 12 December 2005 (UTC)
I've removed some unencyclpedic stuff (Wikipedia is not a how-to manual) and tried to make this a little more international. DJ Clayworth 16:28, 3 April 2006 (UTC)
"30% of homeowners attempt to sell without an agent". This seems exceptionally unlikely based simply on examining the number of agency signs versus FSBO signs in my area. We need a cite on this. DJ Clayworth 16:36, 3 April 2006 (UTC)
30% sounds too much. Oregon has very big fsbo market. 30% can be correct numbers in that area. Unfortunately I have no idea how to get exact numbers. Btw, spammers like the article. Mauserd
[edit] All of these links to FSBO sites
Do we really want to see a list of websites linking to every possible combination of FSBO locations/practices/etc????????????????????????????????/
I'd like to see some discussion here before removing most of them as simply self-promoting (hey, that's their business) businesses but not contributng much to our understanding of the basic topic.
Vivaverdi 01:39, 17 June 2006 (UTC)
I alphabetized the commercial ones and removed the duplicte byowner.com (blatant advertising). Added ForSaleByOwner.com (disclaimer - I work for them - but I figure most of us are in the industry, so nothing wrong there). I think as a general concept for articles that require linking to corporate sites, that there be some specific criteria related to size, reach, or historical significance.
--Adamnelson 20:33, 24 July 2006 (UTC)
[edit] Bias
This page seems to have an apparent bias against FSBO. I've rewritten the first two paragraphs to remove biased tone, improve precision, and remove irrelevant information about commission distribution.
Jay 23:11, 18 June 2006 (UTC)
- You've made some worthwhile contributions here (especially is fleshing out some detail on he nature of the FSBO process, but I have to disagree on the use of one article to justify a blanket statement of a standard 6% across the US compared to the range of 5 to 7% as establihed in Canada.
As a former agent for 20 years in the Washington, DC regional market, the range of 5% to 6% is very common. In some parts of the West, 7% is common. I know because I've received referral fees based on 3.5% to the selling broker.
I shall revert to the originally-stated range. Vivaverdi 03:22, 19 June 2006 (UTC)
From some of the reading I've done I am under the impression that although there is some variation in the US, 6% pervades. If you think that there is enough variation to warrant changing it back, I will defer to your experience. It would be nice to find some better sources for this information, too. Are you aware of any?
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- Unfortunately, commission rates are not typically available to the general public, but can only be seen by agents on MLS systems in terms of "an offer of compensation to cooperating brokers". i.e. we see the half? the percentage? offered to the broker bringing the buyer, and never know, until settlement, what the broker representing the seller is getting.
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- In my experience of the Washington, DC region (69,000 agents involved in that MLS), a total of 5% was very prevalant in the years 2000 to 2005. This typically split at 2.5% to 2.5%, but sometimes 3% (buyer's agent) to 2% (seller's agent).
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- Vivaverdi 13:37, 20 June 2006 (UTC)
PS: look at the third Wall Street Journal article on the list of links: he notes paying "up to 7%". Can't recall exactly where 7% is common, but it exists in some parts of the country.
In 1999 or 2000 there was an attempt by one large real estate company in the DC region to standarize its commissions at 7%, and it pre-printed its listing agreements that way. But few sellers would go for it, especially as the market began to heat up. Agents had to cross out the 7% and insert an agreed-upon amount, all of which emphasizes throughout that commissionsd are negotiable....
Vivaverdi 13:42, 20 June 2006 (UTC)
[edit] Major Revision
OK, so I took some liberties with the article. I removed the history section, although it would be nice to add it back in when we have some good supported information. I also updated the statistics with what was in the latest press release from the NAR and omitted those that had been shaped to form a biased argument against FSBO.
Vivaverdi, you opened the discussion about whether or not to include external links to FSBO service providers. I would argue that although doing so would somewhat commercialize the article, these organizations are part of the FSBO phenomenon, and therefore pertinent to the article. Additionally, I believe readers researching FSBO would be interested in links to FSBO service providers.
- I think what you have done is fine. Those stats were there when I found the site. The reorg. of links looks better too. I just wanted to give the flavor of sites out there in different countries, etc. rather than provide a long "how to" list of options.....
- Vivaverdi 13:44, 20 June 2006 (UTC)
Sorry Vivaverdi, I don't mean to be a stickler, but "In Tulsa, Oaklahoma" isn't part of the article titile that I cited, so I removed it.
jlyon 02:31, 22 June 2006 (UTC)
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- OK, but not sure that the Birger article refers to anything other than Tulsa, OK practice. I've added a range of 5 to 7% in the US in addition to the 6% statement.
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- Vivaverdi 15:42, 22 June 2006 (UTC)
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- Looks good
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- jlyon 01:12, 23 June 2006 (UTC)
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Let me jump in here. I tightened up the first two paragraphs, but changed nothing substantively. I did, however, introduce the notion of FSBO properties being commission-free in the first paragraph. This is the overarching theme of FSBO.
As for NAR statistics, I've watched this page from time to time and have seen it undergo quite a lot of tugs from both sides of the real estate divide. I'm on the FSBO side Iconoblast, but I do believe in encyclopedic objectivism. That said, in an ideal world, any references to or citations from the NAR should be balanced by something from the FSBO world.
Unfortunately, there isn't much. A group of FSBO business/site owners have talked about creating a FSBO association and aggregating our sales and listing data to build up statistics we can use for marketing purposes. That will be slow to come.
I just want to caution us on the use of the NAR as a touchstone for all things real estate. Here's something interesting that I doubt the NAR would like to see here, and it came from their own data: The NAR reported that in 2005, 9% of all homes sold were sold by the previous owner (FSBO). They say elsewhere that 84% of all FSBO sellers end up working with a real estate agent. These numbers suggest that 56.25% of all homes sold start out as FSBOs.
Iconoblast Jul 27 2006 (How do I insert a time/date stamp?)
- Firstly, just put the four "tildes", the symbol on your keyboard - far left side, top row, under "Esc" - one after the other and then save. That will produce your user name with date/time stamp.
- Secondly, drawing the conclusion that 56.25% of all homes start as FSBOs cannot be correct, if only from signs on the street, broker advertsing v. FSBO advertising, etc. It would imply that 50%+ of all signs outside homes are FSBOs.... (I haven't looked at the NAR site).
- Vivaverdi 16:33, 27 July 2006 (UTC)
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- P.S. Your revisions look good.
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- Vivaverdi 16:35, 27 July 2006 (UTC)
- I just did a little math: 9% divided by .16 (100% - 84% = 16% or .16) to get a total of all homes starting out as FSBO. Again, these are based on the NAR statistics the 9% of all homes sold are sold by the previous owner and that 84% of all FSBO sellers end up using a real estate agent.
- Oh, and thanks for the tilde tip.
- Iconoblast 17:36, 5 August 2006 (UTC)
[edit] Thank goodness these links have been removed....
...but PLEASE make a comment on this TALK PAGE re: chages.
I certainly support what has been done. Vivaverdi 03:32, 10 August 2006 (UTC)
After reading these posts, i strongly support removing commercial sites. I own a site and had it added to this section and it got removed. So I went on to ready the policies. Let's not waste editors time by adding sites that do not comply with the policies. March 18, 2007
- Who wrote this?? Please use the 4 tildes to indicate who you are. Viva-Verdi 03:15, 18 March 2007 (UTC)