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Top 10 Reasons Realtors Fail At Short Sales

March 9, 2008

 Real Estate News | Real Estate Radio USA

Why do Realtors fail at short sales? There are arguably hundreds of excuses, but really only 10 or so REAL reasons.

1. Lack of Ability and Knowledge
Short Sales for most agents represented the new chic way of making money in a volatile, foreclosure laden real estate market. So, they took a 2 hour class at the board, became duly knighted “short sale experts” and off they were to conquer the masses. Unfortunately most found that trying to perform short sales without the knowledge to do so was like picking up a baseball bat and trying to hit a Roger Clemens fastball.

You can take all the baseball classes you want and unless you have the knowledge and ability to perform, you are never going to hit that fastball. People train for years to become great at their “profession”. A (2) hour class does not qualify you as a short sale expert.

2. Lack of Experience
Experience is the best teacher. I believe I have read that somewhere. there is no substitute for experience. I believe I have read that somewhere before as well. How can one call themselves and expert without having any experience in the chosen field of expertise. I have changed the oil in my car before, it hardly makes me a mechanic.

However, at least I have changed the oil! How many real estate agents decided to get involved in short sales without ever having completed one in their real estate career? Here’s a hint…over 90% of the licensed real estate agents had NEVER successfully completed a short sale prior to 2007 (source: MBA). Where did all the experts come from?

3. Laziness
In order to be an expert at anything you have to continually train and practice. Have you ever played a competitive sport? Training and practicing are not paid activities. But they are absolutely necessary for you to complete in order to raise the level of your game. No slow, fat, weak kid ever succeeded in football. No slow, weak, fat realtor is going to succeed in short sales.

What amount of training and practice have you engaged in prior to attempting a short sale? What was you daily regimen of fine tuning your game? Yet, you bought some business cards and slapped the words “short sale expert” on them and bamboozled your way through the last 7 months trying to feign being a “short sale expert”. How did that work out for you?

4. Trying to Find The Shortcut
There is no short cut for success. As the great Vince Lombardi once said, “the only place success comes before work is in the dictionary”. Short sales are a lot of work. It is not a field for the faint of heart. You need the knowledge, the strength, the ability and the perseverance to succeed. There are no shortcuts except to failure. Sending all offers to the bank for “3rd party approval” is a fools game and an immediate sign that you do not know what you are doing.

Where’s your comprehensive short sale package? Where’s your loss severity analysis? Where’s your regression analysis? Why did you list the property incorrectly? What’s this stupid addendum your broker is telling you to have singed?

If you have not prepared all of the requisite documents and reports and submitted them correctly you are destined to absolute failure.

5. Lack of Personal Incentive
Everybody already knows that the commission is one of the first items that the bank is going to try and knock down. Well, if you know that going into the deal and that’s the sole source of your revenue then you need to be prepared that you may make a little bit of money or none at all if your commission needs to be struck in order to save the Client from foreclosure.

That’s a cold hard reality pill to swallow but if you decide to be a “short sale expert” then you should not be surprised by this at all. don’t take a short sale listing if you are not prepared to possibly reduce or eliminate your commission.

What we see and hear quite often is Realtors saying that”it’s too much work” for what you get paid doing a short sale. Too bad! You’re the expert, if you don’t know how to make money in short sales, stay out of the game! If you are truly an expert and have the knowledge and experience, you’ll make money.

It’s those who do not that have commission issues. But..who cares…not our problem. Accept it or get out of the short sale game and do your best to sell something else…LOL

6. Picking The wrong Properties To Represent
Despite what you think..every property is NOT a short sale candidate. There are very specific properties that make for ideal short sale candidates. Do you know how to find them, what to look for? I thought you were an “expert”. Short sales have to be identified via prospecting based upon a very strict criteria. Most of the agents whiffing on their short sale deals are doing so because they are finding the right deals to work on. They are spinning their wheels hoping to put a square peg in a round hole.

Let me ask you a question, do you know anything about demographics, psychographics ans statistical analysis? If you do are you applying that knowledge to your selection criteria of short sale deals that you want to get involved in. Simply put, with millions of people in foreclosure, cherry-picking is not a bad thing.

Our closing ratio is so very high because we are EXTREMELY selective in the short sale transactions we decide to get involved in. We don’t go rushing out the door to take every listing just because someone calls. Our time is much more valuable than that. Besides, we already know the most likely of short sale opportunities will be accepted.

7. Subscribing to The Rumor Mill
Would you ask your friend, neighbor, or broker to tell you how to open a parachute if they never have skydived before? Heck no! So why are you asking associates, friends and other brokers how to do short sales..they don’t know either! I read so many postings on Active Rain and other real estate blogs about short sales and it amazes me how many people ask for advice and how many people proffer advice on a subject they know nothing about. Unplug and learn how to do short sales correctly from people who can PROVE to you that they know what they are talking about.

8. Lack of Adequate Due Diligence
Have you read the annual report of the bank that you will be asking acceptance of your short sale from? Do you know the level of their non-performing asset base? Has Moody’s lowered their credit rating? What are their stockholders saying? (there’s an easy way to know) How many REO’s are they sitting on..nationally and in your area? How many foreclosures do they have pending? Have they properly filed their Court documents? Was the mortgage sold?

I could go on and on and on with the amount of data that a true short sale expert obtains to validate and support their request for a short payoff. If you are not doing at least the minimum of what has been asked in this section then you are truly not being an expert and you are showing that you have not even performed a cursory level of due diligence.

9. Lack of Focus
Short sales require a lot of communication and extensive follow-up. Many agents are not even affording their short sale clients a modicum of attention. They are either working on other deals, prospecting for new leads, working a second job…whatever! Short sales are time sensitive and require special attention. How many calls do you miss? How many offers do you not respond to? I can’t tell you how many times we have had to re-fax offers or incessantly track down agents who fail to respond. This is absurd. A homeowner is about to lose their property and they entrusted an agent who may or may not ever be available.

10. Playing God With Lives
This short sale dunce is the worst. This is the agent who actually calls back to tell you that he received your offer but he:
a. The offer is too low and the bank will not accept it
b. We need to place the offer on a form he understands
c. He has an addendum that he requires and it tells me we have no contract even after it’s signed (yes..received one and laughed)

These agents in my mind should be bound, gagged, flogged and left in the public square in stocks naked! They should be exposed. They represent distressed homeowners and try to inject themselves into the transaction as if they had some importance and time after time we see good people represented by crappy Realtors going to the gallows of foreclosure without so much as a concern by the Realtor. Shame.

They have nothing at stake, it’s not their loan, not their property, and if they do not make the commission they want then they could careless. I personally have seen this and have had read about it on numerous real estate related social networks. If you’d like I can send you the links to the posts attributed to these vermin posing as real estate agents.

Bonus!!!!!!! 11. Lack of Negotiation Skills
If you do not realize that you are in a negotiation you have already lost. Do you understand what the field of loss mitigation is? Do you know how many levels of collection there are and what goes on at each level? Do you know what each level is trained for? Do you know the experience level of your opponent?

Maybe you should go to Monster.com and search “loss mitigation executive” and see what kind of experience and knowledge you have to have in order to be a Senior Loss Mitigation rep at a mortgage lender. Then compare that criteria to your resume and let me know how you measure up.If you do not know the various techniques and strategies for negotiation and have not been trained as such then you are vastly unprepared to engage in such negotiation and you are hardly an expert.

Bonus: Fear of Reputation
I often hear from those involved with short sales that they are concerned with how foreclosures and short sales are affecting the overall real estate market and economy. They also fear that negotiating strongly with the bank for the best possible deal is some form of bad karma. this is business people.The short sale expert already knows how low a bank is willing to go.

The Short sale expert already has the knowledge that the loan amount is inconsequential to the amount of the discount or final judgment.As for the impact on the overall market? Hey..don’t we keep hearing that real estate is local? If all that is selling in a market is the REO’s and short sales then those sales represent the true market value.

Trying to stave off a short sale by not competently executing and negotiating the short sale ensures the continual drop in the market you seek to avoid.FYI…what do you think the bank is going to do with that property when your short sale fails? Do you think for an instant that the bank cares about your local real estate market and the impact their low priced REO is going to effect?

A true short sale expert understands that this type of property needs to be looked at as a commodity and it is apparent that MLS boards and the like are trying their best to bandage the wounds caused by the tsunami of foreclosures and it’s not working.

Bottom line, if you are not comfortable doing a short sale the right way, from listing the property correctly, to performing all the steps necessary to get the best price for your BUYER then you need to step out of the game. It’s the BUYER that you need to be kow-towing to in a short sale. A true short sale expert understands this wholly.

Super Bonus: Can’t Attract Buyers
Yes…it’s all about the Buyers. Without a Buyer in a short sale you don’t have a short sale. It’s that simple. If you are not marketing to Buyers properly..you’re done!

The Seller is DOA at your listing sit. They can’t make any money. Their only other alternative is bankruptcy. They have absolutely no control in the transaction. Their credit is going to be ruined if the property is foreclosed. The 1099 issue and deficiency judgment issues are what they are and a true short sale expert knows how to properly explain each. So what’s the problem?

Why are agents listing properties at full value or around full value? You are not going to draw out most buyers at that price. There is so much inventory the price has to be low enough to bring out a real Buyer. Notice I said “real Buyer”. A real Buyer does not and would not walk away from a great deal. He does not have to. Why? Because if the short sale is executed properly and is accepted he would be a fool to do so.

Short Sales are viable, they work and you can generate a great deal of revenue from them. The problem is that most agents will not take the time to obtain the skills to be successful in this arena. Unfortunately, they are slow to exit the game as well. If you are going to be involved in short sales, please, by all means, do them correctly or have the decency to get out of it completely.

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16 Responses to “Top 10 Reasons Realtors Fail At Short Sales”

  1. Top 10 Reasons Realtors Fail At Short Sales | The Long List of Odysseus Medal Nominees | Realtors and real estate, mortgages, lending, investments on March 9th, 2008 7:17 pm

    […] Top 10 Reasons Realtors Fail At Short Sales, by Barry Cunningham. […]

  2. Mike Luzzo on March 9th, 2008 10:06 pm

    hey barry, an expert I am not …a masochist I must be…love your stuff…I read and practice, learn, listen from you and now they call ME the EXPERT in the office…hardly…i’ve closed 3 out of 5…and have 4 more pending…need to learn so much more…so here’s a question….

    I’ve heard you price at approx. 70% of market value…maybe you work with more generous lenders…but it seems they (the lender) don’t settle for much less than 78%…I got one this week (Indy mac) who wanted 97% (eeek!!!) of value…brought them into reality with a little “regression analysis talk” thank you for that. They accepted 91%…sill high …but got it too work.

    Soooo what am i missing here? How can I get them (lender) to accept 70-%???

    (BTW got 2 out there at 75% of value and 70% of value….)

    Thanks you guys are great.

  3. Barry Cunningham on March 10th, 2008 7:47 am

    Hey Mike..love to hear success stories!
    3 out of 5 closed..I’d say you are an expert if there ever was.

    You ask..”what are you missing”? That’s a loaded question..I will try to answer.

    1. What kind of package did you present and how comprehensive was it?

    2. How did you control the BPO…seems that you were not able to influence and control the BPO…tha is vital in substantiating your price.

    3. What were the amount of the repairs needed? Did you pick the right house to short?

    4. Have you researched their NPA, REO’s and present loans in default?

    5. Were you able to ascertain what kind of skin the bank foreclosing had in the deal?

    So much..so much goes into a short sale it is hard to determine why you did not get the discount. Like I have said..our short sale package template is over 100 pages and that’s just the template.

    You must completely validate the number you are requesting they just won’t give it to you becasue you are asking for it. You have to prove that taking your number is in their best interest.

    Keep in touch!

  4. Mike Luzzo on March 10th, 2008 8:40 am

    thanks barry - you said -
    1. What kind of package did you present and how comprehensive was it?
    My packages are good, I never get challenged

    2. How did you control the BPO…seems that you were not able to influence and control the BPO…tha is vital in substantiating your price.
    this could be a clue - however if my value is substantiated at a higher number - it’s sure going to make it tough for the lender to see a lower price.

    3. What were the amount of the repairs needed? $0 - 2 years old - it’s the Orlando, Fl. 2001-2005 builder craze mmarket.
    Did you pick the right house to short? need more info here - I’ve never heard your criteria nor checklist - would love to see (or hear it). HELP

    4. Have you researched their NPA, REO’s and present loans in default?
    thanks - websites?

    5. Were you able to ascertain what kind of skin the bank foreclosing had in the deal? no - HELP

    Disciple Mike - thanks

  5. Mike Luzzo on March 10th, 2008 9:04 am

    Stoopid Addendums from brokers you say….?
    Here’s from our compliance manager this morning.

    From: Margaret Cummins [mailto:margaret@kwwaterford.com]
    Sent: Monday, March 10, 2008 9:11 AM
    To: officemanager@twghomes.com
    Cc: Melanie Ladines; Beth@bethwoodhall.com
    Subject: Short Sale Addendum

    I am assisting Melanie with some of the compliance reviews. I have reviewed your listing file for 11905 Sandy Knoll Ct. Although there are no requirements at this time regarding addendums for short sales, I have attached two short sale addendums, one is a FAR Addendum, the other was developed for our office.

    Although not required, it is recommended that a short sale addendum be executed. You may want to bring these to the attention of your agents for future short sales.

    Thanks.

    Margaret Cummins

  6. Barry Cunningham on March 10th, 2008 9:07 am

    Mike..I see what happened: You did not control the BPO. If you do not control the bPO the bank will take the value as it is relayed to them. Short Sale success is based wholly on the BPO…the package must be presented to substantiate your number ..take a look at our Mock Short Sale package in the free tools section above and see what goes into our packages to substantiate our numbers.

    Imagine yourself as a trial lawyer. You have to absolutely convince the jury that your client is telling the truth. In essence it is up to you to PROVE to the bank why they need to accept so much less.

    Absent said substantiation, you will pretty much be dead in the water.

    But you’re still making money it seems so great!

  7. Barry Cunningham on March 10th, 2008 9:09 am

    LMAO…love the “Although not required” statement..

    I rest my case. A blind leading the blind world out there.

  8. Mike Luzzo on March 10th, 2008 9:34 am

    listing’s are one thing - but coaching the Buyer’s Agent through this can be a real nightmare…

    Do you have a prescribed checklist to follow for them - I am thinking of devisiing a simple checklist of procedures -

    HUGE ISSUE - they (agents and buyer’s) always want to wait til bank approves the short before commencing on the expenditure of the inspection (s)….

    It’s always an arm wrestle - how do you handle the reluctant naive buyer and his agent?

  9. selcapital on March 10th, 2008 9:41 am

    Hi Barry & Barry -

    We are going crazy doing short sales and I read your blogs everyday, I am hearing a lot about regression analysis . Can you tell me what exactly that is.

    You guys are great!

    Sherri Glynn
    SEL Capital, LLC

  10. Barry Cunningham on March 10th, 2008 9:44 am

    What??? “they (agents and buyer’s) always want to wait til bank approves the short before commencing on the expenditure of the inspection”……that’s another problem for you.

    Those expenses are a cost of doing business. How in the world can you submit a deal for approval without having your inspections done? How do you have any idea what your number needs to be. Mike..this is EXACTLY what this article was about.

  11. Real Estate Radio USA Episode 75 | Real Estate Radio USA on March 10th, 2008 5:51 pm

    […] talked in-depth on the show today about Barry C’s recent blog post titled, “The Top 10 Reasons Realtors Fail at Short Sales”. Barry C explained his reasoning behind each and every point he makes in his post. Let us know what […]

  12. Real Estate Radio USA Episode 75 | Real Estate Radio USA on March 10th, 2008 5:51 pm

    […] talked in-depth on the show today about Barry C’s recent blog post titled, “The Top 10 Reasons Realtors Fail at Short Sales”. Barry C explained his reasoning behind each and every point he makes in his post. Let us know what […]

  13. Stephanie on March 15th, 2008 9:58 pm

    Hello! I have spent all day researching short sales, solely because I am the buyer in one. Since I am the buyer I feel as though I have little or no control over whether I get the home but I would like to my best to help my odds. We put in a full price offer on a home listed at 201k this contract was signed by the seller (which I understand means virtually nothing). The home has been put on temporary hold on the MLS. The home was purchased for 242k in December of 2006. The owner bought this home and another as rental properties. What can I do to increase my odds of closing this home? My agent has gone to classes but has no experience in an actual sale although she has two contracts on short sales currently. I would love advice since I feel as though I am helpless. Please help!

  14. Barry Johnson on March 16th, 2008 3:06 pm

    Hi Stephanie,

    As you know, there is no substitute for experience in any type of real estate transaction. Short sales are certainly no different. However, some of this things that make a short sale “easier” are:
    1) A seller that is truly in a hardship and one that cannot afford the property (no hidden assets)
    2) Substantiation for the discount (price) on the contact. If the contracted price is close to current market value you will not have to do a big inspection and repair report.
    3) Buyer with financing in place or cash
    4) Having a trained negotiator talk to the bank and CONTINUALLY follow up
    5) In our experience the closer to the auction date, the more the bank will deal (or even respond). So you may have some waiting to do if this is an early stage foreclosure.

    That should get you started. This is not a quick process by any means, but if the deal is good enough, stick with it.

    Barry J

  15. Stephanie on March 16th, 2008 5:58 pm

    Thanks Barry! Unfortunately a new problem arose today. The house was placed back on the market as active. We have a signed contract by the seller but I am guessing he can do whatever he/she wants since it is the banks decision. My feeling is that it should be illegal to sign more than one contract but I don’t know what the actual law is. Thanks for your help!

  16. Mike Luzzo on March 17th, 2008 8:01 am

    hey Barry - I must be hearing you better or something and pricing the properties better - the offers are flying in - WHEW - for the first time I have multiple LIVE offers on a couple of properties…and of course those buyer agents are crying about their buyers offers not being accepted….wahhhhhh…how can i best dry those tears and tell them what will transpire?

    Thanks Mike

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