In Need of Some Serious Advice!
Posted: Tue Jul 03, 2001 4:47 pm
Okay, here's my situation:
I am the proud owner of a 1990 14x70 Patriot, located in a very nice park in southern Michigan. I bought it in 1997 for $16,300, and in 4 years, have reduced the note all the way to $14,500 (whoppee). Last October, I decided to put it on the market, and signed with the broker I bought it through. In the 9 months I had the house listed with this broker, they brought one prospective buyer through the house. Two more people just happened to knock on my front door because they saw the "for sale" sign in the window, and a friend of a friend inquired, but backed away because she thought the lot rent was too high. I am now signed with my second broker, and two months into my contract, have yet to receive a call from them asking to show the house.
Now, I'm not panicking yet, but it does concern me that we're in the middle of the buying season, and nobody is seeing the inside of my home. I have some plans for the future which do not involve my current residence, and I really can't afford to put life on hold for another 2 or 3 years while nobody even looks at my home. I understand that mobile homes do not sell quickly, but the way I see it, it won't sell at all if nobody even sees it. To add to the problem, my mortgage is through Associates Housing Finance, which doesn't even finance mobile homes any more (so I can forget about the idea of the buyer assuming the mortgage).
So I have some questions for anyone who can offer me some informed advice. Should I try to sell this house without a broker, and do the advertising and marketing on my own? Do I start plastering the local papers and trade rags with ads for my house? Do I have an open house to at least try to get people through the house? Currently, I am relying on my broker to handle all of this for me, but I'm not convinced they are doing so. Would I do better going about it on my own?
October will be here soon, and with that, I must face the fact that my chances of selling this house during the winter will drop substantially. If I go through the summer without anyone seeing the house (my hope is at least 2-3 people per month), I will feel as if I have wasted my time hoping that a broker will handle the agressive marketing of my home for me. Opinions?
I am the proud owner of a 1990 14x70 Patriot, located in a very nice park in southern Michigan. I bought it in 1997 for $16,300, and in 4 years, have reduced the note all the way to $14,500 (whoppee). Last October, I decided to put it on the market, and signed with the broker I bought it through. In the 9 months I had the house listed with this broker, they brought one prospective buyer through the house. Two more people just happened to knock on my front door because they saw the "for sale" sign in the window, and a friend of a friend inquired, but backed away because she thought the lot rent was too high. I am now signed with my second broker, and two months into my contract, have yet to receive a call from them asking to show the house.
Now, I'm not panicking yet, but it does concern me that we're in the middle of the buying season, and nobody is seeing the inside of my home. I have some plans for the future which do not involve my current residence, and I really can't afford to put life on hold for another 2 or 3 years while nobody even looks at my home. I understand that mobile homes do not sell quickly, but the way I see it, it won't sell at all if nobody even sees it. To add to the problem, my mortgage is through Associates Housing Finance, which doesn't even finance mobile homes any more (so I can forget about the idea of the buyer assuming the mortgage).
So I have some questions for anyone who can offer me some informed advice. Should I try to sell this house without a broker, and do the advertising and marketing on my own? Do I start plastering the local papers and trade rags with ads for my house? Do I have an open house to at least try to get people through the house? Currently, I am relying on my broker to handle all of this for me, but I'm not convinced they are doing so. Would I do better going about it on my own?
October will be here soon, and with that, I must face the fact that my chances of selling this house during the winter will drop substantially. If I go through the summer without anyone seeing the house (my hope is at least 2-3 people per month), I will feel as if I have wasted my time hoping that a broker will handle the agressive marketing of my home for me. Opinions?