- SellForSure University Home Page
- Module 1: Introduction
- Module 2: Sell By Owner, or With Agent?
- Module 3: Working with an Agent
- Why You Should Use a Real Estate Agent to Sell Your House
- Drawbacks to Using an Agent
- Real Estate Agent Designations
- How to Choose a Real Estate Agent
- How NOT to Choose a Real Estate Agent
- How to Interview a Real Estate Agent
- Questions to Ask your Real Estate Agent
- Dual Agency
- Check an Agent's Work
- Communicating with your Real Estate Agent
- How a Real Estate Agent gets Paid
- Discount and Flat Fee Brokers
- Real Estate Listing Agreements
- Your Real Estate Agent's Job in a Nutshell
- Today's Real Estate Buyers are Savvy and Empowered
- Real Estate Values and Pricing
- Every Home is Unique
- Three Major Factors affecting Real Estate Values
- Online Real Estate Price Evaluations
- Real Estate CMA or Comparative Market Analysis
- Real Estate Appraisal
- Realtor Property Report (RPR)
- Which Real Estate Valuation should I Trust
- The Real Estate Auction Sales Model
- Overpricing Your Home for Sale
- How to Maximize your Home Sale Price
- The Virtue of Underpricing your Home
- Selling your home with little or no equity
- Module 5: Preparing Your Home for Sale
- Inspecting your Home Prior to Selling It
- Preparing a Full Disclosure Package for Home Buyers
- Contents of a Real Estate Disclosure Package
- Making Repairs to your Home prior to Selling It
- Required Retrofits of your Home
- As-Is Real Estate Sales
- Selling as a Certified Pre-Owned Home
- Preparing your Home for Sale
- Enhance your Home's Curb Appeal
- Home Staging
- The Cost of Preparing your Home for Sale
- Module 6: On the Market
- When to List your Home for Sale
- Living in a Home vs. Selling One
- Getting the Word out about your Home
- Showings and Open Houses
- When Buyers are In the House
- Make your home Available, but make Yourself Scarce for Showings
- Offers and Negotiations
- Selling a Home that is Tenant Occupied
- Selling your Home in a Tough Market
- Recognizing the Wrong Price for your Home
- Real Estate Price Adjustment Strategy
- How to Sell a Home and then Buy Another
- Moving after Selling your Home
- Module 7: Negotiating and Closing the Sale
- The Residential Purchase Agreement
- What Happens when you get an Offer on your Home
- Negotiating the Sale of your Home
- Top Negotiation Tactics to use when Selling your Home
- The Buyer's Due Diligence
- The Real Estate Closing Timeline
- Delays in the Home Sale Process
- The Buyer's Appraisal in the Purchase Process
- Real Estate Tax Information for Home Sellers
- 1031 Tax-Deferred Exchange
- How much it Costs to Sell a Home
- Module 8: SellForSure System Walkthrough
- Goals of the SellForSure System
- The SellForSure Home Sale System Guarantees
- Traditional Real Estate Marketing Methods
- Active Real Estate Marketing
- Free Home Inspection and Termite Inspection
- SellForSure Pre-Sale Services
- The SellForSure Web Portal Status System
- SellForSure Preparation Phase 1
- SellForSure Preparation Phase 2
- SellForSure Preparation Phase 3
- SellForSure Preparation Phase 4
- SellForSure Preparation Phase 5
- Launching your Home on the Market
- SellForSure System Listing Syndication
- How to Manage Showings on your Home
- Real Estate Open House Events
- The Perfect Home Sale Schedule
- While your Home is on the Market
- The Two Week Review Cycle
- What to Expect Once your Home is Under Contract
- Closing the Sale of your Home
- Module 9: The Realty World Advantage


It’s important to realize what matters and what doesn’t in pricing your home. An area where homeowners get into trouble is that their opinion of their home’s value – or, what they think someone will pay for it – is colored by factors which really have nothing to do whatsoever with how much they can sell it for.
These factors include how much they paid for the home, how much they need to get when they sell the home, or how much money they have spent upgrading the home.

In an episode of Million Dollar Listing New York, Realtor extraordinaire Frederik Eklund tells his client something like: “I paid $2,000 for this suit. Are you going to buy it from me for $2,000?” The answer is no, obviously not. That suit is perhaps worth $2,000 to Frederik, but what’s it worth to someone else?
Even if you could find someone else for whom the suit is a good-enough fit, they might be willing to pay a only couple hundred bucks for a second hand suit – even a nice one. The same is true for virtually every aspect of your home. You know what it’s worth to you, but what’s it worth to someone else?
That is the question, and it needs to be answered objectively. Remember: in most cases, buyers have options. They’re not just looking at your home – they’re looking at lots of homes. They are comparing your home to others, and looking at price, condition, location, and a whole host of other factors before they decide if they even want to drive by your home, much less go inside and then maybe write an offer on it.
You might feel your home is worth a million dollars – but be conscious of the Principle of Substitution. If a buyer has $1,000,000 to spend on a home, are they going to buy your home, or buy the home down the street which is pretty much the same only it’s 1,000 square feet bigger on a double lot?
If you’re asking $500,000 your home, check into what else a buyer can get for that same $500,000 and honestly consider if your home is an equal (or superior) substitute for another which is also asking $500,000. If it’s not, you’ll need to re-examine your expectations for your home’s sale price. No matter the situation, buyers always choose the home that offers the best price, condition, and location for their money.