Tag Archives: Pound Ridge Real Estate
How to set the mood for showings | Pound Ridge NY Real Estate
What does it take to have a successful buyer showing? There’s much you can do to set the stage, not only when you are the listing agent, but when you are the buyer’s agent as well.
The basics
Whenever possible meet the buyers at the office, especially on first time appointments. This reinforces your professionalism. Furthermore, if something makes you uncomfortable about being alone with the buyers, it’s easier to cancel the appointment when other people are present.
When your buyers arrive, greet them warmly and give them the itinerary for the day. Since most buyers expect you to drive, plan on taking your car unless you are a poor driver. Your car must be immaculate. Store your broker paraphernalia in the trunk. If you’re uncomfortable driving, let the buyers know ahead of time so they won’t be surprised.
Consumer Price Inflation | Pound Ridge Real Estate
Going Paperless in Real Estate – The Beginner’s Guide | Pound Ridge Realtor
How to Store Potatoes in Your Garden | Pound Ridge Real Estate
Real Housewife of Miami faces foreclosure | Pound Ridge Real Estate
We keep saying it, and it’s true: Foreclosure is not just for the middle-class or the average, working citizens who fall on hard times.
Many borrowers who are somewhat cash-liquid also end up facing foreclosure.
Karent Sierra, 38, appeared to the public on The Real Housewives of Miami to play the independent businesswoman who doesn’t need a husband to support her two mortgages, which carry a total balance of $870,000. Or maybe she does?
A gossip rag out of Miami claims the reality TV star is at risk of losing two Miami homes.
She is apparently worth $5 million, according to published reports.
No word on whether this is a strategic default …
REALTORS® Confidence Index: REALTOR® Comments | Pound Ridge Real Estate
10 Tips from Literature to Turn Your Blog into a Masterwork | Pound Ridge Realtor
There are three parts to a really great blog post. Thinking, writing and editing.
“Thinking” is where you need to start if you want to write that article. Thinking abhors a vacuum. The inspiration has to come from reading journeys that stir the neurons and stimulate the emotions.
Stephen King said. “If you want to be a writer, you must do two things above all others: read a lot and write a lot.”
“Writing” is doing the work. Putting pen to paper and fingers to the keyboard.
Maugham reckoned another, deeper truth: that by performing the mundane physical act of sitting down and starting to work, he set in motion a mysterious but infallible sequence of events that would produce inspiration, as surely as if the goddess had synchronized her watch with his. He knew if he built it, she would come.
So strap yourself in, turn off the social networks, close down your email and start the mundane action.
“Editing” is both painful and joyful.
It involves wrangling the words and phrases into shape so that it says what you mean and means what you say. Removal and banishment of visible thoughts is the art of editing.
It was William Faulkner who said, “In writing, you must kill your darlings.”
You gave birth to them and your emotional investment is high. You have become attached.
So take some advice from the best writers about thinking, writing and editing your blog.
Think
“Writing is thinking on paper” – William Zinsser, Author of “On Writing Well”
1. People who think well write well.
The tall, slim and elegant original Mad Man, David Ogilvy, famously said, “Wooly minded people write woolly minded memos, woolly letters and woolly speeches.” And of course, nowadays they write woolly blogs and woolly content as well. Take some time to research, plan and think about what you will write.
2. Write what you know … or what you want to know
Forget the rule “write about what you know”. Instead, write about what you’d like to know, or what you need to know to succeed. English author Michael Morpurgo recommends seeking out an area of expertise that will enhance your understanding of the world and write about that. Blogging is a perfect opportunity to learn all the things you’ve ever wanted to know. The world is a big place and there are a lot of people out there wondering the same things as you.
3. Write what you’d like to read
“If you wouldn’t read it why would anyone else?” – Hilary Mantel
If you blog about something you would love read chances are you will find readers who feel the same. Best to write only when you have something to say because if you wouldn’t read it, neither will they.
Write
“Write. Put one word after another. Find the right word. Put it down.” – Neil Gaiman
4. Get on with it
British Author Helen Simpson is typical of many established writers. The only rule she follows is a quote scribbled on a post it note stuck to her computer. It says “Faire et se taire” which Google translates as ‘Be silent and do’. Simpson interprets it as “Just shut up and get on with it.”
5. Trust the Gush
“Don’t look back until you’ve written an entire draft” – Will Self
Like the girl in the scary urban legend, if you look back you might see something to make you panic. While it may not be your boyfriend’s head on a stick, the inexorable dread of reviewing what you have just written can be just as frightening.
Welsh writer Sarah Waters describes it as a “bowel-curdling terror”, as she contemplates “the drivel on the screen and sees beyond it, in quick succession, the derisive reviews, the friends’ embarrassment, the failing career, the dwindling income, the repossessed house, the divorce . . “
This from a famous and respected writer…. Don’t look back.
6. Be Unique. Be a real person
“Each of you is an original. Each of you has a distinctive voice. When you find it, your story will be told. You will be heard” – John Grisham
Finding your own voice is an ongoing quest for most writers. That means letting go of the edge and discarding the beige voice prized by business, government and academic institutions. William Zinsser calls it “standing out among the robots”. In this case the robots are the content mills and bloggers churning out posts that nobody wants to read.
7. Go to the movies
“Don’t tell me the moon is shining; show me the glint of light on broken glass”. – Anton Chekhov
Readers understand much better when they can “see” what you are talking about; it’s called painting a word picture. Bloggers can learn from the movies. Novelist Rose Tremain suggests using cinema as a guide to being economic with descriptions, using telling (rather than lifeless) detail and dialogue that people would actually speak. Think cinematically.
8. Talk to a friend
Jonathan Franzen imagines chatting to a friend as he taps his novels on his keyboard. James Patterson takes it a step further. He imagines a friend who looks ready to get up at any moment and only the intrigue of the story is keeping him there. Every sentence counts.
Edit
“Editing is everything. Cut until you can cut no more. What is left often springs to life.” – Esther Freud
That friend can stay only until the editing process. Zadie Smith recommends saying goodbye quickly, figuratively replacing her with a stranger, or even better with an enemy, to read the work with the most critical eye possible.
9. Cut out the boring parts and delete unnecessary words
“I try to leave out the parts that people skip.” Elmore Leonard
Vigorous writing is concise. Avoid redundant words and flowery phrases. As a first step remove every “very”, “actually” and “extremely”. Remove any part that you know readers will want to skip.
10. Don’t be afraid to change your mind
“Good ideas are often murdered by better ones.” Roddy Doyle
Sometimes what you are really writing about only becomes apparent after you start writing. Roddy Doyle was working on a novel about a band called the Partitions. Then he decided to call them The Commitments.
The final word on this blog post goes to G.K Chesterton, known during his heyday in early 20th CenturyBritain as a man of “colossal genius”.
“I owe my success to having listened respectfully to the very best advice, and then going away and doing the exact opposite.”
Guest Author: Margaret Pincus works in digital communications and also teaches writing/journalism at Griffith University. She blogs at bloghappy.com.au
Want to learn how to create great content for your blog?
My book – “Blogging the Smart Way – How to Create and Market a Killer Blog with Social Media” – will show you how.
It is now available to download. I show you how to create and build a blog that rocks and grow tribes, fans and followers on social networks such as Twitter and Facebook. It also includes dozens of tips to create contagious content that begs to be shared and tempts people to link to your website and blog.
I also reveal the tactics I used to grow my Twitter followers to over 139,000.
36
inShare
Home Prices Expected to Rise at least 3.3 Percent Annually though 2017 | Pound Ridge Homes
Home Prices Expected to Rise at least 3.3 Percent Annually though 2017
The housing recovery is expected to grow at an annualized rate 0.6 percent through the third quarter of this year, then gain momentum and prices are projected to grow 3.7 percent between the third quarters of 2013 and 2014 until settling down to 3.3 percent annual increases over the next three years according to Fiserv, a financial services technology provider using data from the Federal Housing Finance Agency (FHFA).
Both home prices and home sales volumes increased steadily last year, making 2012 the first positive year for both prices and sales since the housing market crash, excluding gains induced by the home buyer tax credits in 2009 and 2010.
“Although some recent real estate activity has been speculative, it seems as if buyers have more realistic expectations about housing market returns after having lived through the largest housing market crash in U.S. history”
“2012 was the first year since 1997 that the housing market has resembled something recognizable as normal. For the past 15 years, home price changes and sales volumes have either been boosted by a bubble mentality or crushed by crash psychology,” said David Stiff, chief economist, Fiserv. “Back in 1997, housing prices grew 3 percent, just below the 5 percent long-term average rate of appreciation. From 1998 to 2006, prices appreciated at levels above 5 percent, with double-digit price increases in many of those years. Then, after 2006, the market collapsed as euphoria turned to panic. It took until the end of 2011 before housing markets finally started to stabilize. The latest Case-Shiller results show a return to a historically normal pace of price appreciation in the last year.”
The recovery in home prices has been solid and broad-based. At the end of the 2012 third quarter, prices were rising in approximately 62 percent of all U.S. metro areas, compared to 12.5 percent in the same period a year ago. Average U.S. home prices increased 3.6 percent from the third quarter of 2011 to the comparable period of 2012. Many of the metro areas that suffered the most severe declines during the housing market crash enjoyed the highest price increases in that period.
Fiserv Case-Shiller projects that by the end of 2013, home prices will be rising in nearly every metro area in the U.S. Some markets may experience short-term double-digit price jumps that could be partially reversed by price declines as large tranches of bank-owned inventory (REO) are liquidated. In other markets, price appreciation will slowly return to normal rates as home buyers regain confidence that the market has found its footing.
Stiff cautioned that the parallels to previous years should not be overstated. Unlike in 1997, there are millions of homes with delinquent mortgages, in the foreclosure process, or in REO inventories listed for sale or waiting to be sold. But many trends are positive. With both prices and mortgage payments at historic lows relative to income, Fiserv Case-Shiller expects stronger demand for housing, and the sector once again having a positive impact on the economy.
“The number of new housing units being built per household is near a record low. As momentum in the housing market builds, we will see the residential real estate sector once again make large contributions to the economic recovery. If residential investment – which encompasses all direct spending on residential real estate construction and activity – returns to its 1997 level over the next two years, then housing will boost overall economic growth by 0.5 percentage points in 2013 and 2014,” Stiff continued.
“In all of the bubble-crash markets, foreclosures will have a persistent but diminishing drag on price appreciation. Since the timing of the disposition of foreclosed properties can be highly uncertain, we will witness choppy price movements as individual metro markets stabilize. For example, in late 2011, prices in Atlanta dropped sharply because of a substantial jump in REO sales, and it is possible that we will see similar, temporary price declines in other markets as subsiding waves of foreclosed properties buffet these markets. In other markets, investor demand is quickly absorbing listed REO properties, and as a result, foreclosures are no longer pulling home prices downward,” Stiff said/
The Fiserv Case-Shiller Indexes, which include data covering thousands of zip codes, counties, metro areas and state markets, are owned and generated by Fiserv. The historical and forecast home price trend information in this report is calculated with the Fiserv proprietary Case-Shiller indexes, supplemented with data from the FHFA. The historical home price trends highlighted in this release are for the 12-month period that ended September 30, 2012. One-year forecasts are for the 12 months ending on September 30, 2013. The Fiserv Case-Shiller home price forecasts are produced by Fiserv and Moody’s Analytics.




