Advice for Sellers > Getting Ready to Sell > Perception Vs. Reality

If you are thinking about selling your home or have already started the process, here are links to articles that may be of particular interest to you.  If you have questions that are not addressed here please give me a call or send me a message.  I'm always happy to help.  Neil Kearney 303-413-6624 Neil@NeilKearney.com    

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You have probably seen the attached picture before - is it a picture of a young women or an old women? The answer is it depends on how you are looking at it. How you perceive it.

 

 

One definition of reality is: "all of your experiences that determine how things appear to you". I agree with this on many levels - I believe you make your own reality and what you know and believe as well as your past experiences effect what is "real" for you. A slum dweller in India has a much different reality than a socialite living in Beverly Hills.

 

The key word in the definition above is experiences. I submit that this definition is not as true as it once was. Don't worry, I will tie in to real estate in a moment.

 

In the past (B.C. through the 19th century), reality was based on what one actually experienced. All inputs to opinion were very localized. For example, when there was a famine, chances were that you were hungry. Perceived reality equaled actual reality. There were no outside forces to sway your perception.

 

During the last century, technology in all of its forms have provided us a wider set of inputs. I guess this is called globalization. We have access to and know more about more subjects. Where we used to just be concerned with our local experience, we now are fed data on an ever-broadening spectrum of subjects. Google (verb) whatever subject you can imagine and have instant access to other's research and opinion's. It is no longer our own experiences that form our perceived reality it is the experiences and knowledge of others.

 

My point is that our perceived reality may not always equal our actual reality due to the influence of non-localized information. I run into people all the time who can't believe the sorry state of our real estate market. The problem is that they have no actual experience with the market, their perceptions are based on outside information. We are used to making the leap from "the market is bad in Las Vegas" to "it must be bad here as well".

 

Right now, the media has plenty of negative news to report. There is blood in the water and the sharks are in a frenzy. Foreclosure's in CA, value loss in Michigan, empty buildings in Florida, etc. Bad news all around, a fact. The problem is that people take that news and equate that news to all other areas. The message is that the market is bad, the conclusion is that the market is bad everywhere.

 

Perception does not always equal reality. Before you make a judgement about the market you need to have a personalized evaluation by a seasoned professional.  Different houses have different answers to the question "how's the market".  It doesn't matter how the market in general is doing, it matters how your home fits into the current market conditions.  Call me to get a view of the market.  From the broad sense to the detailed view. 

Last updated on November 29, 2009 by Neil Kearney