
About the Area. Click here for information about Property Taxes, School Info, State and local offices, transportation and more.

Georgetown Historical Courthouse
Click here: About Georgetown
Active Adult Communities in Georgetown - Click Here

Click here: About Leander TX
Texas Comptroller: The Economic Recessioin is Over

Check out this great 7 minute video about the Texas Economy, Population growth and much more. Some amazing information: The TexaPlex 2- Click here
Sedlor Properties: Commercial & Residential Real Estate Services:
-
Commercial
-
Investment Property
-
Professional office space- Sale or Lease
-
Retail
-
Residential
-
Re-Sale or New
-
Single or Mulitfamily
-
Farm and Ranch
-
Land and Lots
Call or email 512-517-8241 Bob@SedlorProperties.com
1701 Williams Drive
Georgetown, TX 78628
Phone: (512) 517-8241
Contact Page
About the Agents Role
Click here for: Information About Brokerage Services
Capital Investment in Medical and BioTech Fields: Are we witnessing the emergence of a new "Medical Triangle?" Click Here
How to put out a Kitchen Grease Fire. Check out this Informative Video
Southern Living - 10 adventures in the Texas Hill Country - Click Here
Monthly Review of the Texas Economy - Click Here
Counter-Offer Strategies
The art of the deal is negotiating. The goal, when you're countering a buyer's offer, is to get the highest price and best terms possible. Once you reject the initial offer, you must decide how much to counter. The answer is easy when the market is hot. You will counter at full price or more.
If the market is normal, you may receive less than full price for your property. In this case, one strategy would be to set your asking price higher than normal. How much lower than your asking price will you counter-offer?
Beware of Setting a Minimum Counter Price.
Setting a firm minimum counter price is a big mistake that some sellers make. Depending on the deal and the buyer your counter offer should be flexible. For example, after investigating the market, you set your asking price at $350,000. Your minimum price may be $320,000. If you are offered your minimum, you sell. If you are offered lower, you don't sell. It sounds simple.
Unfortunately, in this mindset, you box yourself into a limited deal. You want to be flexible when negotiating. Let us review our last example. The buyer offers $300,000. The seller rejects and counters with the minimum of $320,000.
The buyer counters with $305,000 again. Where do you go from here? You have already offered your lowest minimum counteroffer. The only recourse would be to repeat your same offer.
One strategy would be to counter lower at $315,000. Or what if the buyer is willing to pay more than your minimum?
The buyer might be willing to pay $330,000. You will actually have lost money again by countering too low.
There are housing situations where you are just lucky to be paying off the mortgage, commission, and closing costs. You might be offered a little less but you accept to some cash to save your credit. In this case, setting a minimum price would be reasonable.
If you do feel the need to set a minimum counter price, don't set it in stone.
Try to Get a Sense of the Buyer
Your counteroffer is not the final transaction. It is one step in the negotiating process. You counter. The buyer will counter your offer. You will then counter back. This process will repeat until the a deal is made.
Therefore, your counteroffer should not be your best and lowest. The buyer's first offer is usually a low-ball offer. A seller's first counter is a high-ball offer. Both parties are testing to see how the other will respond.
Let the buyer know you are willing to negotiate. You ask $340,000, the buyer offers $300,000. You counter $335,000. You must also send the message that you are not willing to drop your price too much.
Some buyers will cave and accept the counteroffer and others will not. Anytime you reject and counter, you are opening negotiations but you are also taking the risk of losing the deal.
There are some buyers who are just looking for a desperate seller. They make a lot of low-ball offers until they find the property. You are not going to find a good price with that type of buyer.
Others will counter with close to what they originally offered, in this case say $305,000 (now you're still $30,000 apart).
What if You're Close Together in Price?
After a few counters, You are only a few thousand dollars apart. You countered at $335,000 and the buyer countered back at $330,000. Now you're only $5000 apart. Should you accept the buyer's counter?
You can simply accept the deal. Another strategy would be to tell the buyer or the agent the you want to split the difference. They accept. You will then have sold your property at $332,500.
Splitting the difference can be an effective way of closing out negotiations to bring about a win-win situation.
What If You're Far Apart?
You counter at $335,000 and the buyer counters at $305,000. You're $30,000 apart. That's serious money.
There are only two ways of handling this situation. You could hold your original counter. The buyer would understand that this is your final offer. This could be a deal breaker. If you are highly motivated to sell, a steep decline of your price would get the ball rolling again. You counter at $320,000 saying this is your best but last offer.
This action could spark the buyer's interest. He/She could accept or at least make a higher counteroffer.
Is There a Time to Walk Away?
There are only two reasons to walk away from negotiations. You are truly angry and will not lower your price.
The second is for effect. You are willing to take less, but you want the buyer to think you've made your last, best offer. You say, "Take my last offer or leave it. I'll give you an hour to decide."
As a tactic, walking away can start negotiations. You could get your price or lose the deal.
There are no guarantees when negotiating real estate. The final outcome is often determined by the following percentages:
10%--how good you are at negotiating
45%--how motivated you are to sell
45%--how motivated the buyer is to purchase
100%--luck
| Weekly Mortgage Rates | |
Freddie Mac National Averages | |
| 30 Yr Fixed | 3.87% |
| 15 Yr Fixed | 3.14% |
| 5 Yr Fixed | 2.80% |
| 1 Yr Fixed | 2.76% |

Coming Soon: New listing in Sun City: Click Here
For Sale, 4 bedrooms, 3 baths on one acre in Georgetown's premier gated community: Click Here

For Sale - Hubels Bier Garden in Historic Smithville. Click Here

Free standing commercial building for sale or lease. Previosly used as an assisted living facility. Zoned OF - Click here
Farm and Ranch Land
Large Tracts: from 11 acres to 460 acres - Click Here
Build on your Lot: 5 to 30 acre tracts available - Click here
Homes With Acreage
For Sale: 3383 SF Home on 1 acre , 3383 SF, 4 bedrooms, loft in Desirable Gabriel's Overlook
Sold - Gorgeous 3029 SF home on 5 acres. 5 Bedrooms, 4.5 Baths. Bring the kids and horses. Click Here
Sold - Upscale Westlake at the Woods. 3420 Sf, 4 bedrooms, 3.5 baths, 1.2 Acres. Click Here
Visit our Custom Search Results page here. Updated daily with available Acreage Homes or Farm and Ranch property
Acreage or Equestrian Communities
Interested in the Condo Lifestyle? Downtown Austin and Georgetown - Click here
Interested in Multifamily or Duplex as an owner occupant or investment? Click here
Build Your Home on the North San Gabriel River
Stone House Estates features: Acreage lots, Ideal for Horses, River Frontage, Click Here
Real Estate & Business News
- Sun City 16 years in Georgetown
- Retire Here, Not There
- Texas Comptroller: The Recession is Over
- Home prices still falling but NOT in Austin
- The Next Big Boom Towns in the U.S.
- Eminent Domain Bill Becomes Law
- Texas Joins 12 Nations with Trillion Dollar Economies
- Forbes ranks Austin the Best City for Jobs
- Austin Add Jobs, Unemployment Down
- Austin, 2nd Best Job Market in the U.S.
- Texas Tax Burden Among Nation's Lowest
- Texas Adds 47,900 jobs in October
- CNBC's Top States For Business 2010—And The Winner Is Texas
- Formula 1 Grand Prix coming to Austin
- Beware of Scammers
- Why Texas May Lead the Nation's Turnaround
- National Real Estate News
- Real Estate Videos For Your Location
- Austin Real Estate Market Conditions
- Business Journal
- Texas Market Reports
- Community Impact
- Hill Country News
- Austin American Statesman
- Texas A&M Real Estate Center
- Bob's Blog on Active Rain
- Bob's Blog on Google
- Monthly Newsletter
Sedlor Properties: This website was designed to be a very comprehensive source of residential and commercial real estate and area information. Please explore and bookmark it, and visit it often. As always, your feedback and suggestions for ways to improve the content or layout is appreciated. Contact Information
Georgetown TX Homes Commercial Real Estate, Austin TX Real Estate, Georgetown TX Residential Real Estate, Sun City TX Homes, Austin Homes for Sale, Austin area Land and Lots, Surrounding areas:




Equal Housing Opportunity |