
Find Out About the Latest Homes for Sale First! We add our newest homes and other real estate listings to this web site first. It can be some time before they appear in the MLS. Find Out More > View All Offers >
|
Compare three mortgages at one time.
Download TripleCalc now. It's free.
|
Mark and Elena Wood--Wood Real
Estate Group are some of The Top Selling Real Estate Experts Find Out More > |
|
|
 |
|
The Best Princeton & Mercer County, NJ and Newtown & Bucks County, PA Web
Sites |
|
Chambers of Commerce/Visitor Bureaus |
Local
Government |
|
|
|
|
News
and Media |
Local
School District/Colleges |
|
|
|
|
Health Care |
Fitness |
|
|
|
|
Transportation/Local Airport |
|
|
|
Request Our Free Princeton & Mercer County, NJ and Newtown & Bucks County, PA Relocation Package. Request our Free Princeton & Mercer County, NJ and Newtown & Bucks County, PA Relocation Package. It's packed full of useful and important information about the Princeton & Mercer County, NJ and Newtown & Bucks County, PA area. Don't move here without it! Are you new to the area? Request our FREE Princeton & Mercer County, NJ and Newtown & Bucks County, PA package of relocation information. It's our job to help! There's no obligation, and we promise to respond quickly... 
Accepting An Offer >Responding to Low Offers
The beginning of negotiations is usually the end of many months of hard work for the buyer or seller. The work ahead requires skill in order to maintain a strong position.
Sellers can lose their advantage if they do not counter an offer that a buyer has made. Even if the opening offer is beneath what the seller feels is reasonable, it is advisable for the seller to respond with a slight reduction from the asking price. The most important component in negotiating is good communication.
The best way to handle a low offer is to counter it with definite terms that are favorable to the seller. A counter offer has two advantages: 1) it keeps the buyer interested, and 2) it moves the negotiation forward and gives the buyer the opportunity to submit another offer that the seller is more likely to prefer.
|
| Q |
What was the longest distance a building has ever been moved?
|
| A |
Detroit's five-story Gem Theater, built in 1927, was moved 1,850 feet (5 blocks) to make way for two new sports stadiums. |
See More Real Estate Trivia > |
|
|
|
|