Author Archives: rmheditor


Finding Tenants: 12 Creative Rental Marketing Strategies

Creative rental marketingAs any experienced landlord will tell you, vacant rentals are expensive. Assuming you have a mortgage to pay, it’s likely that any vacancy lasting more than a couple of months will essentially cost you a full year’s profit on your rental.

Given this reality, skilled property managers use a diverse range of marketing tactics in order to fill vacant rentals within 30 to 60 days. Here are some professional tips and tricks that you can use to find a qualified tenant within a comparable amount of time:

Use Great Signage

One of the easiest, most cost-effective ways to attract interest in your property is to create good “for rent” signage. “Good signage”:

  • Looks professional: We’ve all seen the “for rent by owner” sign that features sloppy handwriting scrawled on a piece of scrap plywood, which is then propped haphazardly against the mailbox. While this certainly is eye-catching, it doesn’t leave the best impression of you or your rental. Typical “for rent” signs are available at hardware stores, but they don’t leave much room to include information. For best results, consider ordering an inexpensive, custom-made sign from a service such as BuildASign.com.
  • Is visible from the street: Take a cue from professional realtors and make sure to locate a sign near the street. You can use a reader board for this purpose. If you really want to go for the gusto, attach some balloons to your sign.
  • Contains key rental property details: Be sure to include key information such as how many bedrooms the house has, what the monthly rent is, and whether utilities are included. A phone number and email address round out the “must have” information. If you have the space, you can list other key features, such as recent upgrades and other attractive amenities.

Tap Your Network

Professional rental agents aren’t shy about putting the word out when they have a new rental property available, and you shouldn’t be either. Take advantage of your circle of acquaintances to generate some free, or low-cost, advertising.

  • Email friends and family: While other means of contacting your nearest and dearest are okay, too, email’s key benefit is that it can be easily passed on. Be sure to include some photos of the rental house, along with a compelling description of its features. With any luck, your mail will forwarded on to one or more potential tenants.
  • Send postcards to the neighbors: Have 100 postcards made and mail them to all the neighbors within a few-block radius of the home for rent. These people have a vested interest in putting a responsible tenant in your property, and beyond that, may jump at the chance to recommend that a friend move close by.
  • Put up flyers at local businesses: This technique is an oldie but a goodie. Find community bulletin boards where you can post flyers. Grocery stores, coffee shops, and community centers are logical targets. If you live near a college or university, don’t forget the student center and/or admissions office.

Use the Internet

There are multiple ways to use the internet to advertise your available rental:

  • Time your Craigslist ads: A recent Zillow study shows that houses listed on a Friday get many more viewing, and sell much faster than, houses listed on other days. No doubt, the same holds true for rental houses. Don’t be afraid to repost your ad several times—most professional rental agents do.
  • Create a website for your rental: Applications such as WordPress make it easier than ever to create a website in an hour or two—so why not make a site dedicated to showing off your house. If you use targeted keywords (including the terms “rental house,” “house for rent,” and your area), you’ll likely get some traffic.
  • Post a video tour on YouTube: Create a short video tour of your rental house and post it on YouTube, making sure to use targeted keywords in the image tags. You can make the video part of the website, and/or point to it from your Craigslist ad and social media accounts.

Open Your House

By far the most convincing way to sell potential tenants on the prospect of renting your house is to let them view it. While this can certainly be done by individual appointment, the more opportunities you give the casually curious to view the rental, the more interest you’ll create. Here are some creative ways to attract viewings:

  • Leave the blinds open: If you’ve got the “for rent” sign up, and no cars are parked in the driveway, it’s likely pretty obvious that your rental house is vacant—so why not go ahead and pull the curtains back and let curious passersby have a look?
  • Host a social event at the house: Whether this takes the form of a party or a garage sale, having people over increases only helps your chances of renting your house quickly.
  • Time your open house right: If you do decide to have a traditional Sunday afternoon open house, time your event to start an hour earlier or end an hour later than local open houses are traditionally held. That way you’ll create a window in which you can have the open-house going crowd all to yourself.
| November 28, 2011 More

Is Renting My House Right for Me?

rental house

Trying to decide if becoming a landlord is in your future? With the house prices continuing to sag and the rental market heating up, many homeowners are considering taking the plunge.

Whether you need to move for a job, have inherited a house, are contemplating rental-house ownership as an investment strategy, or simply want to move without losing money in the sale of your current home, renting your home may be the right option for you.

While the pros and cons surrounding the “sell or rent” decision are somewhat unique to each homeowner, here are some factors to consider:

1) Local rental market trends

Do some research, or check with a local rental agent, to assess the demand for rentals in your area. In many markets, factors such as a major slow-down in new multifamily housing construction, high foreclosure rates (and displaced homeowners) and home price instability (which discourages new buyers from taking the plunge) have combine with factors such as continued job availability and population growth to produce a high demand for rental properties and low vacancy rates. This in turn has produced a health spike in rental prices, which can be good news for your bottom line.

2) Your profit margin

In addition to gathering rental market data, assess your personal numbers. If you’re considering renting your house as a long-term investment strategy, evaluate the return-on-investment (ROI) as you would any other investment. For example, let’s say you have a $50,000 equity stake in a house worth $200,000, and a monthly payment, including property taxes, of $1100.00. If you can rent the house for $1450 per month, that’s a monthly profit of $350 per month, or $4,200 for the first year. Let’s also assume the house appreciates in value by 2% during the first year, for an additional $4,000 in profit, bringing your total profit to $8,200. Now add the the $13,200 you made in mortgage payments for the year to your original $50,000 investment, for a total of $63, 200. When you divide $8,200 by $63,200, you see that the ROI based on your gross profit is about 13%. Even factoring in budget for maintenance and vacancies, you’re likely looking at a return 8-10% per year. Not bad.

3) Your investment time-frame

Depending on your situation, renting out your house can be a rock-solid financial investment. It can also, however, tie up a great deal of your cash, while requiring significant management overhead relative to other investments. Most successful rental property owners are in the business for the long haul. While it’s uncertain whether house prices will increase over three-to-five years, they will almost certainly increase substantially over the next ten-to-twenty years.

4) Your rental management plan

If your rental property is profitable enough to allow you to hire a property management company, which generally costs between  8-15% of your monthly rent (or $116 to $217 per month for the above example), you’re all set. Property management companies can handle all aspects of your rental management—from marketing your property and screening tenants, to managing the ongoing day-to-day responsibilities, such as collecting rent and handling maintenance. If you’re not able/unwilling to hire a rental management company, be prepared to spend 10-15 hours a month taking care of various chores related to your rental property. Even if you have dream tenants, you’ll still have basic home maintenance to take care of, as well as all the bookkeeping that goes along with running your income property business.

5) Local real estate market

If you’re living in an area that was hit hard by the recent economic downturn, and where it seems like the road to recovery is a long one, you may not be well-served by hanging onto your real estate. On the flip-side, there are many markets where the near future looks hopeful, if not downright rosy.

In conclusion, the decision to rent your house out is a personal one that depends on many individual factors. In order to accurately assess the likely profitability of the venture, your best bet is to contact a local real estate agent and a local property manager. Each of these professionals will be able to give you housing market insight that will give you a much clearer picture of whether or not renting your house is right for you.

| October 27, 2011 More

Should I Hire a Property Manager?

It’s often difficult for new landlords to decide whether or not to hire a property manager to help them fill vacancies, manage tenant relationships, and maintain their rental property. Many assume that hiring someone to manage their rental property will cost a lot of money, which is especially unattractive to those who have become landlords through circumstances such as not being able to sell their home.

In reality, though, hiring a property manager can actually not only save you time, but money as well. While they generally only charge 8-15% of your monthly rent in exchange for their services (which amounts to $96.00-180.00 on a $1200/month rental, for example), hiring a management company allows you to delegate all the work association with owning a rental.

Tasks that property management companies typically handle include:

  • Finding and screening tenants
  • Drawing up lease agreements
  • Collecting rent
  • Property maintenance, including the hiring and supervising of outside contractors as needed
  • Emergency response
  • Conducting periodic property inspections
  • Handling lease violations/evictions as needed
  • Accounting
  • Preparing annual tax statements

If all of that sounds like a lot of work, that’s because it is. If you choose to manage your own rental property, plan to set aside at least 10-12 hours a month to devote to these tasks, keeping in mind that you’ll essentially be “on call” to deal with some of these things as they arise, as opposed to being able to take care of them when it’s convenient for you.

 

 

 

| October 26, 2011 More