Why Your Home Didn't Sell the First Time (And How to Fix It)

Most sellers whose homes come off the market without selling will tell you it was the market. Bad timing. Wrong season. Rates were too high. Buyers weren't serious.

These explanations feel better than the actual reason, which is usually one of three things: the price was wrong, the presentation was poor, or the marketing was lazy. Sometimes all three.

Here's how to fix it.

The phone stopped ringing

When a home is priced right in line with the comparable homes, the phone rings. Buyers call, agents request showings, and there’s activity. But if the phone goes quiet early, if showings dry up in the first two weeks, that’s the market telling you something. Buyers today are informed and they’re browsing dozens of homes at once. If yours feels even slightly overpriced relative to what else is out there, they simply move on without ever picking up the phone.

The price was testing the market, not meeting it

If your home was priced to see what might happen rather than priced to actually sell, it was always going to struggle. That usually means the number was chosen to satisfy the seller, not to reflect where buyers were actually willing to take action! Then you spend six weeks discovering what the market had already made obvious from the start.

If your home did not sell, go back and look at the comparable sales from the last 60 days properly. The actual sale prices. Where does your home sit against those? If it is ten or fifteen percent above them, that is not a marketing problem. That is your answer.

Buyers notice homes that sit. They start assuming there is a problem, so relaunching at the right number, with fresh presentation usually gives you a much better chance.

The presentation didn't justify the price

I've seen genuinely lovely homes in Sherman Oaks and Studio City sit because the listing photos were taken in poor light with clutter still visible. Buyers form an opinion from their phones before they ever schedule a showing. If the photography doesn't make them want to see more, they won't.

If your home didn't sell, look at the photos honestly. Would you click on them? Would you book a showing based on what you're seeing?

If the answer is no, that's fixable. New photography, proper staging, and a weekend of serious decluttering and cleaning can completely change how a home presents. This isn't expensive relative to what's at stake.

The marketing was formulaic

Most listing presentations look identical. Professional photos, MLS distribution, social media posts, open house. That's the baseline. It's not differentiation.

If your home didn't sell, ask what the marketing strategy actually was beyond the basics. Was there targeted digital advertising? Was the home positioned in a way that told a story about why someone would want to live there? Was it distributed beyond the usual channels?

The homes that generate serious buyer interest are marketed intentionally. The ones that sit are marketed like every other listing.

What a relaunch actually looks like

Address whatever was holding it back. If it's price, reprice correctly. If it's presentation, invest in staging and new photography. If it's condition, fix the deferred maintenance that kept showing up in buyer feedback.

Relaunch with intention. Treat it like a new listing. New photos, a refreshed description, a coordinated weekend launch. Create the sense that this is a new opportunity, not a second chance at something buyers already passed on.

If you're thinking about relaunching and want an honest assessment of what went wrong and what needs to change, get in touch.

Anj Catalano, The Agency  |  310.404.6955  |  hello@anjinla.com

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