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Safety Tips to Share With Sellers

The NATIONAL ASSOCIATION OF REALTORS® and this organization have worked hard to keep REALTOR® Safety foremost in everyone’s minds. But what about your clients? They, too, face some dangers in allowing strangers into their homes or visiting other people’s properties. 

Share this valuable advice with everyone, and you’ll help them learn to protect themselves against crime:

  • Remind your clients that strangers will be walking through their home during showings or open houses. Tell them to hide any valuables in a safe place. For security’s sake, remember to remove keys, credit cards, jewelry, crystal, furs and other valuables from the home or lock them away during showings. Also remove prescription drugs. Some seemingly honest people wouldn’t mind getting their hands on a bottle of Viagra, uppers or downers.
  • DON’T leave personal information like mail or bills out in the open where anyone can see it. Be sure to lock down your computer and lock up your laptop and any other expensive, easy-to-pocket electronics, like iPods, before your showing.
  • Tell your clients not to show their home by themselves. Alert them that not all agents, buyers and sellers are who they say they are. Predators come in all shapes and sizes. We tell our children not to talk to strangers. Tell your sellers not to talk to other agents or buyers, and to refer all inquiries to you.
  • Instruct your clients that they are responsible for their pets. If possible, animals should be removed during showings. Make clients aware that buyers and agents are sometimes attacked, and the owner will be held liable.
  • At an open house, be alert to the pattern of visitors’ arrivals, especially near the end of showing hours. In some areas, a group of thieves will show up together near the end of the open house and, while a string of “potential buyers” distracts the agent, the rest of the group walks through the house, stealing any valuables they come across.
  • Finally, when you leave a client’s property, whether after an open house or a standard showing, make sure that all doors and windows are locked. Thieves commonly use open houses to scout for valuables and possible points of entry, then return after the agent leaves.
  • Let your clients know that you will take all of the above safety precautions, but that when they return home, they should immediately verify that all doors are locked and all valuables accounted for.

(Source: REALTORSafety911.com; Realty Times; ThinkGlink.com)

Visit NAR’s REALTOR® Safety Web site at www.REALTOR.org/Safety

This article is part of the NATIONAL ASSOCIATION OF REALTORS®’ REALTOR® Safety Resources Kit.

Lisa Mollitor

Lisa Mollitor has twenty five years working with law firms as a paralegal and joined The Critzer Law Firm in 2010. In addition to work in Alabama and Florida, Lisa has training from the Florida Bar and the National Association of Legal Assistants. Acting as the firm's paralegal, she provides both technical and administrative support. She is also a member of the Northwest Florida Paralegal Association. Lisa has been a Florida Registered Paralegal since 2008. Along with diplomas in civil litigation and paralegal honors from Professional Career Development Institute, she has a Bachelor of Arts in medical administration from Huntingdon College in Montgomery, AL. Lisa is also a Licensed Title Agent appointed by Old Republic National Title Insurance Company as well as a Florida Real Estate Agent with World Impact Real Estate. Her education and experience provide the Firm's escrow and closing clients with the knowledge and skills of someone who knows both sides of the closing table. She currently serves on the Governing Board for the Women's Council of Realtors - Emerald Coast Chapter as its newsletter editor. In her spare time, Lisa is a Founding Director of Alaqua Animal Refuge and a previous member of both National Society Daughters of the American Revolution and United Daughters of the Confederacy. She and her daughter Meri Kate enjoy reading, traveling, genealogy, caring for their pets and improving the lives of all animals they encounter.

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