Thanks Laura!! I am not THAT bad, am I?
Vilma, all of those abrivations that you mention are designations which require additional education and / or professional experience. There are a whole bunch of other ones that are pretty useless in my opinion but CRS, GRI and ABR are good.
CRS = Certified Residential Specialist (a combination of a specified number of course work and a specified number of closed transactions over a certain period)
CRB = Certified Residential Brokerage Manager (course work for brokerage owners or real estate office managers, mostly pertains to training the sales staff)
ABR = Accredited Buyer Representative (3-day class mostly about representing Buyers but gives good legal background on contracts on both sides, has to pass a test)
GRI = Graduate Real Estate Institute (90 hour course work about legal issues, marketing, customer service, internet, etc. has to pass a test)
CRP = Certified Relocation Professional (2 day class about relocation)
In general, agents who have a designation look at real estate as a serious profession and not a side gig where they can make additional money. It is additional education that the majority of agents don't have, I certainly think any education that I have benefits my client as well. ABR is the most common and easiest designation to get. GRI and CRS are a lot more time consuming and involved, also a little more challenging.
I would interview at least 2 or 3 agents. Don't tell them what price you have in mind, have them come up with their own price recommendation.
Questions I would ask (in no particular order):
How long have you been in real estate?
Is this your full time profession?
Do you work by yourself or on a team?
What percentage of your listings sells and in what time frame?
What is your asking price to sales price ratio?
What asking price do you recommend? What do you think it will actually sell for?
What facts / comparable sales to you base your pricing opinion on? (have them document and explain what they base their opinion on - not a pie in the sky number - ask for a CMA (Comparative Market Analysis))
What will you do to sell my house?
What is your marketing plan? (ask for it in writing before you sign any listing contract)
What is your negotiating style?
Do you have references? Can I contact them? (actually call or email the references)
And most importantly, ask them
Why should I hire you? What distinguishes you from other agents?
I think you should look for an agent who is genuinely interested in YOU and building a long-term relationship with you, not only for a quick commission check. I think your best bet would be to find someone who is mostly working by referral. In general, they are not so much interested in the quick buck, but in long-term.
Ask around, talk to neighbors, family, business associates who they recommend. Meet with several agents and ask lots of questions. And be very careful to not fall for the ones that tell you what you want to hear in order to get the listing.
If you can't find anyone through your friends, feel free to email me directly, over the years I have built a pretty large network with agents all over the country.
Sorry, I have to scoot, doctor's appointment for my son to get his cast off. I had typed a long response but accidentially deleted it. There are a few things I wanted to add but I have to be out the door in 3 minutes. Hope this helps for now.