Welcome back to Real Estate WITHOUT Agents —
the Playbook for Homeowners of the Information Age.
the Playbook for Homeowners of the Information Age.

If you’ve downloaded the Equity Protection Kit, you may have noticed something interesting.
On the Due Diligence & Marketing checklist, the pre-inspection originally appeared later in the sequence.
I moved it up.
Intentionally.
Because experience has taught me where sellers actually lose money and suffer the most headaches.
This step is:
● Relatively affordable
● Widely misunderstood
● Massively underutilized
And it protects more equity, earlier in the process, than almost anything else we’ll discuss.
Yet most sellers skip it.
Which is wild to me!
Because houses are like people.
They’re all a lil bit ‘messed up’. 🙂
You live in your house.
You know its quirks.
You’ve adapted to its rhythms.
You have a running mental list — or maybe a literal honey-do list — of things you’ll “get to eventually.”
You’ve adapted to its rhythms.
You have a running mental list — or maybe a literal honey-do list — of things you’ll “get to eventually.”
Over time, those items stop registering as problems.
Living in a house does not make you objective about it.
Just like feeling healthy doesn’t replace a professional medical checkup.
A licensed, professional home inspector is exactly that:
A neutral, third-party diagnosis.
They don’t love your house.
They don’t rationalize issues away.
They don’t overlook things because “it’s never been a problem.”
They don’t rationalize issues away.
They don’t overlook things because “it’s never been a problem.”
And here is what experience proves, again and again:
It always comes out in the wash.
The only question is when —
and whether you are prepared and in control when it does.
and whether you are prepared and in control when it does.
I think about selling a home the same way I think about pursuing a spousal relationship.
Marketing is the dating stage.
The contract designates the due diligence period as the engagement.
The closing table is where the marriage is consummated.
Most sellers spend all their time getting ready for the first date.
Paint.
Photos.
Staging.
Curb appeal.
Photos.
Staging.
Curb appeal.
Trying to win the first impression.
And science actually supports how fast that happens.
Within the first 7 seconds of pulling up, a buyer makes their initial emotional decision.
Within the next 7 seconds of walking through the front door, they experience their second set of first impressions.
And within roughly 7 minutes of walking around your home, they will have made their preliminary purchasing decision.
Seven minutes and fourteen seconds.
That’s how long the dating stage lasts.
But here’s the part most sellers miss:
You don’t just have to attract someone.
You have to stay attractive once things get serious.
The engagement stage — the inspection stage — is where deals either stabilize or fall apart.
That is when your prospective “mate” decides what is really under the hood.
And a quick side note from experience:
Always underpromise and overdeliver — especially in your photos.
Professional or not.
I cannot tell you how many times I’ve heard buyers walk in and say, with visible disappointment:
“It looked so much better in the photos.”
Expectation gaps create friction.
And friction can be real expensive.
You don’t sell a home once.
You have to sell it three times.
To the Buyer
That’s emotional and sensory.
Chemistry. Vision. First impressions.
That’s emotional and sensory.
Chemistry. Vision. First impressions.
To the Appraiser
That’s logical.
Condition. Comparable sales. Supportable value.
That’s logical.
Condition. Comparable sales. Supportable value.
To the Home Inspector
That’s diagnostic.
Facts. Systems. Cold reality.
That’s diagnostic.
Facts. Systems. Cold reality.
I learned a long time ago that I don’t “sell” homes.
I manage expectations.
If someone gets ‘sold’ on a house, disappointment often follows.
If you oversell during dating, you pay for it during engagement.
A pre-inspection stabilizes all three phases.
Let’s talk about cost.
A professional pre-inspection typically runs $350–$500.
That is not an expense.
That is an informational asset.
And that asset routinely saves sellers:
● Thousands of dollars
● Weeks of stress
● Mid-deal leverage loss
Because here is what happens when sellers skip it.
A buyer tours your home.
They fall in love during the dating stage.
They imagine their life there.
They write an offer.
You agree on a contracted sales price.
Then they shift into engagement mode.
They order an inspection.
The inspector documents:
● Missing GFCIs
● Minor plumbing leaks
● Ungrounded outlets
● Duct inefficiencies
● Drainage concerns
None of this felt urgent when you lived there.
But now it is documented.
And documented issues become leverage.
A $1,200 repair list suddenly feels like a $5,000 concession.
Negotiations tighten.
Deadlines compress.
Equity starts leaking mid-contract.
Most sellers do not lose money at the contracted sales price.
They lose it under pressure.
Not at closing.
Not at signing.
But during engagement, when they weren’t prepared.
A pre-inspection flips the script.
You learn first.
You control:
● Timing
● Repairs
● Disclosure
● Pricing
● Narrative
You decide:
● What must be fixed
● What should be disclosed
● What can be priced accordingly
● What becomes negotiable
For non-critical or subjective items, you can:
● Price intentionally
● Offer allowances
● Neutralize objections before they arise
“Priced accordingly with allowance for buyer-preferred updates.”
That signals transparency and confidence — not weakness.
You are typically obligated to fix:
● Safety issues
● Critical defects
● Repairs you would need to address whether selling or not
Everything else becomes:
Disclosed.
Contextualized.
De-leveraged.
Contextualized.
De-leveraged.
Transparency builds confidence.
Confidence reduces friction.
Friction is expensive.
If you skip the pre-inspection, you will eventually be surprised.
Mid-contract.
Under deadline.
With limited options.
Now you are making decisions to preserve the deal — not to maximize your equity.
That is reacting.
And reacting is optional.
Preparation buys peace.
Two homes.
Same neighborhood.
Same contracted sales price.
Same contracted sales price.
Home A:
Great photos
Polished description
Seller’s disclosure
Polished description
Seller’s disclosure
Home B:
All of the above
Plus:
A recent pre-inspection report
Documented repairs and invoices
Insulation & efficiency improvements
Verifiable utility data
Documented repairs and invoices
Insulation & efficiency improvements
Verifiable utility data
Which one would you feel better about buying for your family?
Confidence beats charm.
Clarity outperforms mystery.
Every time.
Buyers today are:
● More informed
● More skeptical
● More data-driven
They want transparency.
They want assurance.
They want facts.
Doing unto others as you would have them do unto you is not just ethical.
It is profitable.
Mainstream advice pushes:
Paint.
Flooring.
Cosmetic upgrades.
Flooring.
Cosmetic upgrades.
Those are subjective.
High risk.
Low certainty.
Low certainty.
A pre-inspection is:
Measurable.
Objective.
Defensible.
Objective.
Defensible.
It is one of the few investments where logic consistently beats emotion.
If you want to invest the least amount of money to protect the greatest amount of equity…
This is it.
Do this sooner than you think you need to.
Talk to:
Friends
Family
Trusted allies
People in the know
Family
Trusted allies
People in the know
Get referrals for 2–3 licensed, professional home inspectors they would trust with their own purchase.
Log their names and contact information.
Be ready to call them 2–3 months before proactive marketing.
Time gives you:
Options.
Perspective.
Better decisions.
Perspective.
Better decisions.
In the next chapter — The Three Lists That Rule Them All — we turn everything you’ve learned here into more negotiations leverage.
Most real estate agents never ask for these lists.
Most Sellers never even think to put them together.
Yet they are among the most value-adding tools you can assemble before going to market.
And in midstream negotiations, they often become your most formidable leverage.
We build them next.
This Playbook gives you the proper mindset.
The resources give you the system.
The resources give you the system.
If you want a lawful, defensible way to sell Owner-Represented (formerly known as FSBO) without guessing, I’ve built free tools, checklists, and training to help you prepare before negotiations ever begin.
This isn’t traditional FSBO.
It’s Owner-Representation 2.0.
It’s Owner-Representation 2.0.
👉 Free tools & training:
https://www.realestatewithoutagents.com/resources
https://www.realestatewithoutagents.com/resources
Preparation protects equity. Blessings on you & Your House.


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