Thursday, February 21, 2013



HomeDex
Housing Statistics

February 2013 Reports
HomeDex
NSDCAR February 2013 HomeDex Reportsprovide January 2013 housing statistics in two separate reports, featuring North San Diego County and full San Diego County statistics. Below is a snapshot of January's housing reportClick on the links below to read the full reports. 
  
  • The median price for all North County home sales - attached and  detached - decreased to $410,000 in January 2013 compared to $425,000 in December 2012.
  • Detached homes in North County decreased 5.01 percent in January 2013 to $465,000 compared to $489,500 in December 2012.
  • The countywide median SFD price decreased 6.01 percent to $360,000 in January 2013 compared to $383,000 in December 2012.
  • The number of North San Diego SFD listings (active and contingent) declined 0.24 percent in January 2013 compared to December 2012.
  • The number of sold North San Diego County SFD units dropped 20.38 percent in January 2013 compared to December 2012. Year-over sold SFD units increased 22.57 percent compared to January 2012.
  • Median days-on-market for single-family detached homes sold in North County decreased to 36 days in January 2013 compared to 48 days in December 2012.
  • The HomeDex affordability percentage for all homes in North San Diego County increased to 44 percent in January 2013, compared to 41 percent in December 2012. 
  

February 2013 FULL County HomeDex Report

Wednesday, February 20, 2013

How To Get More Things Done!


If you’ve ever felt like you can’t find time to get to your list of important things, you’re not alone. New York Times best-selling author Tony Schwarz says almost 75 percent of workers around the world feel disengaged at work and that the "more, bigger, faster" mantra is to blame. We are busier than ever, trying to get more done with fewer resources.
Schwarz suggests everything we do, whether checking email, exercising, or resisting the temptation to eat an extra cookie, often requires thinking, and thinking takes energy. So, if you want to get more done you must actually think less.
Schwarz believes the key to succeeding at this is to make important things automatic, what he calls a ritual. Rituals are highly specific behaviors performed at a specific time. He reports the five rituals that have made the most difference in his life are:
  1. Sticking to a bedtime that ensures he gets at least 8 hours of rest. 
  2. Working out first thing in the morning, whether he feels like it or not.
  3. Starting his workday by doing the most important task first, decided the night before, and working only in 90-minute time blocks with a definite break in between.
  4. Writing down his good ideas immediately, so they aren’t bouncing around in his mind all day, or worse, forgotten entirely. 
  5. When upset by someone or something, he ritually asks how he can see the same set of facts in a more hopeful or empowering way.
Remember, the less you have to think about your goals as you perform the steps to achieve them, the more likely you are to check them off your list.

Thursday, February 14, 2013

4 Things To Do Now To Improve Your Home!

Now's a perfect time of year to create a plan for how you can tweak and hack your home to be a happier place. Here are a few inexpensive suggestions:

1. Paint like a scientist. Studies show that painting rooms colors that are consistent with their purpose actually makes a home's residents happier than they were before the paint job. Spending a weekend shifting to crisp and clean green bathrooms, soothing blue or cream bedrooms, and warm browns, golds, oranges, and reds for dining and living areas turns out to be one of the least expensive ways you can use your home to give your family an emotional boost.

2. Fix (or toss) what's broken. If your coffee machine has been sitting on the counter for four months waiting on a trip to the repair shop, you have drawers that don't close all the way, your dining table wobbles or your shower needs regrouting, you are incurring a little drain of energy, getting a little injection of frustration every single time you look at or try to use these items. Throw out or repair items that don't work -- stat. Just let them go.

Then, create a little inventory for home projects that need to happen, and get a handyman or the appropriate contractors on the horn and get bids so you can budget and plan for getting them done.

If someone in your home is a big do-it-yourselfer, negotiate an agreement that she will have X items fixed by Y date or you will call out a repairperson.

In any event, at least get the bids on the repairs; you might be surprised at how quickly and inexpensively they can get five or 10 little repairs done on a weekend, and your in-house do-it-yourselfer might decide that her time is more precious than the repair costs.

Same goes for situational setups that are simply not working for your life and your activities: If your office space or your kids' rooms are overflowing with clutter, after you purge (see No. 4, below), explore the many built-in and off-the-shelf storage solutions that are affordable and can render this space much more functional.

Generally, get aggressive about setting up each of your home's rooms to help your family optimally experience whatever purpose that room is designed for: Research how you can maximize your bedroom's restfulness, your living room's conversationality, your office's efficiency, and your dining area's coziness.

3. Trick out your trims. If you've ever done a soup-to-nuts remodel of your home's exterior and/or landscaping, you know that there's nothing like the feeling of driving up to your house at the end of the workday and simply loving the way it looks. But what if you don't have a ton of cash to drop on a complete curb appeal overhaul? I believe one of the most underestimated ways to change the way your home looks is to focus on the trims:

•Get a new door or just paint the door and get a new knocker, handle or kickplate.

•Refresh with new house numbers.

•Install exterior shutters, or paint existing shutters an entirely new color.

•Get new outside lights.

•Paint all the eaves and trims in a bold new color scheme.

You'll be amazed; painting a home's front door, eaves, shutters, and trims can make the entire home look like it's had a fresh paint job.

4. Purge. Books, papers, clothing -- these things accumulate as if through their own volition, and can create clutter and claustrophobia, the feeling that you have much less space than you truly do and the feeling of being trapped under a daunting pile of stuff you rarely, if ever, use.

If you crave to purge your stuff and simply seem to never get started make a game of it. Last year, I decided to get rid of 100 things in one month. The number 100 is uber-accessible, and if you give yourself a full month to do it, that can also help you feel confident that this is a mountain you can tackle.

Ultimately, I stopped counting at right around 250 items. The feeling of clearing and the sensory rest all that empty space in your home will create are both addictive sensations -- once you get started, I believe you'll find it easy and even exciting to get rid of things you no longer use or need.

Tara-Nicholle Nelson is a real estate broker, attorney and the author of two critically acclaimed books on real estate.