prv
Well-Known Member
I'm a broker so here's some advice if you go down the diy route.
Thanks. Given the advice here so far, I probably will go DIY, but for the record I'm not anti-broker
Great idea to have her antifouled and in the yard. Give her a good polish too and remove as much personal kit as you can. Make her look as inviting as possible to a new owner. Remove any rust on deck fittings and trim any frayed ends on ropes etc. Consider replacing any tired running rigging.
Can't really polish - her topsides finish is hand-painted with a certain texture to it. Sounds awful, and would be on a modern-style yacht, but on a classic-style boat it looks the part (tends to fool people into thinking she's wooden
The plan is to remove all kit that's not included in the sale - much better to say "everything here is included" than faff about with what's staying and what's going. There's enough stuff that I either have duplicates of, would like the opportunity of replacing, or wouldn't be useful on the new boat, that I should be able to sell KS more or less fully-equipped. With the exception of lifejackets, a new buyer ought to be able to sail her off on a delivery trip without any further purchases.
She is in general in pretty good nick on deck - a few minor scratches, stains, filled screw holes etc on the fibreglass as you'd expect on a 20 year old boat, but the rigging is in good order - I wouldn't have it any other way.
ensure she comes up on search engines when people are searching by price or length not just model.
Good point. Not really sure how to reliably achieve that in a non-domain-specific search like Google, but I'll make sure my copy caters to people searching for something other than "Cornish Yawl".
I have a friend who does (or did) SEO type stuff, so might ask for a few pointers from him. I have a rough idea how this kind of stuff works.
Buyers will want original documents with at least five years worth of Bills of Sale. Current in date registration. Original (not copy) VAT invoice showing clear reference to the boat, a VAT number and the amount of VAT accounted for and if applicable the RCD certificate. (usually in the owners manual)
Got bills of sale and current (and previous) SSR. Have the original invoice on Cornish Crabbers' printed form. Boat is too old for RCD, and doesn't have an owners manual (though I'm writing a set of notes on that score to help reassure anyone who's worried that they won't know how to handle the rig)
protect your email address if you can, or set up a new one just for the boat sale.
I've just registered a whole new domain
The big red flag is someone offering to pay unseen, especially if they are gong to pay extra for delivery etc.
Yep, standard for anything advertised online.
Unfortunately there are also a lot of fender kickers around who will start off enthusiastically asking for details and wanting to view and then either not show up or refuse to answer phone calls or emails. It's currently worse than I have ever known it.
That's something I was aware of, but not looking forward to. People who just stop making contact I'm not so bothered about, but for daytime viewings during the week I'm going to have to take time out of the office so a no-show would be quite annoying.
When you get a viewing go down to the boat beforehand, air her and have the lights on and all the instruments running so you can demonstrate them working.
Yep, all obvious stuff. My one concern is that there's no power in the yard, so keeping the battery charged if she's there for a while could be problematic. I use a portable generator for power tools in the winter, but I don't really want to go down there and run it for a day to get a full charge in. May have no option. I also usually take all the cushions etc out for the winter, but would have to leave them in this time as she looks a bit bleak without them.
When you get an acceptable offer use a sale and purchase agreement. Ensure everybody knows at the outset how the deposit and survey time frame will work
Good point. I know how this stuff usually works, but having a written agreement ready is a good idea.
Some buyers are less happy handing over deposits to private individuals they do not know, so you could use a Broker to hold the deposit in Escrow or a Marine Solicitor.
An issue I hadn't considered. Well - I only know one broker
Best of luck.
Thanks
Pete