Marketing your own timber could cost you
By Jim Griffith
A landowner in the process of selling
his timber was recently given my name with instructions to call me. My name was
passed on to this person to help him navigate the harvest and sell of his
timber and to help him get the highest return for his trees. You see that is
what I do. I help landowners get more money in the sale of their trees.
This landowner was not sure if he
wanted to sell as a clear cut or as a select cut. After looking over the property,
I found the landowner had a valuable timber tract. However, the property
consisted of various timber types. I
offered my advice and suggested how he could get the best price for his timber
while achieving the aesthetic result he wanted for the property. As it turned
out, the landowner wanted a free estimate of what he could get for his land and
timber.
This potential client wanted to sell
his timber for the most possible money, which is what we all want when we sell
anything. However, he thought the key to maximizing his profit was by
conducting the sale himself. What he didn’t appreciate is that there’s a big
difference between what an absentee landowner who lives out-of-state can get
for his timber and what I can sell timber for as a professional forester.
Although
the internet can provide worlds of information for a timber owner, such as a
list of buyers, it isn’t the most effective way to market your timber to obtain
you the highest price. Even if you did contact a broad spectrum of timber
buyers, it has been my experience that if you don’t work these buyers, making
personal contact with them and providing information about the property and
timber, they still may not bid on your timber.
The
reasons for not getting your top price can go on and on. For example, the top
bidder on a timber offering may not be a local company or mill. Timber buyers may travel as far as 50 to 100
miles to buy timber. It is not always
the local buyer that is willing to give the best price.
But
most of all, when you collect your bids, how do you know you have attained a
good price for your timber? If you are selling lump sum, it is easy to
determine who the best bid is from, but how do you know it is the best the
market will bear without the help of a professional forester who has used his
knowledge to provide an appraisal of the timber up front, making sure you get
top dollar in the sale of your timber?
Your
Georgia Farm Bureau forester is available to help you get top dollar in the
sale of your land and timber. We have
helped Farm Bureau members put more money in their pocket from the sell of
their timber for 15 years. Before you sell, call Jim Griffith at (478)
747-0812.
Jim
Griffith is general manager of the GFB Timber & Real Estate Companies.