A Clearer Way to Compare Real Estate Offers
What Is a Structured Real Estate Marketplace?
A structured real estate marketplace is designed to create a more organized way to review buyer interest, compare terms, and evaluate different paths before making a decision.
Instead of relying on a single negotiation, sellers may review multiple offers within a defined timeframe and compare:
- Pricing
- Financing strength
- Contingencies
- Closing timelines
- Buyer credibility
- Flexibility of terms
Why these offers are different
Selling a property is not always as straightforward as comparing prices.
Two offers with similar numbers may carry very different levels of certainty, timing, and execution risk. Some buyers move quickly and close reliably. Others may renegotiate later, request repairs, or fail to secure financing.
Many sellers are also comparing very different offer types without a clear way to evaluate them.
- cash offers
- financed offers
- flexible closing arrangements
- contingency-heavy offers
- alternative financing structures
Defining a Structured Real Estate Marketplace
It is a seller-focused offer review process designed to expose a property to multiple potential buyers within a defined review window so opportunities can be evaluated side by side.
- price
- timelines
- contingencies
- financing certainty
- buyer qualifications
- overall transaction strength
How the Process Typically Works
Property Review
Property details are collected and organized for buyer evaluation.
Market Exposure
The opportunity is presented to qualified buyers during a scheduled review period.
Offer Submission
Interested buyers may submit pricing, timelines, contingencies, financing details, and other terms.
Side-by-Side Comparison
Sellers can review opportunities together instead of negotiating with one buyer at a time.
This may help sellers better understand:
- Buyer seriousness
- Offer flexibility
- Transaction certainty
- Differences in execution risk
Seller Decision
The seller decides whether an offer aligns with their goals and circumstances.
Participation does not require acceptance of an offer.
Why Offer Comparison Matters
- financing uncertainty
- extended timelines
- inspection contingencies
- renegotiation risk
- delayed closing potential
- stronger financial certainty
- fewer contingencies
- faster execution
- simpler transaction terms
14days is designed to help sellers evaluate these differences more clearly rather than focusing on price alone.
How This Differs From Other Real Estate Models
Structured offer comparison is often confused with other real estate approaches, even though the models operate differently.
Traditional One-Buyer Negotiations
Traditional negotiations often involve reviewing one buyer at a time.
A structured review model allows sellers to compare multiple opportunities during the same evaluation window.
Direct Cash Buyers
Direct buyers typically purchase properties themselves.
14days is designed around comparing offers from different buyers rather than making a direct purchase offer.
Wholesaling
Wholesaling models commonly involve securing contractual rights and assigning contracts to another buyer.
14days does not position itself as a wholesaler. Sellers review offers directly before deciding whether to move forward.
iBuyers
iBuyers generally rely on automated pricing models to make direct institutional offers on certain property types.
A structured comparison model may involve different buyer profiles, financing approaches, and transaction terms.
Auctions
Auctions are typically built around live bidding dynamics and formal auction rules.
14days uses a defined review timeline focused on organized evaluation rather than rapid bidding activity.
Who This Approach May Help
FAQs
Is 14days an auction?
14days uses a scheduled offer-review process rather than live bidding or auction-style competition.
Sellers review opportunities within a defined timeframe and remain in control of the decision-making process.
Is 14days a wholesaler?
The model is designed around organized offer comparison and seller evaluation rather than assigning contracts.
Do sellers see all offers?
This may include differences in financing, timelines, contingencies, and buyer strength — not just price.
What makes one offer stronger than another?
- financing certainty
- contingencies
- proof of funds
- closing timelines
- buyer credibility
- likelihood of closing successfully
Can buyers submit creative or flexible offers?
Depending on the property and seller priorities, buyers may propose alternative financing arrangements, flexible occupancy terms, or customized closing timelines alongside pricing.
Do sellers have to accept an offer?
Sellers maintain decision authority throughout the review process and can decide whether any opportunity aligns with their goals.