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September 6, 2010 at 12:44 PM #602170September 6, 2010 at 12:57 PM #601123bearishgurlParticipant
[quote=njtosd]Bearishgurl – just curious, and I apologize if you’ve explained this before, but are you an attorney?[/quote]
No, I am a licensed paralegal with 27 years experience.
September 6, 2010 at 12:57 PM #601214bearishgurlParticipant[quote=njtosd]Bearishgurl – just curious, and I apologize if you’ve explained this before, but are you an attorney?[/quote]
No, I am a licensed paralegal with 27 years experience.
September 6, 2010 at 12:57 PM #601761bearishgurlParticipant[quote=njtosd]Bearishgurl – just curious, and I apologize if you’ve explained this before, but are you an attorney?[/quote]
No, I am a licensed paralegal with 27 years experience.
September 6, 2010 at 12:57 PM #601867bearishgurlParticipant[quote=njtosd]Bearishgurl – just curious, and I apologize if you’ve explained this before, but are you an attorney?[/quote]
No, I am a licensed paralegal with 27 years experience.
September 6, 2010 at 12:57 PM #602185bearishgurlParticipant[quote=njtosd]Bearishgurl – just curious, and I apologize if you’ve explained this before, but are you an attorney?[/quote]
No, I am a licensed paralegal with 27 years experience.
September 6, 2010 at 1:04 PM #601128NotCrankyParticipantThe hourly rate for the typical schmoozing, puffing , bullying, word twisting, mystique inducing realtor, probably is poor.That makes sense. That the person who actually makes a transaction pays for the people who waste your time is just another good argument that the system in broken.
September 6, 2010 at 1:04 PM #601219NotCrankyParticipantThe hourly rate for the typical schmoozing, puffing , bullying, word twisting, mystique inducing realtor, probably is poor.That makes sense. That the person who actually makes a transaction pays for the people who waste your time is just another good argument that the system in broken.
September 6, 2010 at 1:04 PM #601766NotCrankyParticipantThe hourly rate for the typical schmoozing, puffing , bullying, word twisting, mystique inducing realtor, probably is poor.That makes sense. That the person who actually makes a transaction pays for the people who waste your time is just another good argument that the system in broken.
September 6, 2010 at 1:04 PM #601872NotCrankyParticipantThe hourly rate for the typical schmoozing, puffing , bullying, word twisting, mystique inducing realtor, probably is poor.That makes sense. That the person who actually makes a transaction pays for the people who waste your time is just another good argument that the system in broken.
September 6, 2010 at 1:04 PM #602190NotCrankyParticipantThe hourly rate for the typical schmoozing, puffing , bullying, word twisting, mystique inducing realtor, probably is poor.That makes sense. That the person who actually makes a transaction pays for the people who waste your time is just another good argument that the system in broken.
September 6, 2010 at 1:14 PM #601133sdrealtorParticipant[quote=njtosd][quote=sdrealtor] It wont work because most people dont actually buy from the agents they work with. They would spend alot of money for nothing.[/quote]
You make my point for me. An hourly arrangement would be more likely to eliminate economic waste. Ideally, we would prefer people to do most of their investigation on their own, and pay agents/attorneys only for the hours absolutely necessary. In the present system, there is a lot of “fat” in some transactions, which is not good for the economy as a whole.
For example, the buyer who we are under contract with has seen many many homes and has driven his agent crazy. If that same buyer could have been persuaded to have thought things out (or looked online, or whatever) ahead of time, their agent could have spent her time with someone else, potentially resulting in one or more additional sales.[/quote]
Agreed but people dont work or think that way when buying homes. The system evolved because of the way people buy homes not the other way around. What sounds reasonable in a laboratory wont work on the streets.
September 6, 2010 at 1:14 PM #601224sdrealtorParticipant[quote=njtosd][quote=sdrealtor] It wont work because most people dont actually buy from the agents they work with. They would spend alot of money for nothing.[/quote]
You make my point for me. An hourly arrangement would be more likely to eliminate economic waste. Ideally, we would prefer people to do most of their investigation on their own, and pay agents/attorneys only for the hours absolutely necessary. In the present system, there is a lot of “fat” in some transactions, which is not good for the economy as a whole.
For example, the buyer who we are under contract with has seen many many homes and has driven his agent crazy. If that same buyer could have been persuaded to have thought things out (or looked online, or whatever) ahead of time, their agent could have spent her time with someone else, potentially resulting in one or more additional sales.[/quote]
Agreed but people dont work or think that way when buying homes. The system evolved because of the way people buy homes not the other way around. What sounds reasonable in a laboratory wont work on the streets.
September 6, 2010 at 1:14 PM #601771sdrealtorParticipant[quote=njtosd][quote=sdrealtor] It wont work because most people dont actually buy from the agents they work with. They would spend alot of money for nothing.[/quote]
You make my point for me. An hourly arrangement would be more likely to eliminate economic waste. Ideally, we would prefer people to do most of their investigation on their own, and pay agents/attorneys only for the hours absolutely necessary. In the present system, there is a lot of “fat” in some transactions, which is not good for the economy as a whole.
For example, the buyer who we are under contract with has seen many many homes and has driven his agent crazy. If that same buyer could have been persuaded to have thought things out (or looked online, or whatever) ahead of time, their agent could have spent her time with someone else, potentially resulting in one or more additional sales.[/quote]
Agreed but people dont work or think that way when buying homes. The system evolved because of the way people buy homes not the other way around. What sounds reasonable in a laboratory wont work on the streets.
September 6, 2010 at 1:14 PM #601877sdrealtorParticipant[quote=njtosd][quote=sdrealtor] It wont work because most people dont actually buy from the agents they work with. They would spend alot of money for nothing.[/quote]
You make my point for me. An hourly arrangement would be more likely to eliminate economic waste. Ideally, we would prefer people to do most of their investigation on their own, and pay agents/attorneys only for the hours absolutely necessary. In the present system, there is a lot of “fat” in some transactions, which is not good for the economy as a whole.
For example, the buyer who we are under contract with has seen many many homes and has driven his agent crazy. If that same buyer could have been persuaded to have thought things out (or looked online, or whatever) ahead of time, their agent could have spent her time with someone else, potentially resulting in one or more additional sales.[/quote]
Agreed but people dont work or think that way when buying homes. The system evolved because of the way people buy homes not the other way around. What sounds reasonable in a laboratory wont work on the streets.
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