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What
Do Agents Really Bring to the Table?
By M. Anthony Carr
August 25, 2006
I
hate going to the dentist. I've always had good teeth,
only one cavity in my head, so why spend all that money
(not to mention the dental insurance) on a service I've
never really needed. As long as I brush and floss, why
do I need someone with a doctor's degree to look over
my teeth, clean them, whiten them, etc.?
Besides,
I've pulled teeth myself -- when I was just a grade
school kid, in fact. So if I can pull teeth at that
age, with just a string and a doorknob, why on earth
do I have to pay a professionally trained tooth puller
now? As I reminisce on those days of my early tooth-pulling,
I even recall getting paid for pulling my own teeth!
That's right. Every morning after pulling my teeth,
I had money under my pillow.
Obviously,
anyone who has received quality dental care in the past
sees right through the absurdity of this argument. However,
when it comes to real estate agents, everyone wants
them to provide their services for discounted prices
even free.
Licensed
real estate professionals bring state-mandated training
and knowledge to the table for buyers and sellers. In
fact, agents have to get as much, or more, training
than what it would take for some college degrees before
being given permission by the state to represent buyers
and sellers in the transaction.
By
the time a transaction is over, it is chock full of
legally-binding documents controlling the transaction,
pulling two parties together to exchange hundreds of
thousands of dollars to complete a transaction that
they may be involved in only a couple of times in their
life.
Both
the buyer and seller must perform to the contract, and
most times, they don't even know how or what they're
supposed to do to perform the paragraphs they just agreed
to perform.
Nearly
half of the buyers are purchasing for the first time,
according to the National Association of Realtors. They
only think agents are there to usher them into houses
and that's it. And that's because hundreds of thousands
of agents make that tooth extraction look so easy.
Why
should you have a real estate agent on your investing/buying/selling
team when it comes to building wealth?
There's
talk on Capitol Hill of how the real estate industry
has a "strangle hold" on the business. It
makes me want to, not so much defend, as much as bring
to the forefront what licensed professionals actually
bring to the table for consumers.
You've
heard the term, "You get what you pay for,"
and that doesn't go wasted on agents as well. Many sellers
would love to get through the transaction themselves,
without any help from a "middle man," to save
the commission dollars. It sounds like it makes sense,
"Hey, why pay thousands of dollars of your money
to sell a house when you can do it yourself?"
But
every agent has a real estate license regulated by the
state. This means they are knowledgeable about various
aspects of real estate law, rules and regulations, such
as:
1. What rights exist for land and how they can be traded
2. How title can be held and how to ensure clear title
to the land
3. Financing: traditional, non-traditional, owner-held,
etc.
4. Fair housing laws: federal, state and local
5. Local limits on the sale and trade of real estate
6. State disclosure laws and regulations on the trade
of real estate
7. Contracts and forms
Most
sellers and buyers I've talked with, while having access
to plenty of "information" on the internet
about the sales transaction, do not have a handle on
the nuances, pitfalls, and inherent dangers of legal
problems they can face in the midst of this huge investment.
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© 2006 Realty Times. All Rights Reserved. |