Sunday, July 11, 2010

10 Years....

Almost a month and how time flies! My daughter just turned 10 yesterday, so it seems fitting to reflect on the past 10 years. Months after Maddie was born, I took the real estate course and state test and began selling real estate. My how times have changed and haven't!!

When I first started my real estate career, the market was not exactly what you would call "stellar". Meaning, rates were around 9%, there was a pretty large inventory and I felt, as I sat on phone duty rearranging Post-It notes, that buyers were few and far between. So few and far, that on my very first transaction, the buyers could not secure financing and we negotiated an owner finance agreement, that eventually worked out in every one's best interest.

Banks and lenders at the time were still requiring sizable chunks of cash down and the first-time buyer had to save (gasp!) money or have it gifted in order to make a go of purchasing their first home. I remember one office meeting I sat in at the first firm I worked at, when someone came and spoke to our office about 100% financing and USDA rural housing loans. They showed a slide-show, (yes, not PowerPoint but slide show) of the various income levels and how they correlate to the number of people in the family. I remember the buzz around our office as to how could this be sustained and do these folks really need this kind of governmental assistance if they can't qualify under the current standards of lending....Well, you can now sit back and Monday morning quarterback, but you also know where that got us. Now the government backs over 90% of all loans and establishes outlandish criteria and hoops to jump for legitimate buyers while still offering, up until a very short while ago, these SAME exact loan programs!! Guess we still haven't learned...

As I became more experienced, changed companies, owned and sold my own company, my perspective changed. I grew into a position that allowed me to consult and advise buyers and sellers on the purchase and sell real estate. No longer, cold calling (done away with by Do Not Call registry), no longer giving recipe cards and tossing candy in the parade, time and experience blessed me with a trusted and loyal client base that is always sending new leads and referrals my way. Folks now understand my job for them doesn't stop at closing, it continues as an advisor for home remodeling, refinancing, additions, real estate tax questions, advocacy on their behalf to banks and attorneys and so much more. This career is fulfilling and challenging, ever-changing, rewarding, sometimes emotionally-draining and sometimes down-right sad.

Our family has gone from sitting in our first 800 square foot home, with a computer hooked up to a phone line and an AOL disk received in the mail...to wireless and handheld SmartPhones, able to download documents anywhere and databases that includes thousands of names and contacts with a key-stroke.

Easier? No. We sit here today and have no idea where the market truly is because of a false-floor placed on real estate. At least 10 years ago, the buyers and sellers drove the market and the supply and demand, not bureaucrats in DC. Until fewer regulations and requirements are placed on real estate and lending, rather than more and the market settles because of a good dose of old fashioned common sense, then we will continue to speculate on what the next 10 years will look like. Locally, we are in good shape and for that I am grateful, but our market is affected by those trying to sell in other areas and true recovery can't happen until the job market stabilizes and the private sector adds and innovates. And until then, our industry will have to be innovative to not only survive but find a way to thrive in this period of ambiguity.

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