There are many, many aspects to being a Real Estate Agent, and we wear many hats from start to end of a Real Estate Transaction.
But in the past five years I have noticed a trend of agents who get into the business because it is lucrative, and shy away from listing property. All they want to do is find someone who wants to buy a house and then walk around opening doors like it's "The Price ir Right". They think all they have to do is wait for the buyer to say "I want THIS one" and write it up" and toss it to the transaction coordinator or escrow company.
Those who never want to put in the time and energy to value property, really value property, are in my opinion destroying the industry. Handing the consumer a stack of sold property and standing back saying "you decide what it's worth" is NOT valuing property.
Every day I meet agents who say valuing property from scratch, when there is no predetermined asking price, is too hard. Many want to simply approach the subject of price from the standpoint of negotiating, and never determine if the asking price was on target in the first place. Many don't want to be botherered if the house is not going to sell in the first week. They lose interest and hate the heartache of trying to figure out what is wrong and why it isn't selling. They want to call listing efforts "marketing" rather than work on the skills required to position a house to sell.
Standing on a mountain and screaming "Someone Come and Buy This So I Can Get Paid!" is not how you sell a house :)
Working ONLY with buyers is not an excuse to leave behind The Artform of Home Valuation. Negotiating $10,000 off an asking price that is $40,000 too high is NOT something to brag about. Every agent should spend a significant amount of time honing the skill of valuing property. And it never ends. Markets change. Value changes with changing markets.
Knowing what a house is worth, and not just what the seller will take, is paramount to being a consummate professional in the real estate industry. It IS a number's game. But the numbers are the home's true worth, not how many people you can drag to the well and make them drink. For those who want to chime in here and say "A house is worth what A buyer is willing to pay." you can...but you won't make it to my short list of true professionals.
If you think a house is worth what a buyer is willing to pay, then you may be the one holding their feet to the fire to make an offer that a seller is willing to accept. Sometimes the seller wants too much, and convincing the buyer he has to pay what the seller wants in order to get the house, is not the way "the game is played". Sure there's negotiation when you get within 3% of value or so. Home valuation is not an exact science. But you still need to know if a seller is asking way too much. If a seller is asking 20% MORE for the property than it's true worth, because that is what the seller NEEDS, getting it for 97% of asking is nothing to brag about.
Knowing how to value homes is JUST AS IMPORTANT for an agent who only works with buyers...often times...even more important.
Heartfelt applause!!! I've seen too many agents that are ready to write up an offer and not put one ounce of energy into research to ensure that the buyer is getting a good value. Though in the beginning of my career I did primarily work with buyers I always had in mind the fact that someday these clients would be coming back to sell with me.
It's a longterm career for me, not just a moneymaker of the moment.