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Real Estate Theater

By
Real Estate Agent with eXp Realty WA 47927
Ade HouseCan you think of a business where each transaction is like a new play being performed by a new cast of characters with only the most basic facts known to all? What is known? The asking price and the location of the subject property. There is no playwright and no director. Some of the actors barely know each other and a few of the actors barely know their roles. With nobody knowing the outcome this play is a mystery.

The Cast

The main protagonists are the seller and the buyer. They have not much of a speaking role but leave most of that to their respective handlers. Some of these handlers are known to seek center stage while others would rather hide in the wings. Some have their own script and stick to it, others wing it. Their names can be confusing to the audience and to those whom they promise to represent. The selling agent sells nothing at all but assists the buyer. The listing agent enters the stage usually on a high horse. (“This one won’t last,” is her famous line.)

The Overture

The opening act, called the offer, usually sets the tone. It can be ignored by the receiving party. This means curtains. Everybody goes home and looks to perform in a more promising play.  If there is a response, called the counter offer, the buyer can counter again. The handlers calculate, consult, and sometimes cajole. Act one comes to an end if the two parties agree. If this were an opera we just finished the overture. Now the stage is set and the real play begins.

Theater masksThe Stage Is Set

New characters join the action. Some of them have been cast for the play by one or the other agent. The title officer has already played a minor role off-stage. A good title officer is like a referee in a football game. If he does his routine well and doesn’t feel the need to be noticed he’s doing a good job. Seeking attention and having the tendency to dramatize is another actor's trait. He’s called the inspector. His lines can bring the play to a sudden end. Sometimes he introduces actors with minor roles who make the most of them. Mold and other pests do add to the drama.

If the inspection act ends with both parties’ honor still intact, the play continues. In the meantime, papers have been exchanged by the parties with language not everybody always understood. This is a play with the script being written ad hoc. Original script and alterations are being kept. That’s a good thing. Reproduced in facsimile fashion, the re-writes can become unintelligible. Some of the actors can’t read their own lines.

Some players have bit parts on stage but when they appear they get attention. Such is the role of the appraiser. He usually has had more education for his role than all the other actors combined. He too, can bring the play to an untimely end.

The Final Act

The desired end of the play was written into the original offer. The cast member to bring the play to a rousing finale is the escrow officer. The final act takes place on her turf. The seller and buyer sign “docs.” Funds are being transferred, deeds recorded. The roles of the main protagonists – the buyer and the seller - have come to an end. The other actors are looking for another play on another stage. They join with a new cast of characters in a play without a script and an uncertain outcome.    

© 2006, Gerhard N. Ade

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Seattle Area Real Estate

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Chris Tesch
RE/MAX Bryan-College Station - College Station, TX
College Station, Texas Real Estate

Ahhh, the drama, the agnst, the tears, the laughter... 

Sounds like an agents life 24/7!!!  I'll never forget my first days in real estate.  I think I was on a roller coaster for the first 2 years solid.  One minute was up, the next down.

Dec 09, 2006 09:03 PM
Kristal Kraft
Novella Real Estate - Denver, CO
Selling Metro Denver Real Estate - 303-589-2022

Gerhard ~ interesting and accurate assessment of real estate. It's definitely a never-ending, always different drama.

kk

Dec 09, 2006 11:10 PM
Carole Cohen
Howard Hanna Cleveland City Office - Cleveland, OH
Realtor, ePRO
Beautiful analogy! I love that you highlight the importance of ALL parties involved.  Very cool read!
Dec 10, 2006 03:33 AM
Sharon Simms
Coastal Properties Group International - Christie's International - Saint Petersburg, FL
St. Petersburg FL - CRS CIPS CLHMS RSPS

Great analogy. It's good for the actors to remember the Dos and Donts of their roles. It's also good for each to realize they are On Stage.

Dec 10, 2006 07:24 AM
Jennifer Fivelsdal
JFIVE Home Realty LLC | 845-758-6842|162 Deer Run Rd Red Hook NY 12571 - Rhinebeck, NY
Mid Hudson Valley real estate connection
Great reading.  You really got it right, no too deals are alike and the players are always changing.  Certainly not an industry in which you can get bored.
Dec 10, 2006 01:55 PM
Jolynne Photography, Creative Wedding Photography, Family Portraits, Bar Mitzvahs
Jolynne Photography - Hemet, CA
Bat Mitzvahs, Senior Pictures, Event Photography

Fun analogy, but unless I'm half asleep, I missed the entrance of the loan officer.  Every story needs a villain, right? :)

Maybe it's different in Seattle, but the inspector's not usually the guy who ends the play, it's a negligent lender!

Dec 10, 2006 03:42 PM
Gerhard Ade
eXp Realty - Seattle, WA
What sets me apart, will set you apart.
Ade HouseVery astute observation, Joey. One of my last transactions was a cash purchase and the other with a lender who did everything right. Could be a Freudian omission too, since my wife is a loan officer... The next play I write will feature a negligent  lender in the role of the villain :-)
Dec 10, 2006 04:08 PM
William Collins
ERA Queen City Realty - Scotch Plains, NJ
Property and Asset Management
Gerhard, Thanks for the post. Most amusing analogy.
Dec 11, 2006 12:51 AM
Brian Brady
Matthews Capital Markets - Tampa, FL
858-699-4590
Witty writing and great analogies.  I enjoyed it!
Dec 11, 2006 01:49 AM
Toby Boyce
C.G. Boyce Real Estate Co. - Delaware, OH
MBA, Delaware Ohio
Nice piece. I enjoyed the analogy and it is always helpful when we step out of ourself and see it from a different angle.
Dec 11, 2006 02:58 AM
Steve Dalton
219-465-8352 - Valparaiso, IN
Northwest Indiana Home Builder

Very adroit application.  Have you ever been to a pay or movie and wondered what really happened behind the scenes? 

I have ... our business allows us to see the behiind the scenes.  The problem is that we can get caught up backstage and forget what the real story looks like to those watching.

Dec 11, 2006 08:15 AM
Kaushik Sirkar
Call Realty, Inc. - Chandler, AZ
Great analogy!  Keep em coming!
Dec 11, 2006 12:13 PM