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What is a home inspection? Are you hanging 10 or afraid of the water?

Reblogger David Selman
Home Inspector with Selman Home Inspections, Inc. 10299

I truly enjoyed this blog post about home inspections. As a home inspector in Texas, I see what this article is talking about every day. So many agents want a simple, "clean" report at most any cost including the expense of thier client. Where is the integrity in that? As a member of "Camp 2", my job is to educate the home buyer about the condition of the property they are interested in. If you are a home inspector or agent, poor reports or "soft reports" will bite you in the end....

Original content by Charles Buell

 

You can ask 100 different inspectors and 100 different agents and get 200 different answers.  Each will be just as confident that their answer is the correct one.  Most are some version of:  “a visual, non invasive, look at a home, including a written report, that is performed according to the Standards of Practice of a particular State or Association Standards of Practice.”

Turtle surfingTo me it doesn’t matter that there are so many different opinions as to what a home inspection is as it does that the buyer may not being taken care of as a result.

I think that consumer expectations and real estate agent expectations of Home Inspectors varies around the country as well.  After we peel away all the rhetoric around which association is better, who is the best trained and who has the most stringent qualifications for entry into the field, we are left with quite polarized approaches to home inspections.

I find this polarization a little baffling in light of the fact that nearly everyone in the industry attests to the importance of having inspections done.

I frequently get into conversations with other inspectors over this dilemma.  I inspect in a very large metropolitan area with a very large number of agents and inspectors.  No matter what approach an inspector takes to providing service there will be agents and a buying public to support their business model.  As we move into smaller markets, the tolerance for “different” approaches can be affected to the point that a good inspector might not even be able to work if their business model varies too much from what is “expected.”  They become victims of a type of “old boy’s & girl’s network” that has rigidly defined a home inspection as “XYZ” and anything different from that is marginalized.

The Internet has greatly improved, or at least provides a way around, this rigid thinking.  Inspectors that want to provide a different level of service to the buying public can now, through exposure on the internet by blogging, bring awareness to the buying public, and by-pass the normal referral process traditionally held in a stranglehold by real estate agents.  In the end, whether agents are recommending these “different” inspectors or not they find themselves having to deal with them regardless----whether they are the buyer’s agent or the seller’s agent.

So let’s talk about these two camps of agents and inspectors.  In my experience there do appear to be two more or less distinct camps.

CAMP #1:  Inspections are to be quick, specific to the Standards of Practice, with reports as short as possible and discussing only defects.

CAMP #2:  Inspections take whatever time they take, they meet and exceed the Standards of Practice, with reports that are long and full of all kinds of useful information about the house---not just defects.

Whether you are an agent, an inspector or a buyer, which approach do you want if you are buying a home for yourself.  If you answer “CAMP #2” why would your business model to the buying public be something different?

I think part of the answer to that question lies in the presumption that too much information is a bad thing.  It is the notion that if a nervous buyer is overwhelmed by too much information they may be scared away from the deal---thus making the “deal” more important than “taking care of the buyer.”  So let’s for a moment assume that this is true---even though I do not think it is true or has to be true.  Now another question must be answered.  Who is to decide what information is not important to the buyer?

I, for one, would not presume to know my buyer that well.  That leaves me with providing as much information as I can about the home based on the short time I am there.  Additional information can be provided that is pertinent to any home of that age and type of construction that would be deemed necessary for the buyer to properly maintain or live in the structure.

I think that if the report is clear, well written, and accurately describes the concern, what the implications of the concern are, and then explains what should be done about it and by whom, most buyers are smart enough to wade through the information.  If they are not, perhaps they are making the correct move by being scared away.

Of course equally important in all of this is the guidance that agents can provide to the process of wading through the information.  A really good Summary of Significant Concerns is very important---and is the place for the significant safety issues and deal breaker type issues.  An 80 page report with a 2 page summary is less intimidating to anyone than an 80 page report with no summary.

At the end of the day, “information” is the wave of the future.  Whether you are an inspector or an agent, it is time to get on the surf board.  Buyers are already surfing---and they are getting pretty good at it---their expectations are increasing.

 

Charles Buell, Real Estate Inspections in Seattle

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David Selman
Certified Master Home Inspector
Lic.# 10299
WDI #660910
FHA/HUD # F537 
Septic Cert #113423
Phone: 469-371-3228 
Email: david@SelmanHomeInspections.com

"Accurate Investment Protection You Can Trust"

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Dallas Home Inspection

 

Elite Home Sales Team
Elite Home Sales Team OC - Corona del Mar, CA
A Tenacious and Skilled Real Estate Team

A well written and comprehensive report is what is needed for each property.

May 11, 2012 01:11 AM
Charles Stallions
Charles Stallions Real Estate Services - Pensacola, FL
850-476-4494 - Pensacola, Pace or Gulf Breeze, Fl.

This is a great post and very informative great repost and well worth the read.

May 19, 2012 10:54 PM