There’s always something to howl about.

Category: The Odysseus Medal (page 2 of 7)

The Odysseus Medal competition — Voting for the People’s Choice Award is open

My take is that the most important news this week was Zillow.com’s announcement that it will be doing background checks on the loan originators it will be referring to consumers as a part of its forthcoming mortgage product. In consequence, this week’s short list is all about Zillow’s announcement and its implications.

So: We have just eight entries on the short list this week, out of a long long list of 115 posts. You can vote for the People’s Choice Award here. You can use the voting interface to see each nominated post, so comparison is easy.

Ahem: Please don’t spam all your friends to come and vote for you. First, what we’re interested in is what is popular among people who would have been voting anyway. And second, I’ll eliminate you for cheating. Don’t say you weren’t warned.

Voting runs through to 12 Noon MST Monday. I’ll announce the winners of this week’s awards soon thereafter.

Here is this week’s short-list of Odysseus Medal nominees:

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“Brian Brady — Zoriginators Delight
Zillow Mortgage: Zoriginators’ Delight or Bane?“,
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“Mike Farmer — Zillow Nation? Zillow Nation?“,
“Morgan Brown — Zillow Launches Mortgage Lender Sign Ups Zillow Launches Mortgage Lender Sign Ups – Points to a New Way of Consumer Control of Mortgage Process“,
“Teri Lussier — Zillow creates the end of the world Zillow creates the end of the world as we know it, and I feel fine“,
“Todd Carpenter — Zillow Mortgages Zillow Mortgages to give loan originators \”absolutely free and unlimited access to consumers looking for a mortgage\”“,
“Sean Purcell — Success in Disbrokeration? How Do You Find Real Estate Success in Disbrokeration?“,
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    Deadline for next week’s competition is Sunday at 12 Noon MST. You can nominate your own weblog entry or any post you admire here.

    Technorati Tags: , , ,

  • The Odysseus Medal: “Free has emerged as a full-fledged economy”

    I’m sorry to keep going outside the RE.net for the Odysseus Medal competition, but that’s where the news is right now. Inside the RahRah.net, present company excepted, everything seems to be devoted to mutual back-slapping — which would be boring even if it were warranted. In any case, The Odysseus Medal this week goes to Chris Anderson for Free! Why $0.00 Is the Future of Business:

    Thanks to Gillette, the idea that you can make money by giving something away is no longer radical. But until recently, practically everything “free” was really just the result of what economists would call a cross-subsidy: You’d get one thing free if you bought another, or you’d get a product free only if you paid for a service.

    Over the past decade, however, a different sort of free has emerged. The new model is based not on cross-subsidies — the shifting of costs from one product to another — but on the fact that the cost of products themselves is falling fast. It’s as if the price of steel had dropped so close to zero that King Gillette could give away both razor and blade, and make his money on something else entirely. (Shaving cream?)

    You know this freaky land of free as the Web. A decade and a half into the great online experiment, the last debates over free versus pay online are ending. In 2007 The New York Times went free; this year, so will much of The Wall Street Journal. (The remaining fee-based parts, new owner Rupert Murdoch announced, will be “really special … and, sorry to tell you, probably more expensive.” This calls to mind one version of Stewart Brand’s original aphorism from 1984: “Information wants to be free. Information also wants to be expensive … That tension will not go away.”)

    Once a marketing gimmick, free has emerged as a full-fledged economy. Offering free music proved successful for Radiohead, Trent Reznor of Nine Inch Nails, and a swarm of other bands on MySpace that grasped the audience-building merits of zero. The fastest-growing parts of the gaming industry are ad-supported casual games online and free-to-try Read more

    The Odysseus Medal competition — Voting for the People’s Choice Award is open

    We have 15 entries on the short list this week, out of a long long list of 91 posts. I’ve already decided on the winner of the Odysseus Medal, so I’m not linking that way. Instead, again this week I’m showing nothing but Black Pearls, practical hard-headed ideas for working better, faster and more profitably.

    Vote for the People’s Choice Award here. You can use the voting interface to see each nominated post, so comparison is easy.

    Ahem: Please don’t spam all your friends to come and vote for you. First, what we’re interested in is what is popular among people who would have been voting anyway. And second, I’ll eliminate you for cheating. Don’t say you weren’t warned.

    Voting runs through to 12 Noon MST Monday. I’ll announce the winners of this week’s awards soon thereafter.

    Here is this week’s short-list of Odysseus Medal nominees:

    < ?PHP $AltEntries = array ( "Dan Green -- The NEXT Time Mortgage Rates Plunge How To Get Ready For The NEXT Time Mortgage Rates Plunge”,
    “Daniel Scocco — Poor Writing Skills Overshadow
    Can Poor Writing Skills Overshadow Good Content?“,
    “Dave Smith — Create Your Own Backlinks Hyper Local Target Marketing Create Your Own Backlinks“,
    “James Hsu — Pictures are Worth a Thousand Words, but Pictures are Worth a Thousand Words, but what are your pictures actually saying?“,
    “Jeff Corbett — Page Rank and SEO Just Write Relevant, Compelling Articles About Real Estate and/or Mortgage and You Won’t Have to Worry About Page Rank and SEO“,
    “Jeff Pabian — Smart email campaigns begin at home. responsible email marketing for real estate professionals“,
    “Jim Cronin — The Real Estate Business Is Content The Real Estate Business Is Content, Not Home Selling“,
    “Jim Kimmons — Your Website Why Your Website Isn’t Bringing You Clients“,
    “Jim Watkins — Real Estate Mail Marketing Real Estate Mail Marketing: Pull the Right Strings“,
    “Mary McKnight — Target a Typo SEO Tip of the Week: Target a Typo of a Common Keyword and Increase Search Traffic by 30%“,
    “Milton B. Yates — Short Sale Opportunities Every Short Sale Opportunity isn’t Worth Chasing – More Time – Bigger Checks“,
    “Milton B. Yates — Subject to Foreclosure Buying \”Subject to\” Existing Financing – Subject to Foreclosure“,
    “Scott Buresh — Sam’s Club SEO Sam’s Club Wants to Read more

    The Odysseus Medal: The art of rhetoric — and the rhetoric of art

    As I said yesterday, I had already picked this week’s Odysseus Medal winner, so I didn’t include his posts among the Short List of nominees. Instead, I’ll present them here. The Odysseus Medal this week goes to Mike Farmer for his tour de force series of posts on Web 2.0 and the real estate practitioner. Mike had an astounding thirteen posts on the Long List last week, but the eight posts (!) cited here are a cut above everything I saw last week. These are Mike’s essays, in chronological order:

    If you didn’t read them — or didn’t read them all — making the time will repay your effort. Cathy and I were talking about thanking authors for the gifts they bear — not as fawning fan mail but as a simple expression of gratitude. I’ll thank Mike now for this compendium, and I hope you will take a second to do the same by email or in a comment on his weblog.

    The Black Pearl Award this week goes to Set Godin for Advice for real estate agents (quit now!):

    The second asset to build is permission. It turns out (according to the NAR) that 91% of all Realtors never contact the buyer or the seller of a home after the closing. Not once. Wow. Someone just spent a million dollars with you and you don’t bother to call or write?

    The opportunity during the current pause (and yes, it’s a pause) is to find, one by one, the people who would benefit from hearing from you and then earn the right to talk to them. Earn the right to send them a newsletter or a regular update or a subscription to your blog. NOT to talk about what matters to you, but to give them information (real information, not just data) that matters to them. Visit Read more

    The Odysseus Medal competition — Voting for the People’s Choice Award is open

    We have 16 entries on the short list this week, out of an astoundingly long long list of 104 posts. I’ve already decided on the winner of the Odysseus Medal, so I’m not linking that way. Instead, this week I’m showing nothing but Black Pearls, practical hard-headed ideas for working better, faster and more profitably.

    Vote for the People’s Choice Award here. You can use the voting interface to see each nominated post, so comparison is easy.

    Ahem: Please don’t spam all your friends to come and vote for you. First, what we’re interested in is what is popular among people who would have been voting anyway. And second, I’ll eliminate you for cheating. Don’t say you weren’t warned.

    Voting runs through to 12 Noon MST Monday. I’ll announce the winners of this week’s awards soon thereafter.

    Here is this week’s short-list of Odysseus Medal nominees:

    < ?PHP $AltEntries = array ( "Athol Kay -- Sunshine Is The Bomb Sunshine Is The Bomb For Real Estate Photos”,
    “Brian Brady — Gene Simmons: Originality is Overrated
    Gene Simmons: Originality is Overrated“,
    “Brian Brady — Sins Writers Commit The Two Sins Writers Commit That Business Bloggers Can’t Afford“,
    “Chad Smith — Starbucks Wi-Fi Starbucks Makes Decision That Could Save Real Estate Agents Money“,
    “Cheryl Johnson — Static Page and Blog Page Coexist WordPress: Static Page and Blog Page Coexist“,
    “Cheryl Johnson — Using FTP Using FTP“,
    “Dan Green — The One-Day Change To Your Closing Date The One-Day Change To Your Closing Date That Will Save You Money“,
    “Dave Smith — Hyper Local Blog Market Targeting Hyper Local Blog Market Targeting“,
    “Jay Thompson — The Taxman Approacheth The Taxman Approacheth“,
    “Jeff Brown — My Topic Wish List I Hope Unchained Considers My Topic Wish List“,
    “Jim Cronin — Not Your Competition 7 Reasons Why Your Local Real Estate Blogging Peers Are Not Your Competition“,
    “Jim Cronin — Website Working Against Your Career? Is Your Website Working Against Your Real Estate Career?“,
    “Paul Chaney — Keyword-optimized blog posts Don’t tell me keyword-optimized blog posts don’t get Google’s attention, cause they do!“,
    “Reggie Nicolay — ESignature Technology Is ESignature Technology Right For Your Real Estate Business?“,
    “Sean Purcell — Think Cat Blog Want Hyper-Local Blogging? Think Cat Blog“,
    “Seth Godin — Advice for real estate agents Advice for real estate agents (quit now!)“,
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    The Odysseus Medal: Amy Winehouse is not in the house

    Judging this contest, I get to read a lot of talented writers. But only one can connect Amy Winehouse to real estate and have it all make the most delightful kind of sense. The Odysseus Medal this week goes to Geno Petro for She tried to make me buy a rehab…:

    Truth is; I can barely swing a hammer….Let me rephrase that; I can swing the hell out of a hammer but just not in a constructive way. I am not the fixer-upper type, in case we haven’t met. (See mug shot above for clarity.) I probably err to the side of demolition, if anything.

    That being said, my lovely wife (and occasional muse) found a possible second home that in theory, could fulfill our retirement needs during those forthcoming platinum years that Dennis Hopper pitches on the Ameriprise commercials during prime time every night. All things equal, he’s my favorite corporate sell out so far this century, that Dennis Hopper.  Cool, quirky and rich beyond words, for sure.

    “60 is the new 40,” exclaims my man, sharply dressed in black, The Spencer Davis Group blaring in the background, and looking unlike like any beshaded 72 year old cat I’ve ever met.  And I’m all over it. According to DH, I’ve got 40 more good ones ahead of me. According to his math and blueprint for living, I’m barely 34.  When he comes on the plasma in high def I get a sudden urge to run out and invest in something spectacular before I lose another precious second. I yearn to  join the expedition, or at the very least, embark on the journey to financial freedom.  After all, one man’s destination is another man’s starting point. Ask any truly wealthy person (9 figures+ by my definition) and I’m certain he will tell you as much. “It’s the journey, not the…” whatever.

    But the ‘hidden gem’ my wife came across this past weekend, a shack on the Tennessee River, needs some serious attention; more attention than I’m prepared to pay for, quite frankly. She found it on the Film Location site our own house is registered with (unbeknownst to me until a few months ago). And in case you didn’t know, there is a market Read more

    The Odysseus Medal competition — Voting for the People’s Choice Award is open

    We have 18 entries on the short list this week, out of a long list of 74 posts.

    Vote for the People’s Choice Award here. You can use the voting interface to see each nominated post, so comparison is easy.

    Ahem: Please don’t spam all your friends to come and vote for you. First, what we’re interested in is what is popular among people who would have been voting anyway. And second, I’ll eliminate you for cheating. Don’t say you weren’t warned.

    Voting runs through to 12 Noon MST Monday. I’ll announce the winners of this week’s awards soon thereafter.

    Here is this week’s short-list of Odysseus Medal nominees:

    < ?PHP $AltEntries = array ( "Athol Kay -- Tales For An Accelerated Culture Tales For An Accelerated Culture”,
    “Brian Boero — Partial vision
    Partial vision“,
    “Brian Brady — Are You Blogging For Speed? Are You Blogging For Speed?“,
    “Dan Green — Ignoring Adjectives How Ignoring Adjectives Can Improve Your Understanding Of Mortgages“,
    “Dan Green — Mortgage Rates Why Mortgage Rates Don’t Look Like They’re Coming Back Down Any Time Soon“,
    “Geno Petro — She tried to make me buy a rehab She tried to make me buy a rehab…“,
    “Harvey Edgecombe — Barack Obama versus the US Economy Barack Obama versus the US Economy“,
    “Jay Thompson — Dale Stinton Stops By NARWisdom.com NAR CEO Dale Stinton Stops By NARWisdom.com“,
    “Kris Berg — A lesson in push(y) marketing. A lesson in push(y) marketing.“,
    “Kris Berg — In sickness or in health In sickness or in health – It’s viral.“,
    “Mike Farmer — Due Diligence and Real Estate Due Diligence and Real Estate“,
    “Mike Farmer — The Religion (Tyranny) of Niceness The Religion (Tyranny) of Niceness“,
    “Mike Price — Armchair Quarterbacking Real Estate 2.0 Armchair Quarterbacking Real Estate 2.0“,
    “Morgan Brown — McCain’s Mum on Mortgage Reform McCain’s Mum on Mortgage Reform“,
    “Morgan Brown — New conforming limits New conforming limits – what will it do to jumbo loan rates?“,
    “Nick Bostic — Save the World (and some money) Save the World (and some money)“,
    “Teri Lussier — The training of the shrewd The training of the shrewd“,
    “Todd Carpenter — Why Google Page Rank Matters Perception Is Reality, Why Google Page Rank Matters“,
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  • The Odysseus Medal: Our own style of disintermediation brings us all closer to the liberty that is self-reliance

    I’m not going to award an Odysseus Medal this week. The Short List candidates were very good, but nothing killed me, and I want for this award to celebrate work that is beyond excellent. But: I do want to cite two Honorable Mentions, two posts that I thought were very good, and which took us in directions we will need to travel as we come more and more to be our own sources of arcane information.

    It’s funny actually: Our relationship as webloggers to the mainstream media is very much like our clients’ relationship to us. They want to take on more of the work that was once exclusively ours, just as we seek to take on more of the work that was once hidden behind the walls of print and broadcast outlets.

    The two posts I am citing, The Proposed Solutions Are Going To Be Worse Than The Mortgage Crisis by Doug Quance and Barack Obama’s Mortgage Reform Policy by Morgan Brown, illustrate the kind of depth of understanding we can achieve when we apply ourselves. By now it seems likely that our presidential nominees have been chosen, and I look forward to this kind of thoughtful analysis of the real estate and economic implications of the candidates’ proposals.

    Black Pearls we have, though, and more than just a few. Choosing one was a problem. The Black Pearl Award this week goes to Jim Cronin for Blogging Etiquette – The Blog Comment Policy – Do You Need One?:

    Blogs are meant to be a two-way street.  We are blogging for an audience.  Engaging that audience to participate is a huge part of the the motivation and an element that can define a blog’s success.

    So where do you draw the line?

    What do you consider acceptable behavior by the audience, on your real estate blog?

    For a lot of real estate bloggers, their blog is an extension of their business.  This means that their reputation, credibility, personality, works, message and even their career are potentially on the line with every article published.

    What are you doing to protect the above?

    The following are a number of items that range from mildly Read more

    The Odysseus Medal competition — Voting for the People’s Choice Award is open

    Late again. Sorry. I’ve had my Mac back since around Noon. Logic board this time, again no charge. In terms of replacement cost, I’ve got about 60% of a new computer for free. The back side is that I’ve never had to live with component failure — nor with the fear of data loss. Until Sunday, I had never backed up a Macintosh in my life. Today I made plans to buy a TimeCapsule.

    Anyway, there are 12 entries on the short list this week, out of a long list of 78 posts.

    Vote for the People’s Choice Award here. You can use the voting interface to see each nominated post, so comparison is easy.

    Ahem: Please don’t spam all your friends to come and vote for you. First, what we’re interested in is what is popular among people who would have been voting anyway. And second, I’ll eliminate you for cheating. Don’t say you weren’t warned.

    Voting runs through to 9 pm MST Wednesday this week. I’ll announce the winners of this week’s awards soon thereafter.

    Here is this week’s short-list of Odysseus Medal nominees:

    < ?PHP $AltEntries = array ( "Alex Mather -- Improving Zillow's Neighborhood Gift Improving Zillow’s Neighborhood Gift”,
    “Bonnie Erickson — MGIC Runs the Gauntlet
    MGIC Runs the Gauntlet“,
    “Carson Coots — How Local Should You Go? How Local Should You Go?“,
    “Doug Quance — Proposed Solutions Worse The Proposed Solutions Are Going To Be Worse Than The Mortgage Crisis“,
    “Jay Thompson — NAR and Social Media Why the NAR Needs a \”Social Media Director\”“,
    “Jim Cronin — Blogging Etiquette Blogging Etiquette – The Blog Comment Policy – Do You Need One?“,
    “Jim Cronin — Worrying About SEO Why Worrying About SEO Is Detrimental to Your Real Estate Blog“,
    “Kris Berg — I’m too sexy for my blog. I’m too sexy for my blog.“,
    “Michael Creel — The Perils of Being a Realtor The Perils of Being a Realtor“,
    “Mike Farmer — Fundamental Solutions Folk Music, Blame and Fundamental Solutions“,
    “Morgan Brown — Barack Obama’s Mortgage Reform Policy Barack Obama’s Mortgage Reform Policy“,
    “Paul Chaney — Becoming a social media leper Becoming a social media leper… many marketers are missing the whole point!“,
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  • The Odysseus Medal: Always check snopes.com first?

    Amended: The Odysseus Medal goes this week to… no one. The post I had picked as the winner turned out to be someone else’s work. I’ve elected not to award The Odysseus Medal this week and, instead, to gargle with Listerine to clear my palate and my mind of schmaltz.

    The Black Pearl Award this week goes to Mike Farmer with Real Estate in A Brave New World:

    Despite the rhetoric from politicians who claim we’re on the edge of ruin, there’s a lot of wealth in this country, and it’s congregated in metropolitan areas that have outgrown, or never had, an appeal for comfort, hominess and quality of living. Baby boomers (BB) will have second thoughts about retiring in areas where road rage and pollution are the nicest things you can say about them. These places are where the money’s at, but now a large chunk of it’s in the banking accounts of BBs and will transfer anywhere their hearts desire – North Carolina, Georgia, Utah, Colorado, Tennessee, Nevada.

    Many of these BB buyers will want to live in places where they can golf and shop and exercise, walk the streets and smile rather than snarl, join clubs, start a mini second career doing something they love in communities where everyone knows their names and don’t give a fig what they’re worth on a financial sheet – the easy, slow, entertaining, friendly life. I’m talking myself into early retirement, here.

    These BB buyers are already net-addicted and I receive emails each day from them asking me about the area, home prices, things to do, etc. – they’re gathering information and making plans. They aren’t in a hurry and they want good, reliable, spam-free information. This has been written about many times – but what many agents don’t realize is that it’s here, now. No one’s predicting the future anymore – they’re reporting. How many are ready?

    Who better to service their needs, to be their wise guides, their comforting counsel, to make information gathering and analysis painless and useful, than the modern day, internet savvy, service-oriented, friendly and efficient local realtor?

    Many agents will have to change Read more

    The Odysseus Medal competition — Voting for the People’s Choice Award is open

    Sorry to be late. I’ve worked with dozens of Macs, mine and other people’s, since 1985, and Iridium is the first one I’ve ever had fail to start up. I cleaned my desk today — idle hands — and fired up 96 Tears, a ten-year-old G3, for the first time in months, the second time in more than two years. No problem. Cameron had a IIci running on his desk for more than twelve years.

    Anyway, there are 20 entries on the short list this week, out of a long list of 113 posts. News, yes, but some truly thoughtful think pieces, too.

    Vote for the People’s Choice Award here. You can use the voting interface to see each nominated post, so comparison is easy.

    Ahem: Please don’t spam all your friends to come and vote for you. First, what we’re interested in is what is popular among people who would have been voting anyway. And second, I’ll eliminate you for cheating. Don’t say you weren’t warned.

    Voting runs through to 12 Noon MST Wednesday this week. I’ll announce the winners of this week’s awards soon thereafter.

    Here is this week’s short-list of Odysseus Medal nominees:

    < ?PHP $AltEntries = array ( "Brendan King -- Change Your State of Mind Change Your State of Mind”,
    “Dan Green — Another Rate Cut
    With Another Rate Cut, The Federal Reserve May Be The Proverbial \”Fool In The Shower\”“,
    “Dan Green — Database Marketing In The Business Of Personal Relationships, Database Marketing Is More Effective Than SEO Marketing“,
    “Dustin Luther — dothomes DotHomes Launches US Home Search Tool“,
    “Geno Petro — A Mastermind of Hucksters A Mastermind of Hucksters“,
    “Jeff Brown — Getting Off the Ground Principles of Flight and Real Estate — Getting Off the Ground“,
    “Jillayne Schlicke — Walk Away If You Walk Away, I’ll Walk Away“,
    “Jim Duncan — I hear rumors all the time I hear rumors all the time“,
    “Joel Burslem — dothomes International Real Estate Search Site Makes a Move into US“,
    “Joel Burslem — The New MicroHoo Real Estate The New MicroHoo Real Estate“,
    “Kevin Boer — dothomes Do We Really Need Yet Another Real Estate Search Site?“,
    “Kris Berg — Going Green Going Green – finally!“,
    “Kris Berg — Joe and Marge Joe and Marge“,
    “Marc Grayson — Are Read more

    A new way to howl: Announcing “The Long List of Odysseus Medal Nominees” — the weblog

    Apart from the normal crush of business, I’ve been hammering away for the past few weeks on a huge project — which I’ll be announcing shortly. In the mean time, I’ve wanted to make a further elaboration on the Long List lister I made a few weeks ago. That tool will echo The Long List of Odysseus Medal Nominees as they come in, but I wanted something that could be subscribed to by feed reader, as well.

    It occurred to me to push the data out as a feed on my own, but instead I decided to build a link blog. I did that tonight. You can see it by clicking here.

    This is a pure link blog — no commentary and no comments. I’m just drawing attention to the 75-100 posts that are making The Long List every week. You can see what’s new by visiting the weblog, but the ideal way to use this tool is simply to subscribe to the feed.

    The Long List is updated several times a day, so you’ll always be abreast of the very best writing in the RE.net.

    The other end of the pipeline commands your attention, as well: If you see something you think is truly great, and if it’s not already on The Long List — nominate it.

    Here’s a trick, if you’re interested. Go to this nomination form, then drag it into your browser’s tool bar or save it in your bookmarks. The when you see a post you like, open the form in a new tab, so you can swap back and forth to paste in the title and URL.

    On my end, the nomination process is by now almost completely automated. I moderate for porn and spam, of course, but I can normally update both the The Long List list box and The Long List of Odysseus Medal Nominees weblog with one click.

    One of the things that I like best about this new weblog is that, from today going forward, The Long List will endure, instead of evaporating every Monday.

    Anyway, the new weblog is open for business. Visit the blog, subscribe to the feed Read more

    The Odysseus Medal: “A hopeless attempt to regain what she lost: her sense of trust and self-reliance”

    One of the benefits of The Odysseus Medal competition, for me, personally — especially since we started echoing the Long List of nominees — is that I don’t feel as much pressure to weigh in on every last thing. I’ve been writing software in my spare moments for the last two weeks, and, amazingly enough, the world spins on without me. Last week we had Roost.com launch, which I wrote about, but we also had a huge Fed rate cut and the extended coverage of the Ummel lawsuit, and I got to coast on both stories, on the strength of the great work done by other voices in the RE.net.

    And, as it works out, this week is an all-Ummel Odysseus Medal Awards post.

    We start with Glenn Kelmann, who wins The Odysseus Medal this week for “114 Pounds of Absolute Perserverance”:

    Once a buyer’s agent begins making representations about price, it seems possible for him to make negligent representations about price. This doesn’t mean an agent can’t make representations about price, and can’t be wrong when he does. He just can’t be negligently wrong, by withholding material information that a reasonable person would want to see. If the Ummels’ agent did that, he should pay for it.

    Of course, since we have no idea from our seat in the peanut gallery what really happened between Ms. Ummel and her agent, the whole debate is academic. The only undeniable fact is that the lawsuit that Ms. Ummel is pursuing, at greater cost than she is likely to recoup, must be like all other forms of revenge, a hopeless attempt to regain what she lost: her sense of trust and self-reliance.

    In this respect, the case just illustrates the perils to both parties when a client outsources her brain to a real estate agent, or a stock-broker, or anyone else trying to sell something. It is why we dislike the paternalistic mindset occasionally used to justify brokerage fees, in which talk of “hand holding” is not seen as condescending, fears about “the single biggest purchase in your life” are stoked, and agent attempts to be persuasive during Read more

    The Odysseus Medal competition — Voting for the People’s Choice Award is open

    There are 18 entries on the short list this week, out of a long list of 78 posts. A lot of news, so a longer short-list. Upside: A boatload of fascinating reading.

    Vote for the People’s Choice Award here. You can use the voting interface to see each nominated post, so comparison is easy.

    Ahem: Please don’t spam all your friends to come and vote for you. First, what we’re interested in is what is popular among people who would have been voting anyway. And second, I’ll eliminate you for cheating. Don’t say you weren’t warned.

    Voting runs through to 12 Noon MST Monday. I’ll announce the winners of this week’s awards soon thereafter.

    Here is this week’s short-list of Odysseus Medal nominees:

    < ?PHP $AltEntries = array ( "Ben Martin -- Realtors And Their Associations Realtors And Their Associations Share A Common Problem. What We Have Here Is Failure To Communicate.”,
    “Brian Brady — Erin Brockovich
    Watch Out! Here Comes Erin Brockovich!“,
    “Brian Brady — Guerilla Warfare Needed Housevalues.com Invades Activerain.com: Guerilla Warfare Needed“,
    “Brian Brady — Ultimate Irony Activerain.com and HouseValues.com- The Ultimate Irony“,
    “Brian Brady — Brokers/Lenders The Danger of Real Estate Brokers as Loan Advisors“,
    “Charles Feldman — Litigious Clients Real Estate Agents: Are Litigious Clients Out to Get YOU?“,
    “Dan Green — Mortgage Rates and the Fed Why Mortgage Rates Didn’t Fall More When The Fed Made A Surprise 0.750% Rate Cut“,
    “Doug Quance — Self-Fufilling Prophecy And Now We Shall Witness The Economic Self-Fufilling Prophecy“,
    “Dustin Luther — Roost.com Who gave Roost complete MLS listings?“,
    “Galen Ward — Benefit versus Features Descriptive text as benefit, not feature“,
    “Glenn Kelman — Absolute Perserverance “114 Pounds of Absolute Perserverance”“,
    “Jay Thompson — Buyer suing realtor On Buyers Suing Agents“,
    “Jay Thompson — Roost.com Roost.com: A New Player in Real Estate Search“,
    “Jim Cronin — Slow-Loading 3 Reasons Your Real Estate Blog Loads So Darn Slow, and the Solutions“,
    “Joel Burslem — Roost.com Roost.com Kicks over the RE Search Cart“,
    “Kris Berg — The Fast Lane Real Estate in the Fast Lane“,
    “Michael Wurzer — Branded or Unbranded Media Branded or Unbranded Media, A Video Conundrum“,
    “Mike Price — Who Rules The Roost? Who Rules The Roost?“,
    );
    shuffle($AltEntries);

    $radioGroup = “”;
    $num = count($AltEntries);
    for ($i=0; $i< $num; $i++) { $pieces = explode("\t", $AltEntries[$i]); $radioGroup .= "

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    $radioGroup .= “$pieces[0], “;
    $radioGroup .= “$pieces[1]”;
    }

    echo (“

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    ?>

    Deadline for next week’s competition Read more

  • The Odysseus Medal: “It’s not just about the lender, escrow officer, and agent doing their job; its about them doing their job as a team.”

    The Odysseus Medal this week goes to Trevor Smith for Theology, Postmodernism, and a Different Kind of Buyer:

    Postmodernism places value on the journey. Many of my clients are very interested in learning about the process of real estate. They don’t want somebody to do it for them. They want to be part of the journey. They want to be an integral cog in the process, so that when they get the house they want, they can say “I took part, in buying this home.”  Contrast this to agent/client relationships of the past where the agent decided what homes to show their client, they drafted the paperwork and said “sign here,” and they moved their client through closing with directions rather than explanations.

    Postmodernism distrusts authority. At one time you may have been able to say, “This is a good value for this house,” and your buyer would simply trust your judgement. After all you are a professional. This is no longer the case. Now, multiple factors must go into making a decision: 1.) What does the data say? 2.) What does my agent say? 3.) What do my friends and spiritual advisor say? 4.) and lastly and most importantly, How do I feel about it?

    Truth is personal and it’s relative.There is market data, there are appraisals, there is the financial situation of the seller, and there are comparables; but none of this makes a bit of difference if the buyer doesn’t see the truth in them. Today’s buyer can’t be given the data and the data’s conclusion. They have to be given the data and make their own conclusion. To you the chicken farm next door might devalue the house by $10,000, but to the buyer it increases the value by $10,000. After all, they grew up on a chicken farm, and viewing one brings back fond memories.

    Postmodernism values community. It’s not just getting a good deal, but it’s meeting the seller of the house to learn about their kids and the experience they had in the home. It’s not just about advice from an agent, but its becoming friends with your agent. It’s not just about the lender, Read more