There’s always something to howl about.

Whatever it takes: A determined Realtor is a bargain . . .

Jeff Turner wrote this in a comment, but I think my answer to him justifies a post of its own:

Greg, what percentage of transactions fall into the category of “requires great skill,” as a result of the kind of title issues you speak of in this post, and what percentage fall into the “no problems” category?

Four out of five, at least, seem very routine to me, but that’s misleading. There is no transaction we are involved in to which we don’t bring a great deal of non-obvious value. Frankly, if I just talk with you, or visit you at home, I’m going to shed a lot of information gleaned from experience. I’ve seen thousands of houses. I’ve worked with hundreds of buyers and sellers. I’ve been directly involved in dozens of escrows from start to finish. You might be a lot smarter man than me, but I have seen everything, big and small, that can go wrong in the sale of a home. I’m not just there for the paperwork, which any title company can do in Arizona, and I’m not just taking your order, sink or swim. My job is to make sure you get everything you want — as, when and in the amount you want. So even on transactions that seem routine to me, I will be doing many, many things for you that you would not know to do for yourself. It’s not razzle-dazzle salesmanship, and it’s not some vast brilliance. More than anything else, it’s the knowledge that comes from having done it so many times before.

For what it’s worth, the house that closed yesterday didn’t require great skill, just bulldozer persistence. A dozen phone calls a day for weeks, not letting up. Yesterday, I spent half the day in my car moving documents myself to avoid courier delays. This is dumb work, perhaps demeaning to some. My attitude: Whatever it takes. Last Friday I looked at a hopeless situation and bet everything I had that we could get the job done by the end of the month. At two-thirty yesterday afternoon, the movers were waiting at the house when I pulled up with the keys. What would have happened if I had been wrong? I made a joke about it on Tuesday, writing in the dark for Friday’s Arizona Republic, but it would have been a huge disaster with consequences rippling out through time. As it was, we finished four hours later than I wanted to. But the difference between a late success and a protracted failure, possibly involving many more lawyers, was someone stepping up to make it happen.

Here’s something you hadn’t thought about, because you’re not a Realtor: The escrow we’re talking about closed on the last day of the month. This is the busiest day of the month at title companies, the day when a closing is most likely to slip a day — or more. One of the skills you have to master to do this job well is getting your files to the top of the stack at the title company. They always have more work than they can do at the end of the month, and if you can’t get your files pushed through first, you’re that much more likely to close late. In this particular case, I made it plain that I was going feet first into the file. Walking on coals is dumb work, too. But no one else will do it with me unless I’m willing to go first.

Want more? In his last-minute move-out, the seller had taken the refrigerator, which was under contract to stay. It was contested property in the sellers’ divorce, which would have meant more delays from more attorneys. To kill the issue, I conceded $1,000 out of my own commission to the buyer. I did it that way for two reasons: First, to make the problem go away now, rather than later. And second because a unilateral concession from me required only my own signature, which meant that we could proceed without delay. I was already conceding a very substantial sum to the buyer, so that’s a thousand dollars I would rather have kept. But the more important issue was keeping my vow that we would close by the end of the month. Whatever it takes.

Without meaning to be confrontational, I think the idea of the disintermediation of Realtors is a non-starter. There are simply too many things that I do on even the most routine transactions that an unrepresented (or barely represented) buyer or seller would never know to do. The job is so complicated that, unless you are doing it full time (which could include full-time investors), you could not possibly do it as well as I can. I would expect you to have exactly the same attitude about me doing your job — and you’d be right…

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