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I am not sure I'd describe my current state as "relaxed". I actually spend much of my life worried to half way to death about people and circumstances I often can't control, but that doesn't keep me from getting an ulcer trying! Today I would describe my mental state as "anxious" but it beats "panicky twitching" that I was close to a day or two ago. We're getting better... we have a deal now. Now the work begins. It will be a complicated one.
JB...I do a lot more for my clients than your little list up there. If all I ever did was the things you list, I would have free time, probably sleep at night.
I know you are consumed with unhappiness about the real estate industry... but I can't help that. I just do the best for my clients, and most of them think we provide a pretty good value.
I don't worry so much about my clients being flakes... It's much more often other people who aren't even a party to the contract, an appraisal scheduler, or loan officer, or some neighbor down the road who won't sign the road maintenance agreement, whom our lives and livelihoods depend... And that's where my clients appreciate me. Because I fight those battles and smooth those wrinkles for them... so they can keep their day jobs. Client even said that to me the other day. "We pay you to worry for us, we're not worried at all." That makes me happy.
I hate to break your heart, but successful agents get paid more than engineers.
I agree, but not because people want to pay them that its because they have a corner on the market and buyers use agents because its not their money. If it ever went to a pay by the hour situation I guarantee that would not be the case.
At this point, I'm not even sure YOU know what you're saying. It's clear your knowledge is poor, and most points that are made by agents are ignored or go over your head.
also, the top 3 criminal attorneys (life and death) probably make as much as the top 3 Realtors in a decent-sized city, but not beyond the top 3. And they get their cash upfront. Oops - convicted? Sorry!
At this point, I'm not even sure YOU know what you're saying. It's clear your knowledge is poor, and most points that are made by agents are ignored or go over your head.
also, the top 3 criminal attorneys (life and death) probably make as much as the top 3 Realtors in a decent-sized city, but not beyond the top 3. And they get their cash upfront. Oops - convicted? Sorry!
Ha, go ask successful agents how much training they have and let me know frequently you get 3 weeks as an answer. It takes 3 weeks to get a license from the state that says a person is qualified to help someone buy or sell real estate. The training goes way beyond that. In SC that training period or apprenticeship period is 3 years as defined by the state. That's how long the agent must be supervised by a broker before they can practice on their own.
Ha, go ask successful agents how much training they have and let me know frequently you get 3 weeks as an answer. It takes 3 weeks to get a license from the state that says a person is qualified to help someone buy or sell real estate. The training goes way beyond that. In SC that training period or apprenticeship period is 3 years as defined by the state. That's how long the agent must be supervised by a broker before they can practice on their own.
And, I sure want that attorney with 4 years of Poly-Sci and 3 years of law school to handle my wrongly-accused murder defense...
Because he is "Trained" and even passed the bar exam.
in NC, you're looking at 6.5 weeks of 3 days/week + pass class test + pass state test (with about a 30% failure rate) + 2 more weeks for post-licensing
in NC, you're looking at 6.5 weeks of 3 days/week + pass class test + pass state test (with about a 30% failure rate) + 2 more weeks for post-licensing
and neither has to do with what you get paid.
...and neither is actually "training." Real training starts when you attain basic educational qualification to be trained.
Untrue and no clue.
You should pick better attorneys and better real estate agents.
I didn't say that I'd hire an attorney with no experience, but somebody will.
These timelines are what it takes a high school graduate to get to the point where they get paid for their time (assuming they pass some licensing exams)
As should be obvious to anyone, there is a vast gulf between the education required to be a lawyer and one that's needed to be a realtor.
(BTW, since your job is literally a salesman, I must say I'm unimpressed with your social skills)
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