Most agents and bank employees are competent, dedicated, professionals. And by most I mean 51%.
And only half of sellers are competent, dedicated amatures. Likewise buyers. And that is correlated. So there are only ~1/25 transactions that involve a confluence of
Going outside of the world of house buying, I find that 50% of interactions I had with repair people were like that as well. So that definitely makes sense.
Other explanations are that people are afraid of trying things out, don’t have time, or insist on a reality that simply isn’t there (that when you pay someone to do something, they should reliably do it).
Interesting. Care to elaborate? Why don’t more people do this?
Most agents and bank employees are competent, dedicated, professionals. And by most I mean 51%. And only half of sellers are competent, dedicated amatures. Likewise buyers. And that is correlated. So there are only ~1/25 transactions that involve a confluence of
An on-the-ball personal buyer
A slacking agent and bank
An on-the-ball personal seller
Going outside of the world of house buying, I find that 50% of interactions I had with repair people were like that as well. So that definitely makes sense.
Other explanations are that people are afraid of trying things out, don’t have time, or insist on a reality that simply isn’t there (that when you pay someone to do something, they should reliably do it).