Not exact matches
We
tend to give very good service to our
clients at a pretty reasonable price,» said Nancy Johnson, chairwoman of the County of Carleton Law Association real
estate lawyers committee.
When lawyers think about real
estate fraud, they
tend to think about fake
clients with forged ID obtaining fraudulent mortgages, or flip frauds where the value of a property is artificially inflated.
As the head of the firm's Probate Division, she is able to provide vast services to the firm's
clients by
tending to all of their probate or
estate needs in - house.
Again, this is not as much of an issue for larger firms, who (with the exception of bankruptcy cases where the
estate pays, so no one cares about flat fees)
tend to represent
clients who pay attorneys fees to other parties, rather than recover fees themselves.
Plenty of agents and brokers are assiduous about
tending to their
clients» needs, but it is surprising how many have yet to integrate the environmental aspect of real
estate into their practice.
The songs are her own compositions, penned between Open Houses and
tending to real
estate clients.
The majority of home improvement
tends to happen in the 90 days leading up to or after a sale, Williams says, «and so, given that so much home improvement happens before and after a purchase, we are a sure way for a real
estate agent to delight their
clients.»
Your appearance is partially responsible for whether you land a new
client, some studies suggest, with one 2013 report from Columbus State University in Columbus, Ga., finding that real
estate professionals who were deemed «attractive» by consumers
tended to net higher sales prices for listings — and, therefore, higher commissions.
«A number of our
clients have made their wealth via real
estate investments, and they
tend to continue to invest directly into properties,» he says.
As real
estate pros, we
tend to make ourselves available to our
clients and prospects 24 - 7.
Freakonomics is a book that got great press citing a study that showed real
estate practitioners
tend to keep their own home on the market longer — and, thus, command more for it — than homes of their
clients.
While most real
estate professionals advise their
clients to
tend to the yard work, trim the trees, and put out a new welcome mat, they may miss other opportunities to help sellers improve a home's curb appeal.
Be Prepared While international
clients may be more financially sound, they
tend to have less of an understanding in terms of what goes into a real
estate transaction in the U.S., and what it will entail from a legal standpoint.
Those
clients tend to blab to more friends, more often and with more emotion about a bad a real
estate transaction than a happy
client who talks about a good one.