Sentences with phrase «organize real estate when»

Not exact matches

Faith leaders who organized a large nonpartisan forum for the city's mayoral candidates were left fuming Thursday night when the biggest names pulled out at eleventh - hour — including Mayor de Blasio who cited a scheduling conflict and Republican real estate mogul Paul Massey who complained the questions were too tough.
When brutal organized real estate crime enforcer Thomas (Romain Duris) looks at a new lover through the slits of his fingers — fingers we've seen hungry at her body just moments before, fingers we've seen brutalizing squatters and other unfortunates he's been enlisted to bloody — there is aroused an essential sympathy with the base humanity of this man through his most human part.
Since Mr. Rook, apparently, expects higher levels of brokerage competition in slower market places, how can we not see his Tribunal comment, as it relates to current levels of competition in the Greater Toronto Area, as potentially being a broader endorsement of organized real estate's system's — when we follow a similar approach to the one that is used by TREB?
When this industry finally becomes a normal sales industry where product knowledge, competence and ethics are paramount, the independent sales practitioners who have these qualities will enjoy strong businesses and a good way of life, and the multi-ringed circus we've known as organized real estate, will be no more!
For the Competition Bureau of Canada to concern itself with how organized real estate: Registrant's, Practitioner's or Brokerages attract new Clients, beyond our ability to charge various rates of commission, is absolutely bizarre — when it's grossly evident that there is ample competition already, and it is just as evident that ours is an industry that really needs to compete through increased professionalism: competence and ethics, because the cost of the absence of the aforesaid can be immeasurable!
When one reviews the Competition Bureau online statements, such as what I've covered in the preceding paragraph, it gives the impression that the Competition Bureau didn't take the time to properly research organized real estate in Canada, because to think otherwise, would be to suggest that the Competition Bureau of Canada, is just playing - to - win.
When it comes to organized real estate the Competition Bureau of Canada has about as much credibility as a problem child!
When I'm at board meetings and talking with realtors, most very successful, they all see the value in being a part of organized real estate.
I know that organized real estate began in some parts of Canada more than 100 years ago and as I look through the records of the past, it seems to me this really became a significant industry when the first group of agents organized co-operatively as a sharing organization.
As a matter of fact, because of the way IDX and the DDF clutter up Google a FSBO (private seller) should have a cleaner and better exposure on Google when they are not listed with organized real estate and tied to either the IDX or DDF exchange programs — as said programs bleed multiple versions of the same listings over the Internet.
You may remember some months ago when I outlined the problems within the organized real estate appraisal industry.
Mr. Campanale said: «I know that changing the way organized real estate and the Realtors who work in the industry do their business is not an easy proposition, even when it may be better for the industry itself and the consumers who rely on us.»
Due to the source of this storey it needs to be told in full, or not at all — especially when it is being reproduced by a publication that is seen as having peculiar ties to organized real estate.
It began when Century 21 successfully sued Zoocasa for scraping listings from its website and continued when Zoocasa hired Lawrence Dale, who as owner of Realtysellers had launched a series of legal challenges against organized real estate.
Some times, when turning in for the night re my real estate days, during my stints therein through the early eighties, mid nineties, and most recently, 2008 until last December, I felt like I was a member of «organized grime» due to the pathetic so - called «strategic» old and worn top - down learned negotiating tactics employed by the never - ending stream of amateurs in real estate masquerading as professionals.
When Incentives are REALTOR, and not Brokerage based, this is when competition will exist in organized real estWhen Incentives are REALTOR, and not Brokerage based, this is when competition will exist in organized real estwhen competition will exist in organized real estate.
The industry leaders were asked what's different from about five years ago, when some of them were threatening to break away from organized real estate.
You're the «poster boy» for what's wrong with organized real estate — someone who needs to think he has it all figured out, yet who can't make an intelligent argument, or respond lucidly when pressed.
For example, when Egerton's team identified Turkey as a source of investor buyers coming to London, they reached out to LeadingRE / Luxury Portfolio member AYIKCAN Real Estate there, who organized a dinner with high - net worth Turkish business people during a Strutt & Parker visit to Turkey.
Just a tidbit info: When I first opened my boutique real estate business in 1991 (and the concept was quite new to my area), I set up my «correspondence system» to include a courtesy letter to the buyer, saying where their deposit was physically (what bank and location), and stating that the deposit would form part of the closing funds organized by their lawyer, and would be released and or paid out as we were instructed, AFTER being notified in writing (fax) that their transaction had, in fact, closed.
I think the Competition Bureau needs to be told by someone in authority that it should stop with the compliance kick it is on when it comes to organized real estate and its member boards.
How should organized real estate respond when tech giants like Amazon and Facebook pour billions of dollars into creating real estate platforms?
Isn't it remarkable, as tough as this business is that we've even managed to become a punching bag of sorts for the Competition Bureau of Canada, when in fact the high failure rate in this industry should have also served as a stark reminder of just how brutally competitive a business organized real estate is!
Many in organized real estate had a far different view of fair housing when Title VIII of the Civil Rights Act was passed in 1968.
The deafening silence by CREA and BCREA when it was needed can leave absolutely no doubt that they have zero relevance in organized real estate.
When the members of the British Columbia Real Estate Association (BCREA) cast a ballot this summer to determine whether to dissolve the association plus its 11 associated boards in favour of a new provincewide professional standards entity called Realtors of B.C., the vote may be more about what Realtors are willing to sacrifice to get organized real estate to a new, more efficient destinatReal Estate Association (BCREA) cast a ballot this summer to determine whether to dissolve the association plus its 11 associated boards in favour of a new provincewide professional standards entity called Realtors of B.C., the vote may be more about what Realtors are willing to sacrifice to get organized real estate to a new, more efficient destinEstate Association (BCREA) cast a ballot this summer to determine whether to dissolve the association plus its 11 associated boards in favour of a new provincewide professional standards entity called Realtors of B.C., the vote may be more about what Realtors are willing to sacrifice to get organized real estate to a new, more efficient destinatreal estate to a new, more efficient destinestate to a new, more efficient destination.
Still, Realtors are notoriously apathetic when it comes to taking part in organized real estate.
And when it does, it will be the end of organized real estate as we know it.
Your real estate journey is unique, and your MyLocations dashboard helps you to organize your favorite properties, hide unwanted listings, and get alerts when something new is right for you.
When in your office, it's where you'll organize all information on clients and properties; compose correspondence and marketing materials; and access the Web, which is essential to nearly all real estate transactions.
Don Lawby, president and COO of Century 21 Canada hit the nail on the head when he says «If organized real estate had stayed where it originally was designed to be — providing information and data between members and not dealing directly with the consumer — we wouldn't be in this position today.»
As I read the latest application by the Competition Bureau against organized real estate, I thought of the great line used by Ronald Reagan when he won the debate over Jimmy Carter in 1980.
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