GovernorARNOLD
New Member
an agent friend once said Harry bought the land for 14million. so if he sells it for 30, he would be able to settle with Mirvish. This is the last parcel of free land in that area. so i'm sure he will do well.
Such errors are most definitely not rare occurrences in MLS and other online real estate listings....they're not a big deal.
I had a professor who told me a story about a friend of hers who worked for a law firm and had to sort through resumes. The first step: she went through them and through out any resume with a spelling or grammatical error on the cover page. The point: little mistakes make a big impression.
If a salesperson doesn't pay attention to details in their ad why would anyone trust them to pay attention to details in an Agreement of Purchase and Sale?
The point: little mistakes make a big impression.
Why would anyone use an agent that didn't care about precision and who was a misogynist, or a user of child labour?
I could understand a mistake with remax, selling thousands of blah 200-400K properties. But if your Stintson, trying to hawk off a $30MM property, you'd think their is a higher level of detail and review.
An agent will write up something polished and give it to "the girls" in the office who proceed to edit it for length and appropriate asterisk and exclamation mark ratios and then put it up online. Unless the agent is constantly checking the site and checking in with "the girls", they may not know when exactly it's going to be posted - two or three days may go by before the agent notices an error, tells "the girls" about it, and has it fixed, which is why I wondered how long that ad has been up.
Lots of real estate people arent going to care about a spelling mistake that they know was made by some random assistant inputting her 62nd of 98 ads that afternoon.
She "through" them out based on grammatical errors?