- Joined
- Apr 14, 2007
- Professional Status
- Certified Residential Appraiser
- State
- Tennessee
Yes. I said that already. Experience in itself, is certainly not viable as the foundation for a fact driven analysis. (But nothing replaces experience either, whether we are talking about life altering surgery, or professional analysis opinions by somebody who has "been there and done that" for years.)It is certainly a combination of learning (course work, mentoring, etc.) and past experiences that result in one knowing how to apply the various techniques that can be used to support an adjustment - and that includes recognizing when the results are wonky (not to get too technical). But, it is the data and the analyses of the data that provides the support, not the past experience.
One can often re-use data and analyses from a prior assignment with similar elements. It is still the data and analyses that provides the support, not the experience of having done it.
Experience "should" also recognize corrupt data, which abounds today. You've not been a Tennessee appraiser in decades, so you've not had reason to review how questionable some of the data is that spews from our MLS. The same data used in groupings to support many adjustments and is sent to the Billow and Fluff sites used by everybody, including the GSE's. Data that's often distorted by information we see all the time individually. GLA is often wrong - Concessions are not reported - Last minute buyer agent commissions added to the price at the 11th hour - Again, these things can be caught individually, but not in bulk data and it distorts many things.