- Joined
- Jan 15, 2002
- Professional Status
- Certified General Appraiser
- State
- California
95% of what we do in an appraisal assignment is wrangling the information. Not actually analyzing it. The whole hybrid controversy demonstrates the concept. Insofar as (only) collecting and formatting the factual data, that function doesn't require any individual training or experience in analyzing that data.Of course it will. Information is power - and AI has already transformed the information availability space. You could personally tell Claude to write you a code script in Python or R - you no longer need to know how to code. Same applies to any other kind of information. The only thing preventing AI from being able to perform this service is - again - an asymmetry of information. AI doesn't have access to lender pricing algorithms. A bit like the GSE's not having access to MLS data in the past. They'll solve for that quickly enough, though - just like the GSE's did.
It's not now and it's not certain, but the potential is there. The more expensive human labor gets the more economic incentive there is to leverage the use of human labor with technology. Even in the trades. Robot 3D "printers" building concrete shells and the framing for the room partitions. I don't think they're laying the foundation or doing the roof yet but its just a matter of time before they do.