The confusion now with the NAR lawsuit re: co-broke compensations has even caused potential sellers to be confused. A potential listing has fallen into my lap this week, and Seller asked me about that, then I find NAR thinks they are getting Realtors prepped for the "new" system, then suddenly the DOJ has put off any final decision until November I hear. That will throw a few pebbles on the path, but it will be worked out. I'm hearing the Fed is planning to reduce the rate soon (30-45 days????), and that should goose the market. Lots of pent-up demand. But of course that doesn't solve the initial poster's dilemma.
With Core Logic having access at our expense to everything in ala Mode, they are destroying the residential appraisers' livelihood. I'm sure they would like all lenders to pay them tribute fee and provide 'The Number' at the push of a button for 80%-90% of the loans out there. Like any parasite, they are killing their host, plus we pay $500-$2500/year to use their software on top of it, as they absorb the data in our reports.
Would I recommend someone to start on the road to become an appraiser? Nope. Hard to get a mentor even after all the classes, mortgage loan appraising is scarce and pays the same as it did 25 years ago but requires more than double the work... You might as well go to work for McDonalds... probably pays better and is consistent income. Need for Appraisers General will likely continue, but much of that is highly specialized and takes many years to become an authority, such as for appraising land for minerals, shopping centers, imminent domain, subdivision development... you don't learn those skills overnight; mentors in those areas are extremely rare. You're likely not to be offered that kind of work until you show years of proficiency.
Overall, IMO from Dodd/Frank going forward, the system has been twisted into eliminating appraisers as much as possible, and I suspect the economy is going to find itself up against some very bad housing loans in the end with these push-of-a-button valuation systems. By then most of us appraisers will be dead, retired, or moved on into actual income-producing line of work. Even with Google Earth, a valuations program can't see inside a property to evaluate condition, upgrades, view etc. Zillow thought they had the key to seeing trends and values and offered push-of-a-button values... but it didn't work for them either, and they suffered financially for it.
For now and the immediate future, appraising offers a shrinking clientele. I would recommend looking into an area which has growing demand. What will society's needs be tomorrow? As always, "Find a need, and fill it".