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For paired sales our office uses a proprietarty program we developed to compare MLS data against eachother over 16 criteria. It compares across those criteria and allows you to specify which item you are trying to measure, and tolerances for the other 15 items. It's a beast and takes about 5-7 minutes to cross-compare about 300 properties. But the needles in the haystack are there, though it requires computing power and algorithims. The total number of calculations is a factorial and runs into the hundreds of thousands. It is excel based but should not be, as excel was not designed as a procedural database. We are playing with the idea of converting it to SQL and making it available to the appraisal public. My week is consumed with appraisal and I never seem to find the time to work on it, so it remains a pet project. Every time I see one of these discussions about paired sales I get a little more motivated, as the technology exists to runs pairs for each appriasal. We do it every day. I am not the smartest guy in the room, just a tinkerer. I guess I'm just not convinced other appraisers would find it valuable as they have concluded paired sales is only an abstraction taught in school.
Very interesting and I am intrigued. Full disclosure, I am of the opinion that dollar adjustments, at least in the formats/forms they exist today, have little-to-no place in appraisal, due to the question if people even purchase in such a way in the first place and secondly if they do, albeit subconsciously, that the data available is not good or plentiful enough to produce a credible result that might be better than what an appraiser could conclude from what I call a simple trends analysis. I've bolded some things I wonder about.
There are 33 potential adjustments on a 1004, not including the spaces open for anything else.
You are able to find 300 relevant properties in the markets you work in?
Is a needle in the haystack a quantity you feel good about?
Do you understand the hundreds of thousands of calculations? On this point I expect you might - it aint rocket science, but garbage in garbage out comes to mind.
You say the technology exists and you use it everyday, but is it credible?
I do believe a program could be developed to extract adjustments. What I question, is the quality of the result, and the correlation between the expense of the method and the quality of result. Doesn't seem like a good use of resources to me, when other solutions to the problems are out there, for the whopping cost of zero.
A bit off here, but lots of appraisers use tablets and such in the field on an inspection. They claim it saves them lots of time and its entirely worth it. I don't think I could argue that it might in fact save them time. For me, a piece of paper and a pencil works pretty good. I am not sluggish on a computer, so transferring/touching the data a second time into the form report isn't a big deal for me - certainly about the last thing that comes to mind when I wonder where all my time went. Paper is nice too, because I wont lose it when my computer crashes. So, when I consider using a tablet, I wonder why I would spend so much money for so little benefit and additional risk? Pencils cost almost nothing, rarely break, mostly work in the rain and don't need to be recharged or upgraded. The point is maybe tech can be created and used in appraisal, but at what expense and what benefit? I think that's a relevant consideration.
Why is it so important to "prove" adjustments? How vital to the process is it really? How much benefit are we getting from so much toil???
