By Mike Daughtry
President, Home Builders Association of Midwest Georgia
Before you settle on the house of your dreams, it’s essential to find the right lender. Knowing how much home you can afford before you start searching will help the home buying process go that much smoother, and the right lender also can help you determine what mortgage works best with your financial situation. Here are ten questions you should ask potential lenders before making your final selection. (more…)
May 31st, 2007
By Jerry Nesbitt
Coldwell Banker Bullard Realty
There is a saying in the real estate business when the question is asked, “When is the best time to buy a home?� The answer, which is true, is “Now�.
There are many benefits to purchasing a home now. First, prices of homes are down from record highs. Also, the real estate industry has the highest inventory levels of homes in over 20 years, (see www.cbbullard.com). There are several reasons for this. The glut in home mortgages that are in default and over building by some builders in certain areas of the country has caused them to provide larger incentives to buyers to purchase their homes. Both of these should allow you to build equity in your home faster. Second, interest rates are still very low. For qualified buyers, a 30 year fixed rate mortgage is in the low 6% range. And last, the enjoyment of owning your own home is the greatest benefit. (more…)
May 16th, 2007
By Freda Stephens
Coldwell Banker Bullard Realty
So you want to be in real estate?
A career in real estate provides flexibility and freedom to set your own pace. Income directly reflects your efforts with no limits on what astute, hard-working agents can earn. Successful people in real estate are goal-oriented, persevering, self-motivated, ambitious and people-oriented. Coldwell Banker Bullard Realty is currently searching for new professionals to assist us in servicing the many leads that we currently have available. More information is available at www.cbbullard.com/careers/.
Real Estate agents come from all walks of life, educational backgrounds and ages. All can achieve the education and licensing requirements necessary to begin a new career in real estate at our Advantage School of Real Estate. (more…)
April 16th, 2007
By Sandy Boda
Executive Officer, Home Builders Association of Midwest Georgia
Each year, thousands of companies from across the planet gather for the Inte
rnational Builders’ Show® (IBS), a showcase of the latest products and technologies available to builders. This year’s show brought together a record 1,900 companies exhibiting products in 300 different categories over one million square feet space. “It’s like a mega-mall with something new every year,â€? says Robert Frost, a Missouri builder. “While the show is not open to the public, we do have a sneak peek of the latest products to come from the show. Look for them in show rooms and new homes in the upcoming year!” (more…)
March 22nd, 2007
By Wayne Martin
C
oldwell Banker Bullard Realty
The real estate industry has come a long way in a short period of time in relation to technology! From cell phones, to PDAs to wireless computers, technology stands at the forefront of today’s real estate industry.
Industry statistics tell us that in 2006 that approximately 80 percent of all home buyers used the internet to search for a home. It’s easy to see why home buyers would rely on websites like our own which is at http://www.cbbullard.com/.
* Easy online home search. (On cbbullard.com, that’s over 90,000 Atlanta area properties)
* Access to company information including office locations, contact information and the ability to select from over 300 agents.
* Online information requests with a guaranteed quick response time.
* Ability to schedule a showing while online.
* Valuable information and contacts for relocation services, mortgage information, foreclosures and careers.
For the real estate agent, the benefits are obvious! By pointing a prospective buyer or seller to the company website, you are providing that person with valuable tools that assist them in buying or selling their home, as well as reflecting your professional affiliation with a corporation that is committed to providing those tools. Ongoing SEO (Search Engine Optimization), pay-per-click programs and lead generation are just a few of the items that make a website like cbbullard.com invaluable to a company’s agents.
What is the future of technology in real estate? The demands are tremendous and technology is here to stay. It will play an even bigger part in real estate as new, cutting edge hardware and programs in development today become the standard of tomorrow.
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(Wayne Martin is the director of information technologies for Coldwell Banker Bullard Realty, which has seven offices in the Metro Atlanta area and is the parent company of Coldwell Banker American Land Mart. This column originally appeared in the “Bullard Blog”, a regular feature of the company’s website.)
March 20th, 2007
By Ray Appen
(This column originally appeared in Appen Newspapers Inc.’s publications on Wednesday, Feb. 22, 2007. It is being reprinted with the permission of the writer.)
One of my oldest friends is a senior NASA scientist. He’s a smart guy.
We have a small disagreement though about the media, which finds us at odds. You see, my friend thinks that media is “liberal” and that “the liberal media” is in a conspiracy against us. I think that is hogwash, or, as they say here in Georgia, that dog just won’t hunt. Heck, that dog can’t bark or even lift his leg as far as I can see.
Part of the problem is that people get sidetracked by issues, and they suspend part of their rational thinking and logic. Instead of just looking at the facts, they get a single thought in their brain and don’t let go. That’s a real bad idea.
When this happens, people tend to become fodder for opportunistic politicians — and talk show hosts — who “fish” with bait like “immigration,” “taxes,” “patriotism,” “amnesty,” “the border,” “gay marriage” and, yes, the “liberal media.”
If I had a dime for every time the talk show folks try to cram the “liberal media” down our throats, I would be a multi-millionaire.
Also, when people allow others to do their thinking for them, they often tend to end up supporting ideas and causes that are destructive and wrong. Think Salem, Mass. Think post Weimar Germany. Think Joseph McCarthy in the ’50s. Think “immigration” today.
We are much better off thinking for ourselves instead of indiscriminately believing what others tell us.
Many people allow actors like Rush, O’Reilly and Hannity to make their decisions for them. Sure, a portion of what they say is well thought out and sometimes rational, but at the end of the day, most of these guys are just bad actors shouting “fire” in a crowded theater hundreds of times a day.
The “liberal media” is in large part their creation of convenience, just as Mickey Mouse is Walt’s.
The “media” today is print, broadcast, podcast, the Internet and more. The “media” is not The New York Times. The “media” is not the Atlanta Journal-Constitution, but both newspapers are part of the print media — a very, very small part.
In this country there are perhaps 2,500 daily newspapers and 5,000 non-daily newspapers give or take a few. In 2005, the circulation of non-daily newspapers (now about 45 million) passed that of daily newspapers, and this gap is now accelerating.
Is the “media” liberal? Is it conservative? Well, first tell me which one you are you talking about — print, broadcast or the Internet. Then, if print, which paper? And after you tell me the paper, I’ll probably want to know if you refer to a specific columnist, reporter or editor.
And finally I may want to know about the frequency of the “liberalness” — all the time, sometimes or just that article you read last week.
Calling the media “liberal” is kind of like saying that everyone who drives a red car has leftist views or that everyone who is not married is gay. It just doesn’t work that way. I don’t care how many times O’Reilly tells you that it does.
The news business is about as decentralized a business one can imagine. The news that you get — whether it is a big national story or a local story about something that happened at the high school, will generally be written by a reporter who will have his or her name attached to the story. The vast majority of these reporters have a thing about editors messing with the substance or veracity of their stories. They really have a problem if someone tries to spin the story — their story. My point is that for the media to be “liberal” (or conservative) it must be biased, and if it is biased then the reporter who wrote it and who signs their name to it must knowingly — essentially agree to lie. And most of them just won’t agree to do that. Publishing something other than the truth ends careers. That is, the self interest of real journalists dictates objective reporting. And editors can no more force their reporters to spin their stories on a significant scale than they can make pigs fly. There is no conspiracy — promise.
The bulk of the media in this country — large and small — report your news as best they can as objectively as they know how. They’re more reliable, because they’re held more accountable. And the accountability is to, yes, you guessed it, you. Their credibility is their primary and arguably only major asset. This is the part that the public just never seems to understand. Self-interest ordains they protect that asset to the bitter end, no matter what. They can’t afford to be liberal or conservative in their news reporting.
So, the next time you’re invited to join in the “liberal media bashing” shtick, you might stop for just a moment and consider if it is really in your best interest to help damage this “media” that is primarily responsible for protecting this way life that we so take for granted in the west. It’s not a game, and taking your “free press” for granted is probably the worst decision of all.
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(Ray Appen owns and publishes a group of weekly newspapers on the north side of Atlanta. Included in the Appen Newspapers Inc. group are the (Alpharetta & Roswell) Revue & News, the Forsyth Herald, the Johns Creek Herald, the Milton Herald, North Atlanta’s Real Estate Report, and North Atlanta’s Business Post. Previously, Ray worked at the Miami Herald and the Suburban Journals in St. Louis, Mo. Ray can be contacted by email at appen@northfulton.com, and his company’s website address is www.northfulton.com.)
February 25th, 2007