@@1960fusion There is such thing as too specific. I would add as large of a geographic area as within reason. If my client was in the middle of Orange County I would put the whole county. If the client was on the border of two counties I would put both counties - provided I reasonably serviced those areas. If a buyer challenged the agreement they would state that the agent listed a proximity in which they had not or could not service. If that is correct, the buyer may potentially skirt this agreement. "Vague" is only bad because any contractual terms should be clearly defined. But I think "too broad" is a better description of the risk an agent faces with with this form. An agent should clearly specify the widest extent of an area in which they have or can reasonably offer service to without any compromise to the client.
You said you have a less intimidating proprietary buyers form and a video no it, where is that video? couldnt find it on your channel . Just want to see what it looks like at least thanks.
You sound as enthusiastic about this form as I do. Thank you for explaining it short and to the point.
thank you for your educational videos, they are very helpful!
This was a great help, thank you for putting this out!
Thank you. Just what I was looking for
Thanks. Super annoying that they have to bundle all this stuff--just to freak out the Buyer and make it harder to get signed....
Thank you. This really helped.
This is great, thank you.
Thank you! this is great!
The more vague you are for your location the less enforceable it could become
Good comment. There should be a happy medium that protects the agent and isn't so vague that it's unreasonable.
That's correct. I learned this from the attorney that teaches about buyer/broker agreements in the CAR class
@@BalboaRealEstate
you are correct, you want to be as specific as possible, ambiguity could hurt you in this case.
@@1960fusion There is such thing as too specific. I would add as large of a geographic area as within reason. If my client was in the middle of Orange County I would put the whole county. If the client was on the border of two counties I would put both counties - provided I reasonably serviced those areas. If a buyer challenged the agreement they would state that the agent listed a proximity in which they had not or could not service. If that is correct, the buyer may potentially skirt this agreement. "Vague" is only bad because any contractual terms should be clearly defined. But I think "too broad" is a better description of the risk an agent faces with with this form. An agent should clearly specify the widest extent of an area in which they have or can reasonably offer service to without any compromise to the client.
I find your videos very valuable. Do you have classes available?
Thanks for the feedback. No classes, just guidance for the agents at my brokerage and these TH-cam tutorials.
Thank you!
You said you have a less intimidating proprietary buyers form and a video no it, where is that video? couldnt find it on your channel . Just want to see what it looks like at least thanks.
If 3. b is selected, does that mean you double end it if they move forward with the purchase of that one property?
Only if you happen to be the listing agent.
Thank you
How do we acess this form on the California association of realtors website?
Just go to car(dot)org. It's pointless unless you join a local board of realtor, IMO.
Awesome
speak up boy act like you got a pair ..