WHAT YOU CAN EXPECT FROM YOUR REALTOR
Your REALTOR, as your agent, has your best interests at heart
The word 'agent' is defined as 'a person who acts for another'. It sounds so simple, doesn't it? We all 'act for another,' formally or informally, on a daily basis. In fact, it's so easy to slip into an 'agency relationship' that people sometimes forget that it involves serious legal responsibilities.
A REALTOR is someone who acts as an agent for another in a real estate transaction. An agent can act for the buyer or for the seller - or, to a limited degree, for both. But no matter whom they represent, agents and their representatives are legally obligated to protect and promote the interests of their clients as they would their own. Specifically, a real estate agent commits to:
AGENCY DISCLOSURE
It is now a lawful requirement for real estate agents to disclose
to customers whom they will be representing. This disclosure
is usually done with the aid of a blue brochure entitled Working with
a
Real Estate Agent. The brochure
includes a tear-off statement that the customer signs and the
REALTOR retains as proof that disclosure was made.
Signing the statement does not obligate the customer in any
way. Having explained to the customer the various
agency relationship options available to him or her, REALTOR
and client can now determine what services are to be
rendered.
Seller's agent
The agent for the seller, or listing agent, is the role we
are most familiar with, thanks to the immense marketing clout
of the Multiple Listing Service® over the past 40 years.
The seller retains a real estate agent to use his or her
marketing expertise and network to position the property to
its best advantage on the market, attract qualified buyers
and effect a sale at the highest price. In theory, the agreement
to act as seller's agent can be a handshake
agreement, but to list the property on the Victoria Real Estate
Board' s
Multiple Listing Service®, the Board requires
a listing contract be filled in, signed and submitted.
Buyer's agent
The buyer can benefit from an agent's representation, too. The buyer's
agent uses his or her knowledge of the
community and the market to source all of the properties that
fit the buyer's
budget, needs and wants. He or she
promotes the buyer's interest in purchase negotiations
to effect a sale at the lowest price. The agreement to act
as a
buyer's agent can be a handshake agreement or a contractual
one as mutually decided by agent and client. If it is a
handshake agreement, the REALTOR still abides by the tenets
of agency representation as mentioned above: loyalty,
professionalism, accountability, discretion, etc. The REALTOR
works hard to maintain the client's loyalty.
Dual agent
What happens when an agent who is working as a buyer's agent
shows the buyer a home for which he or she is also
the listing agent? Since the agent has promised a duty of confidentiality,
loyalty and full disclosure to both parties
simultaneously, it is necessary to limit these duties in this
situation, and gain the consent of both parties to continue
in this limited capacity. This is called a dual agency relationship.
The agent will ask for written consent of both parties to continue in a dual agency relationship, with these limitations:
WHAT TO LOOK FOR IN AN AGENT
The key word is 'expertise'. Look for it in a number of areas: