Welcome to SoundBiteBlog.com. This website focuses mainly on providing Real Estate, Mortgage, and Local Area information for consumers and residents in Western Puget Sound, we also share our passions, expertise, and practical insights on Internet marketing and technology, including social media/networking, SEO, website design, and custom web applications. SoundBiteBlog is an award-winning joint venture between Mark Flanders of Pastik Design and Rich Jacobson of Windermere Real Estate / West Sound, Inc.

Within the pages of SoundBite is an eclectic collection of articles covering a wide variety of topics we hope you'll find interesting, engaging, and helpful. Rich is committed to relentlessly representing his client's best interests and empowering them to make informed decisions. Mark finally decided what he wanted to do when he grew up and gets excited when the code he's written solves a customer's problem with blinding efficiency!

“How much does a Good Reputation cost?”

May 8th, 2007 by Rich Jacobson

For real estate professionals, as it is for many different sales-oriented businesses, there are a gazillion different plans, programs, and systems available that you can employ to market yourself.  You could invest a nice chunk of change for a high-end website, complete with all the latest and greatest visual bells and whistles. Or, you could spend a ton of money for a personal coach to slap you around and to make sure you’re managing your time wisely. You could even buy a Hummer and convert it into a moving billboard to promote your image/services.

good-reputation.jpgBut of all the marketing and promotional tools at my disposal, by the far the most effective and lasting, is my reputation.

Five of the transactions I’ve enjoyed so far this year have come from repeat clients. These were all people who purchased homes through me, and valued my services enough to entrust me with the sale of their homes.

A potential client calls me out of the blue, asking if I would be willing to help sell his home. A good friend of his knows of me, and says I have a good reputation; someone he can trust.

Reputation. It isn’t something that’s easy to achieve. It doesn’t happen overnight. It requires consistent behavior and performance. It takes a long time to earn and develop. In some markets, it can take years and years.

Unfortunately, a good reputation that takes years to cultivate, can be easily destroyed in less than a minute.

With one word or one action, an entire lifetime of good reputation becomes questionable or suspect.

When my kids were little, they used to watch all the Veggie Tales videos. One was entitled, “Larry Boy and the Fib from Outer Space.” In the story, a character named Junior Asparagus tells a lie. Each time he’s confronted about his indiscretion, he lies to cover it up. This ‘Fib’ that starts out very small, gets bigger and bigger as the video progresses. Pretty soon, the ‘Fib’ is GIGANTIC, totally out of control, and about to destroy the town!big-fib.jpg

That’s the way it is in real life. We start out telling little white lies. The lies become larger and larger, and turn to grey. Pretty soon, the web of deception is HUGE and pitch black. A career is ruined.

One small compromise leads to another small compromise. Pretty soon, compromise becomes a consistent practice, a way of life. A lifelong reputation is destroyed.

How well do you protect your reputation? What checks and balances do you have in place? When temptations present themselves (and they will and do, daily), what keeps you from giving in to compromise? What ensures that your reputation can never be bought?

A good website?   $ 1000 start-up, $ 75 per month

A business coach?  $ 3000 annually

A good reputation?   Priceless.

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Should I Tell My Loan Officer About The Loan That’s Not On My Credit Report?

April 24th, 2007 by Mark Flanders

Mortgage fraud article graphicIt doesn’t happen often, but occasionally credit reports are missing some information. What about child support from before your current marriage? That doesn’t show up at all on a credit report. Should you tell the loan officer or just keep it to yourself. If it’s not on the report it doesn’t count, right?

Your loan and your credibility are at risk

You can go to jail if you deliberately withhold information from your mortgage application. It is called fraud and it’s not worth the risk. If you have ever wondered whether or not you must let a loan officer know about something that isn’t on you credit report, now you have the answer. Everything you know about your debts or obligations, regardless of if it may be on your credit report, must be disclosed to your lender. The lender is considering lending you thousands of dollars and has the legal right to full information. If that lender makes a decision to loan you money and finds out later that you withheld pertinent information, you could still go to prison.

Think of it this way. If a friend of yours asked you for a loan, but didn’t tell you something financially critical like they just totalled their car after a hard night of partying and need to get another one as soon as possible. And they didn’t tell you until after you gave them money. You’d be pretty ticked off, wouldn’t you? I would be. Without a car, your friend probably can’t get to work. And no work means no money. So of course you are going to wonder how they’ll pay you back.

A mortgage lender is in exactly the same position. They are making a decision based on a lie of omission.

Here’s the good news

Your loan officer can probably get your loan approved anyway. There are so many creative loan programs available these days, your debt ratio may not be as bad as you think, to a lender. If the lender agrees to make a loan after you have told everything there is to tell about your debts, you have nothing at all to worry about. The lender knows what he needs to know and fraud is no concern of yours.

So, if you have ever wondered about that hidden obligation or been tempted to keep it all to yourself, go with the honest solution and let the loan officer do his or her job. It works better for everybody involved. The honest solution allows you to stay out of jail and live in a nice house. The other decision? Well…..visitors are allowed!

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