Blog – Tuesdays with Mary

Tuesdays with Mary: Homebuying Millennials

Tuesday, November 14, 2023 I’ve been thinking about millennials coming into their homebuying season of life, and what a jolt it is for many who waited longer than previous generations to buy a starter home. The market didn’t actually favor waiting, which makes the leap not only feel larger: that leap is larger for this group. For millennials who went to college, the journey into homeownership can feel more daunting, instead of less. Which wasn’t supposed to be the deal was it? But there that deal is, nonetheless. We (I’m talking about generations older than millennials here) set a stage [...]

2026-03-23T13:26:26-04:00

Tuesdays with Mary: Chesterton’s Fence

Tuesday, November 7, 2023 I’ve been thinking about Chesterton’s Fence. If you’re not familiar, the concept starts like this: imagine you’re walking along a road and you come across a fence built across the road. You see no use for it, it leads nowhere, it prevents nothing. It’s just sitting there, being a fence. For me it helps to place the walk in a forest, and out of nowhere I come across a short bit of fence, in the middle of the forest, in the middle of nowhere. Regardless of the scenario you choose, there is no immediately discernible reason [...]

2026-03-23T13:26:26-04:00

Tuesdays with Mary: The Trump trial in NYC

Tuesday, October 31, 2023 I’ve been thinking about the Trump trial in NYC. And how an appraiser just might be the key witness of the entire thing. I’ll bet you didn’t have that on your bingo card! Regardless of your political outlook on the presidential race, if you live and work in the world of real estate, you no doubt are somewhat interested in following the outcome of the trial in New York that centers on valuations of commercial real estate. It’s with that interest that I’ve mildly kept watch on the case. It deals with questions of reps and [...]

2026-03-23T13:26:26-04:00

Tuesdays with Mary: Seller Impersonation Fraud

Tuesday, October 24, 2023 I’ve been thinking about Seller Impersonation Fraud. Did you know there’s an app for that? Everyone has been talking about seller impersonation fraud lately, and rightfully so. It’s on the rise and the amount of theft in real dollars is no joke. In every description I’ve read on how to combat it, there are wonderful tips and tricks to help mitigate these kinds of losses. In each of these I also read how easy it is to “comb the public records” looking for properties (usually vacant land) at the beginning of the scam. But it’s worse [...]

2026-03-23T13:26:26-04:00

Tuesdays with Mary: Mentoring

Tuesday, October 17, 2023 I’ve been thinking about mentoring. Do we do it enough in our worlds? Do we do it right? Heck, do you do it at all? I’m not talking about some big formal communication apparatus where you don a cloak of gray-bearded wisdom and pontificate from high atop the mountain, calling forth all your years of experience and storytelling about all the adversity you faced and overcame. Though if we’re being honest, isn’t that what some of us call mentoring? If that’s how you’re “mentoring” – stop. It’s a no. My guess is that isn’t your style, [...]

2026-03-23T13:26:40-04:00

Tuesdays with Mary: Customer Service and Artificial Intelligence (AI)

Tuesday, October 10, 2023 I’ve been thinking about customer service and artificial intelligence (AI). Listen, I get it. AI can do the rote activities of your business: driving out costs, finding new patterns for success, and boosting your efficiency. That is all true. In that sense, as in many others, AI is one of those game changers that comes along only once every decade or so. I embrace any tool that bolsters both sides of the profit equation. Anything that can help raise revenue and decrease expenses deserves serious analysis. The promise of AI to do that is legitimate. But [...]

2026-03-23T13:26:40-04:00

Tuesdays with Mary: The Loper Bright Enterprises case

Tuesday, October 3, 2023 I’ve been thinking about the Loper Bright Enterprises case that SCOTUS will hear this fall, and how the basis of that case is inter-woven with the Payday Lending Rule case we discussed last week. If you believe the administrative state has grown too large and unwieldy – upsetting the balance between the three branches of the federal government – then this case is for you. Many in our industry have overlooked this case, because it appears to deal with fishing companies rather than the real estate sector. But let’s take a look at the facts [...]

2026-03-23T13:26:40-04:00

Tuesdays with Mary: Supreme Court Cases

Tuesday, September 26, 2023 I’ve been thinking about the cases SCOTUS will hear this fall and what they might mean for our industry. If you’ve followed our coverage, you’re up to speed on CFPB v Community Financial Services Association of America so far, and we will keep you fully informed about the case and its outcomes, from oral arguments to when a decision is handed down, and the aftermath. This is the case where the CFPB’s funding structure has come under scrutiny. In a nutshell, at issue is whether a rule crafted by the CFPB (in this case its Payday [...]

2026-03-23T13:26:40-04:00

October Research welcomes Mary Schuster as Chief Knowledge Officer

August 14, 2023, Cleveland, Ohio October Research announces that 25-year title and settlement services industry veteran Mary Schuster has joined the company as Chief Knowledge Officer. In her new role, Schuster will help drive content across multiple channels, support the editorial boards and develop new educational tools for keeping the industry educated and informed throughout the year. “We are thrilled to have someone of Mary’s caliber and stature within the settlement service industry join the team,” CEO and Publisher Erica Meyer said. “She has hit the ground running, and we are grateful and excited that she chose October Research for [...]

2026-03-23T13:26:40-04:00

Veteran appraiser still going strong, and loving it

Dear Readers, After a recent conversation with 71-year-old appraiser Alexander “Sandy” Grice, it is safe to say that this individual, who has spent almost a half century in the profession, has seen it all with assignments that have taken some very interesting and unusual turns. Homes with history attached to them fills Grice’s resume. One particular job dealt with property, as history would prove, belonging to a witch. “Having appraised dozens of historic houses, I have gotten pretty good at dating the structures, by looking at how the timbers were cut/milled and the fasteners holding everything together,” Grice, a Virginia [...]

2026-03-23T13:26:40-04:00