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 The Revolution in How We Work
by Richard M. Betts
 Key words: accommodation, appraisal, change, computers, work. 
 AbstractIntroductionThis paper seeks to explore the likely impacts of the new
          "information age" upon the real property valuation
          occupation. Information Access is the KeyThe central force in this new era seems to be the rapid decline in
          the cost, time and effort of accessing information. Information is
          becoming much more widely available, both geographically and
          demographically. In turn, greater access to information is reducing
          the role of people who process information for others to see, and is
          eliminating many jobs. Consider This a Rolling ChangeOverall, the change is large, but its progress is slow and uneven.
          It varies by time, by place, by occupation, and by culture. The rate
          of change is influenced by how long it takes to develop the product,
          adapt it to people’s needs, and convince people that the benefits
          are worth the initial cost and learning effort and time. Because this
          change is a rolling change, we can and should look elsewhere, to see
          what is coming our way. Hints of the FutureOne clear element is the merging of devices that carry out related
          functions, a necessary step as the number of information devices
          increases. A second element is the movement toward a closer
          relationship or connection between the user and the devices, allowing
          devices to be customized to emphasize what the user wants. An
          important third trend is the reduction in work where one gathers
          information for another to make decisions from; decision-makers
          generally now directly obtain more of the information needed. Finally,
          as information becomes more available and less expensive, there is
          less of a premium to be earned by those who have learned how and where
          to find it. The Need for New SkillsIt is a truism that all change hurts someone, and that big changes
          hurt more than small. It is also true that people resist change, and
          have only a finite tolerance for change. However, people will change,
          if and when they are convinced that they need to do so. Even then,
          their rate of change will be influenced by many different cultural and
          demographic factors. The evidence suggests that the coming changes
          will be rather large, and that the benefits to the individual for
          adapting to the changes will be rather large. In turn, this means that
          those who do manage to adapt earlier will have a considerable
          advantage over those who do not. Impacts on the WorkplaceOne impact is the emphasis on ideas, on improvement, and on change
          itself. A second is the emphasis on efficiency and productivity. A
          third impact is the increasing use of technology in all businesses,
          and greater expertise of managers with managing technology. In turn,
          that leads to the fourth change, the growing technological skills of
          the workforce, leading to easier adaption of future new devices or
          ideas. What then for Valuation?Computers, automated information processing and other technologies
          have already had a substantial effect on people working in valuation.
          Nearly every office has changed a number of functions as a result. It
          is clear that much more change is to come. The production of appraisal
          reports, while usually performed on computers, relies almost
          completely on manual input of information. This surely will change,
          along with semi-automated preliminary cost, depreciation, and sales
          adjustment analyses. Automated data collection and analysis will also
          increase. As a result, absent an increase in the numbers of appraisals to be
          performed, appraisers will face growing competition from automated
          valuation models. The competition will be over quality, on the one
          hand, versus cost and speed of delivery on the other. In the short
          run, appraisers may tend to move to the two extremes, focusing either
          on quality or on cost and speed. But both groups will find it
          imperative to automate as rapidly as possible, in order to reduce
          costs and improve delivery, even though such action will have the
          effect in aggregate of displacing appraisers out of the industry. Appraisers must also take action to improve both the customer’s
          perception of appraiser quality and the reality, as it is their only
          competitive strength, and one that they must maintain to survive. 
 Richard M. Betts, MAI, ASA, SRA1936 University Avenue
 Suite 300
 Berkeley
 California, 94704
 USA
 Tel. + 1510 845 6988
 Fax + 1510 845 0780
 E-mail bettsnassoc@compuserve.com
 
 The Revolution in How We Work1. INTRODUCTIONWe are all moving into a new "information age,"
    which will cause changes in all areas of nearly every society. Understanding
    and adapting to those changes will be a major challenge for many years to
    come. This paper seeks to examine the potential impacts of these changes in
    general, and then apply them more specifically in the context of the real
    estate appraisal occupation. 2. INFORMATION ACCESS IS THE KEY!If there is some type of change occurring, how would we
    describe it? The initial vehicle for these changes unquestionably was the
    development and miniaturization of the transistor, the microprocessor, and
    the computer. We are all aware of some of the results of this process, from
    desktop and laptop computers, to cellular phones and global positioning
    devices. In a theoretical sense, these devices share technology that allows
    them to process information rapidly, while being very small and using little
    power. But recent history teaches us that the meaning of descriptive words
    like rapid, small and low power, as applied to these devices, changes
    frequently and substantially, always toward more rapid, smaller, and lower
    powered. Thus, we can be absolutely certain that, whatever devices are in
    the stores today, the ones next year will be faster and smaller, and will
    use less power. The central point, however, is that such devices only
    exist to allow us to process information, faster, more easily, and with less
    expense. It follows that we will process this information in many more
    locations. Information that we once had to travel some distance to obtain,
    perhaps from a University research library, we now may obtain from the
    Internet, at work, at home, and even from vehicles. As a result, where
    information is located is becoming much less important. The smallest library
    today has access to most of the content of the largest library of 50 years
    ago. And we know that some of the gaps in available information will be
    filled in every year. Further, as equipment costs continue their inexorable
    decline, the cost of accessing information of all types is declining as
    well, allowing more people access to more information, more often. In short,
    the ability of people everywhere to access information is expanding
    geometrically, and will continue to do so. It is important to recognize that
    "information," in the sense that I am using it, is very broad.
    What information is it that we get from a Global Positioning device (GPS)?
    Simply it is "Where am I?" (Or perhaps, in what direction or at
    what speed am I going?) Here, the GPS uses its power to extract information
    from a group of satellites, to yield a rather simple fact, but a fact that
    at one time could not even be known, and then later could only be known at
    great expense. When every vehicle has a GPS readout, as in time they
    probably will, can mechanical speedometers survive? And sometimes the information is simply a cellular phone
    conversation with a friend about your last vacation. Arguably, this
    information may not have much "value." The exchange could be
    postponed, or eliminated. However, humans are social, and we need, and
    benefit from, the bonds that we build with others. It seems likely that much
    of the improved information access that we are examining will be used to
    provide better access to others, creating or enlarging extended families. But overall, we must accept that we are living through a
    phenomenal change in peoples’ ability to access information. The change
    involves many aspects, starting with the location of the information, its
    format, and its cost. Also changing is the easing of access, (in time, money
    and effort), and the broadening of access, (from the few to the many). 3. CONSIDER THIS A ROLLING CHANGEIt is also very clear that these changes are gradual,
    varying over time, place, occupation, and culture. Part of the reason that
    change is gradual is economic: the newest devices are still scarce and
    expensive, until production increases; but after a while they are pushed to
    the back of the shelf by still newer and better devices. People with less
    income, or less need for a particular device, will wait until prices drop,
    or until the need for that device arises. I do not own a GPS device,
    interested as I may be, because I have not yet reached the need level, or a
    low enough price, where I will say yes. I do recognize that it is only a
    matter of time. Change is also gradual because time is needed to adapt
    the device to society’s needs, and for society to adapt to the use of the
    new idea. It is often said of computers that the hardware, (the device
    itself), is a year ahead of the software, (the programs that allows users to
    gain benefits), and the software is a year ahead of the users. In truth, the
    time lag may be much longer than one year. I can only claim to be fully
    using perhaps 20% of the software capabilities of the computer on my desk,
    despite using one for more than 20 years. And my computer hardware is behind
    the latest devices by several years! It seems that I have a learning curve,
    like everyone else. New hardware cannot be put into mass production until
    someone can visualize how we might be able to benefit from such a hardware
    idea, and how to produce it at a low enough price. Next, the functions of
    the device must be defined, and understandable controls designed. Necessary
    software and instructional materials must then be developed. Only then can
    the device be marketed. Thus, the time from the birth of the idea to its
    introduction on the market can be years. The early adaptors of any new device are few in number;
    this has been true for most major new pieces of equipment. Only over time
    will you and I realize, primarily by talking with others, that what we
    thought was a "gadget" will justify the cost and learning time to
    become a useful tool. The initial benefits of a device may be relatively
    low, and our comments to friends ambiguous, and they may decide to wait. In
    time, however, we will get over the startup learning curve, and the word
    will spread that there is a real benefit to be obtained. Gradually, then,
    the adoption rate of the device will increase. The desk-top computer and the
    cell phone are past that point already, and the 3Com Palm Pilot is at that
    point today. Adoption time is also influenced as the original device
    is improved, with each successive model, as the makers learn how we want to
    use the device, and which hardware and software features are important to
    us. The Palm is not a new idea: similar hand-held phone list and calendar
    devices have been available for some years, but with only limited success.
    It took that long to "get it right," to combine the right features
    in the right way in the right package at the right price! Finally, it will be obvious that a country that is
    already wired for fixed telephones will be slower to adopt cellular phones.
    Thus, the rate of adoption of any new technology is also influenced by what
    competitive technology is already in relatively widespread use in that
    occupation, culture, or country. As a result of all of these and other factors, we see
    that the adoption of new ideas and equipment occurs gradually, varying by
    country, economic class, education, culture, and many other factors. In
    turn, then, it is likely that whatever new technologies might soon impact
    our lives already exist, at least in preliminary form, and perhaps
    are in widespread use in some other country. We can, and must, watch what
    new technologies are being introduced elsewhere, for they are the harbingers
    of our own future. And the first attempts may be failures, as the first
    pocket electronic address books were, or the early laptop computers. Even if
    the first one is a flop, in time, like the Palm Pilot, someone will get it
    right. 4. HINTS OF THE FUTUREIncreasingly, we read about the elimination of different
    telephone numbers for the different locations that you are at, during the
    day. As you move from home to car to office to meeting to home, it is argued
    that you could be accessed by the same phone number. The various devices you
    choose to use would automatically move your number around among themselves. One of the clear trends that we can expect to see, then,
    is better and more automatic coordination between devices, as technological
    means are developed, to simplify our use of the increasing number of
    devices. How many different places/devices do you have with people’s names
    in them - perhaps some with email addresses, some with phone numbers, some
    with other detailed information, and so on. This is an example of a need
    that is crying out for greater, better integration, and it will come. One University in the United States has established a
    laboratory which is experimenting with "wearable computers." Their
    thought is that, as computing devices become smaller and smaller, some forms
    of them will probably be with us all day long, and perhaps while we sleep,
    as well. Effectively, they will be embedded in our clothes, or in our
    ornamental jewelry, watches, etc. We see this now with the interesting new
    multifunction watches, including radios, cellular phones, phone number and
    address devices, stock market monitors, and simple internet devices. Related
    are the new miniaturized medical monitoring and treatment devices, from
    electrocardiograms to insulin pumps. The concept of "wearable computers" points out
    what may be the second trend to be expected, our greater personal
    "connectedness," a closer bond between ourselves and some type of
    computer, perhaps acting as a support device or assistant to us. It may be
    fastened into a watch, or a seam of our clothes, or even implanted in our
    body. Because it is nearly always with us, it can communicate with other
    devices for us, to alert them that we are there, what our phone number is,
    what temperature we usually like a room at, what our preference for type of
    music is, or if we prefer the room to be as silent as possible, or any
    interface with our environment that we as consumers turn out to want.
    This bond will, in turn, allow us to structure our environment more to our
    liking, somewhat as if our household were managed by a superb butler. Notice
    that this concept would require far better coordination between devices than
    what we now experience. A third trend is already with us, a result of the better,
    faster, cheaper access to information, noted above. In major businesses of
    the 1950s, large numbers of people worked to process information, from many
    sources, and to sum it up into some form that would give decision-makers a
    sense of events. Increasingly, the information is being collected
    automatically, aggregated automatically, analyzed automatically, and put on
    the boss’s desk for daily review. Thus, fewer people are gathering and
    processing information for others to make decisions about; more of us have
    occupations where we are expected to act upon information received. A fourth clear trend is that, as information is more
    widely available, there is less of a premium obtainable to those who have
    mastered the skill of finding it, and more of a premium for those who have
    mastered the interpretation of it. This change is highly important, in my
    opinion, in studying the future of many occupations, including appraising. 5. THE NEED FOR NEW SKILLSAll of these changes seem very intriguing. What is the
    downside? It is a truism that all change hurts; it is also true that bigger
    changes hurt more than smaller changes. Greatly improved access to
    information is not exempt from these rules. What happens to librarians when
    many, if not most, reference books are on the Internet, or on microchips at
    our desk? At the very least, the nature of their work would change, from
    monitoring access to these books, to helping people access what they need to
    access, and bringing some order to the overwhelming flood of information. Thus, one very important issue is people’s tolerance
    for change, and resistance to change. We know that we all resist change: my
    wife despairs of getting me to discard a favorite old jacket! But we know,
    from our own experience, that we can and do change, gradually, when we are convinced
    that it is in our best interest to do so. As noted above, the willingness to
    change unquestionably varies from time to time, place to place, and culture
    to culture. Here, the evidence suggests that the change that we are
    going through will be unusually large, and potentially rather fast. The size
    of the change means that the benefits to be obtained from the change will
    also be large. In turn, this means that those who adapt to the change may
    well have a considerable benefit over those who do not. 6. IMPACTS ON THE WORKPLACEThere appear to be several clear impacts on many
    different workplaces. One is the gradual shift from a production of things,
    to a production of ideas, now well along in the United States. Better ways
    of doing things, of solving problems, of allocating resources are being
    rewarded. But the biggest rewards appear to be for the better new
    products or services, which allow us to use technology to live better,
    easier, and longer. Another big impact, mentioned above, is the gradual
    reduction in mid-level information-processing employment. Every large,
    medium, and small company has or soon will restructure itself, as the
    improvements in automated information processing reduce the number of data
    handlers, which reduces the number of levels of supervisory people, and
    flattens out the company. In turn, each is increasingly asking that its
    major suppliers do the same, reducing prices or improving quality or both.
    Thus, nearly every business is asking itself how it can improve what
    it does. A third big impact is the rapidly growing importance of
    technology to the average business. The corner store often has an electronic
    cash register now. Field salespeople often are provided a pager and/or
    cellular phone by their employer. Many also are provided a Palm or similar
    hand-held device, and some are provided a laptop computer. Increasingly, the
    financial books in even small businesses are kept on a personal computer,
    and the correspondence is prepared on one. Video training tapes are fairly
    common, and computer-based or internet-based training is being used more
    often. As a result, the average business manager is increasingly managing
    technology, and making purchasing decisions that involve technologic issues. A fourth change, related to the third, is the growing
    familiarity of the work force with technologic devices. Personal pagers are
    becoming common, along with cellular phones and home computers. At the same
    time, a significant percentage of jobs require at least some use of a
    computer, keyboard, or touch screen. Thus, where there is an absence of
    these skills, there is a barrier to the expected changes. Where there is
    this growing familiarity, it is an inducement to further change. A fifth change, slow in coming, is to become comfortable
    with storing data, documents and records only in electronic format, without
    the necessity for a paper copy. It seems highly likely that this change will
    occur, but possibly very slowly! 7. WHAT THEN FOR VALUATION?Valuation workers, of course, are not exempt from change.
    We have seen the industry go from typed report forms to computer printed
    forms. We have changed from sales data on paper sheets or cards to data
    stored on a computer. Sales data that once came to us in a mimeographed
    sheet then came in a printed book, and then a microfiche, then a CD-ROM, and
    now often by a telephone connection to a central computer, perhaps over the
    Internet. Some have made field inspection notes by dictating into a
    micro-cassette recorder. A few have experimented with using a laptop or
    hand-held computer to take field notes, or for computer voice dictation in
    the field. Some have used hand-held laser devices to calculate distances. In
    the past, appraisers had to get nearly all of their information about the
    property being appraised from their actual inspection of it. Increasingly,
    however, that information is being captured, saved in computers, and
    partially reused, in various ways. All of this simply states what we all know, that
    computers and automated information processing have already caused
    significant change to the occupation of valuation as it existed several
    decades ago. In the United States, the great majority of real property
    appraisers prepare their reports on a computer, and most do the data entry
    themselves. Perhaps one-half of real property appraisers already have an
    Internet connection at this time, and possibly ten percent presently obtain
    business information from the Internet on a regular basis. There is no
    available data on the percent who own or use a digital camera or digital
    scanner, but it is very clear that the percent is increasing fairly rapidly. What, then, can we say about the future, given the
    existing usage. It has been said that valuation is "investigative
    reporting." The appraiser must investigate the property being appraised
    and the market setting in which it exists, analyze how the property fits
    into that market, and then report the findings. Let us use this functional
    breakdown to explore our future. Report preparation can be automated much more than now,
    particularly the entry of data on the subject property and sales. Also
    feasible would be a more automated system of initial sale adjustments and
    cost and depreciation calculations. Increased use of digital cameras and
    other digital imagery will allow much faster and cheaper production of
    pictures and other report exhibits. These changes are occurring, and will
    accelerate. The collection of data, on the subject property and the
    sales, will also go through a similar automation process. Cities in the
    United States are increasingly providing land-use zoning information on the
    Internet, and building permit histories in time are likely to follow. Land
    characteristics of individual properties are becoming readily available,
    while building characteristics are less easily accessed. However, there is
    growing business pressure to make better building characteristics
    information available, and steps are being taken that are likely to lead to
    that. The date of transfer of ownership of a property is available in most
    areas now, along with names of buyer and seller, but information on prices
    is much less available. Again, there is growing business pressure seeking to
    improve this data. This increase in available data raises important issues
    regarding personal privacy, which will be a barrier that slows down the
    adoption of increased automation. The analysis portion of the process is the biggest
    question mark. There are several companies providing automated valuation
    models in the United States, with coverage ranging from an individual city
    to many metropolitan regions. Several companies have been in business for
    some years. The methodology varies, as does the accuracy, but most rely on
    analysis of sales, or of sale price trends. At present, these systems
    primarily are used by lenders for smaller loans, such as home improvement
    loans, where a regular appraisal is considered too expensive relative to the
    size of the loan. Nearly all current use is on residences, although models
    applicable to small apartments, smaller industrial buildings and small
    retail buildings have recently been introduced. These programs are generally reported to work best with
    the more standardized properties, in markets where there are adequate
    numbers of sales, and where the market data is readily available in computer
    form. It is to be expected, based upon the earlier discussion of general
    trends, that accuracy will improve over time, that data will become more
    widely available in computer form, and that the usage of these systems will
    probably widen to include types of loans, and appraisal situations, beyond
    the current usage. I must conclude, then, that the future of valuation work
    is subject to two great changes, already well under way. The first is one of
    greater efficiency, reducing the time and costs of the appraisal and the
    report. As appraisals are produced in less time, there will be somewhat of a
    decline in the number of appraisers needed to do a given amount of work. Please
    note that projecting the total future demand for numbers of
    appraisals to be performed is outside the scope of this paper, although I do
    expect that the number of all types of appraisals, including
    automated ones, that will be performed will increase substantially, over
    time, as the cost of an appraisal falls. The second great continuing change, as is obvious, is
    increasing competition from automated analyses, which have the advantages of
    being much less expensive, and much faster, but the disadvantage of being
    less reliable. It is possible that some presently unforeseen regulatory or
    legislative action will limit the growth of automated valuation, or restrict
    it to a relatively narrow sub-market. Otherwise, it seems very likely that
    such products will continue to grow in accuracy and geographic and property
    type coverage. Given that, they will continue to take business away from
    real estate appraisers. These two trends have the same effect - of reducing the
    demand for appraisers below what it would otherwise be. What, then, will
    appraisers do in this situation? I submit that the primary competitive
    advantage that the appraiser has over automated valuations is better
    quality, and the primary disadvantages are high cost and long delivery time.
    As is nearly always true, the need is to maintain or improve the advantage,
    while vigorously attacking the disadvantage. The clear means to attack the problem of high costs and
    long delivery times is to improve productivity and scheduling, and that
    means much better use of automation, and more of it, than we have achieved
    to date. There is growing pressure upon appraisers to do this, and
    competition among appraisers to achieve results. How to maintain or improve quality is much more complex,
    I believe. First is the difference between "real" quality, and the
    perception of quality by those who are consumers of appraisal
    services. Over the years ahead, it seems to be very important for appraisers
    to seek to convince their customers that appraisers will and do provide a
    better quality product, and are very committed to doing so. In my opinion,
    this message is not receiving enough emphasis by appraisers. However, this message runs up against the very real
    problem that some clients do not particularly want high quality, but
    rather place more emphasis on low cost and high speed delivery. It is not
    possible to have all three at any one point in time, so quality suffers.
    (Only over time can productivity be increased while maintaining a particular
    quality standard.) As a result, it seems to me to be likely that appraisers
    will be drawn toward the two extremes, those who are competing in the
    markets where a low cost and fast turnaround are the keys, and those who are
    competing in the markets where better quality is the key. The first group is
    the most at risk to competition from automated valuations. However, both
    groups will be under pressure to maintain or improve standards of quality,
    while cutting costs and turnaround times. Both groups must
    embrace technologies that hold promise of cutting time and costs, and/or
    improving the quality of their work. Effectively, they are in a race with
    the developers of automated valuation models, and the amount of the work
    that each gets is a function of who does well in the race. The real point of this article, then, is that the great
    changes in information availability that are sweeping the world will affect
    all of us in various ways, regardless of our occupation. But for appraisers,
    because our role is to collect and analyze information, we are particularly
    at risk. And our best strategy is to move with this change to the greatest
    extent possible, in order to gain the maximum individual benefit from it. In
    doing this, we each maximize our competitive position relative to automated
    valuation. However, in doing so, our increased productivity will
    further reduce the demand for appraisers. Only by improving our marketing,
    increasing the use of appraisers in situations where we are not now being
    used, can we hope to address that problem. There are early steps being taken
    toward that end in the United States. Appraisers in other countries may well
    have more time before they will need to act, time that they should use to
    monitor the changes occurring in other countries. 
 BIOGRAPHICAL NOTEThe author is a practicing real estate appraiser and land
    economist, with more than 35 years of experience in a wide variety of
    property types. The emphasis is upon unusual properties and/or unusual
    appraisal settings, including contaminated properties, construction defects,
    or earth movement, in property or income tax, litigation or arbitration
    settings. His formal education was a Bachelor of Science and a Master of
    Business Administration Diploma, both in Real Estate and Urban Economics,
    and both from the School of Business, University of California, Berkeley,
    followed by extensive professional courses. Mr. Betts holds the MAI and SRA
    designations from the Appraisal Institute, and the ASA designation, in real
    estate, from the American Society of Appraisers. He has been quite active,
    as a chapter officer and chapter committee member of both groups, as well as
    serving on a number of national or regional committees. He has taught real
    estate appraisal and economics courses for more than 30 years, most recently
    teaching for AI and ASA. Mr. Betts is a coauthor of The Essentials of
    Real Estate Economics, with Dennis McKenzie, published by Prentice Hall
    and now in press for the fifth edition. He is also the coauthor, with Silas
    Ely, of Basic Real Estate Appraisal, also published by Prentice Hall,
    and also in press for the fifth edition. 
 Richard M. Betts, MAI, ASA, SRAE-mail bettsnassoc@compuserve.com
 27 March 2000
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