I have been reading different blogs and articles regarding the importance of education. I have also read various opinions on the value of experience. When you are evaluating the capabilities of an individual, both can be used as a yardstick. If you come across someone that has both, you may discover the best of both worlds.
Education is fundamental in learning the basic framework of a profession. Experience is the result of actually performing the tasks of a profession and learning how the knowledge gained through education is practically applied.
You can usually decide your educational pursuits; experience is often garnered by chance. In a perfect world, you acquire the education and then step into the professional role. In that professional role, you apply your knowledge while experiencing the events that occur in the course of you performing your job.
There are times, when life throws you experiences before you have had the time to acquire the education necessary to deal with them. In those times, you have to call on prior experience and the cumulative knowledge you have garnered in life. There will be times when you make the correct decision and there will be times when you make the incorrect decision. The event will become another learning experience.
Is there a difference? When I was a younger man, I believed that you could study and read and acquire the knowledge necessary to do just about anything. I have learned that belief was flawed. Reading a textbook, taking part in a classroom exercise, watching film or listening to a lecture never replicates real life experience.
Soldiers tested in the field of battle have a much greater understanding of the perils of war than those that have read "The Red Badge of Courage". There is something distinctly deeper about knowledge gained through practice.
Lessons learned in classroom settings usually occur in controlled environments. An individual may learn how to perform all aspects of their profession. Lessons learned in real life situations are filled with ancillary activity that is going on at the same time. You may read how to perform each function. Experience will teach you how to perform many functions simultaneously. Lessons are learned in a sequential order. Experience occurs in a multifaceted fashion which requires you to handle several functions at one time. Classroom experience is generally one sided whereas experience occurs with the interaction of others.
When weighing education and experience during the evaluation of potential real estate agents, it would behoove the public to consider what may be needed to accomplish the task at hand. If your need can be met by one that has more knowledge than experience, that is the route you should take. If your need requires the skills acquired through years of experience, that is the individual you should hire.
How do you know which type of agent you need? The question is not easily answered. If you were to ask the agent that is educated but lacking in transaction experience, they will surely attempt to sway you with the value of education. If you ask the agent that has been working for several years, they will surely point out the advantage of "real life" experience garnered through many transactions. The truth is probably somewhere in between the two and it will depend on the market at that point in time.
If housing is active, there are advantages to both sets of individuals. If the market is slow, you may be better advised to seek out an agent that has dealt with a slow market. You see you can read about the slow markets of years past. Agents can study how others dealt with those markets. Agents that have been through those markets will be in a better position to guide you through a transaction without needing to check a guidebook.
Glib statements like "interest rates remain at an all time low" carry a great deal more impact coming from an agent that was involved in transactions in the 80's when rates were 14%.
The final thought on the difference of the two types.....education or experience involves the one thing that separates those that are successful. Focus. I truly believe that the ability to focus is the strongest asset in any professional's bag of tricks. Focus can only be fine tuned through the understanding that comes from day to day experiences.
Although, it is in a different venue, I look at the difference between Tiger Woods and the hundreds of golfers that come through the PGA schools. He is a champion, because of his ability to focus on the task at hand. His focus is fine tuned from the experiences he has experienced. There are several components to a fine round of golf. It is necessary to understand which component has the highest priority at various stages of the round. (It does not good to focus on the though process needed to make a long putt when you are getting ready to hit a shot from the fairway.)
So there you have it. Education or experience? I am an old guy now, so I will have to fall on the experience side of the equation. As a side note, to you young folks coming out of the universities, I can remember walking 10 miles, up hill, both ways in snow that was knee deep ............
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John-Great Post. I think both are lifelong adventures tightly interwoven. From the time we are babies we are gaining both and learning from them. Experience can translate across boundaries better than some educational pursuits. I'll know when I stop one or the other then I'm pretty much done in.
John, I love this post. When I first started in this business, I had no experience so I tried to get as much education as possible. Experience with each transaction brought forth its own education. And now that I am more experienced, I continue to pursue education because very little remains status quo in real estate. Education by experience is often the best way. Neither my father nor my wife have an MBA. Yet I feel that they are two of the best business people that I know. My father has a PhD in chemistry and worked his way up in the corporate chemistry world, finally retiring after being the CEO of several biotech companies. He never had a course on business and started his career working a chemistry lab. Yet he could run circles around the young MBAs that are spit out from the top schools when it comes to managing a successful company. My wife graduated with a degree in journalism and became a dance teacher. She has built a business with 7 teachers and a full-time secretary that is one of the most successful dance businesses in the D.C. metro area. Again, no business background, but she wheels and deals with the best of them.
Excellent post, John, and I agree with your observation regarding the importance of focus.
If I had to choose between education and experience, though, I would generally go with experience and someone with a proven track record; one can acquire unlimited education and still not have a clue what to do in practical situations -- I think this is particularly true in the real estate business. There is no substitute for experience! And there are just times when "working hard" cannot overcome a lack of experience.
When I look at what I have learned through experience over just the past few years, I sometimes cringe at just how much I didn't know.
John, this post is terrific.
It brought me back to my new agent days when I had no experience and 6-weeks at the old Shannon & Luchs School of Real Estate. And I had an amazing office manager/trainer who grew an amazing class of rookies. And it was about focus. Focus and energy. I did almost $6 million my first year. and that was 1983.
What I'd like to get now is some of that new agent energy. OK, I'm a bunch of years older than I was then, and experience has helped me to become a little, um, lazy (I like to think of it as "efficient, but it isn't really). Maybe Buffini can help me! Due to depart in an hour, and I'm blogging!
John, thank you, as always you have written a suburb post. I always find your writings full of insight.
John ~ I think you're right; for me it is a little bit of both. I enjoy the learning process, but sometimes an incident (or client) comes up that gives me the best education about a situation. This is priceless because it is a true "on the job training" and has affected what I do and do not do in my business, at times.
Cindy - Thank you for sharing the ribbon that ties the two concepts together.
Brian - It is obvious that you have been surrounded with the finest of people. The focus I mentioned may be a derivative of the combination of education and experience interwoven into a tapestry of life practice.
Susan - I believe that most experienced agents went through the period of sleepless nights while they learned how to apply the education they brought into the field. Today, yesterdays enigmas are the foundation for tomorrows success.
Rob - Thank you for your kind words. If you have time, let my wife know. She has a penchant for rolling her eyes when I am posting.
Kathy - It is amazing what occurs in the fields of battle below the ivory towers of academia. The substance of practical experience often overshawdows the mundane musings of professors.