Skip to Content

Online Reviews – Check Before You Select

ONLINE REVIEWS – CHECK BEFORE YOU SELECT

Hello. I’m doing a video blog today while on my treadmill, that’s why I’m bouncing up and down a bit, on online reviews. Online reviews were thought only to be for restaurants and bars. And you would go to a website like Yelp to see if you wanted to go to a certain restaurant in your neighborhood. But it’s really evolved to the point where you can see reviews on any type of service provider. Even a mortgage loan officer.

How did people used to find a loan officer?

And before online reviews came about most people would ask their realtor. “Who should I use for my mortgage loan officer? And who should I use for my home inspector? And how about who should I use for a title company?” And the realtor really drove all those decisions. One data point, one opinion. And the consumer just went with whatever the realtor said. That was the way it was done ever since I got in the business in 1986.

Now what do people do?

Now, things have evolved slowly and they’re really starting to take off with these online reviews. Not only for products but also for service providers. You can find on Yelp, Zillow, Google Plus, Angie’s List reviews for service providers, doctors, lawyers, roofers, home inspectors, and mortgage loan officers. And see how people have performed in the past. And instead of getting one data point, you can get multiple. As many reviews as someone might have.

So if you go to Yelp and you plug in mortgage broker, mortgage lender, Washington DC Yelp. You search by geography and the results will have Brian Martucci up at the top hopefully still. And if Brian Martucci has 48 five-star reviews, chances are pretty good that he’s going to do well. He probably does his job and is efficient and executes and has good pricing. All the things that you want out of a mortgage loan officer.

The old way really is limited.

Going to a realtor, going to a friend, going to someone at work. Getting one or two or three data points and trusting an opinion or two really doesn’t make sense. When you can go online and find reviews on people hopefully and determine if the crowd, I guess this is basically a crowd-sourcing example. If the crowd says they’re good, they’re good. Now of course, if you have a service provider that doesn’t have any reviews, they haven’t put up a profile to let themselves be reviewed. You have a hard decision.

Either there’s a reason that they don’t want a profile online to be reviewed. And that may not be a good reason. Maybe they just don’t do an excellent job and don’t wanna be reviewed. Or maybe they just haven’t caught up with the times. And that doesn’t necessarily mean that they’re not a good service provider. But it leaves it open to question. How can you not pick somebody with 10, 20, 50, 100 reviews over someone that one human being who could be flawed says, “Oh, use them. They’re excellent. They’ll have competitive pricing and they’ll get the job done. Don’t worry.”

Crowd source your mortgage lender! Online Reviews – Check Before You Select!

I just don’t understand how we can rely on an opinion or two when the world seems to be going to crowdsourcing now. And wanting to see multiple opinions. So I know you can find Brian Martucci on Yelp and Zillow and Google. Just Google Brian Martucci or Google mortgage lender or mortgage broker in your marketplace. I would plug in Washington DC mortgage broker, Washington DC mortgage lender. Wherever you are in the country, Los Angeles mortgage broker. See if you can find someone with reviews.

Or if you happen to have a specific referral from a realtor, from a friend, Google their name and see if you can find Doug Johnson mortgage lender. Maybe followed by the city that they’re in. See if you can find reviews on them and see what the crowd says. I think that’s the way the world is evolving. And I wanted you to know that I’m online. Feel free to find me online. I wanted to talk a little bit about the logic on why these reviews probably make sense. Good luck on your next mortgage transaction. Thanks.

To contact me to discuss your mortgage scenario, mortgage rates, or other mortgage questions, click here to schedule a call or you can email me directly.