In my department we get dozens of quality resumes, and interview at least 4 or 5 of them multiple times. Only once in 3 years here have I seen someone bail out without being told they're out of the running. Pay good money, get good candidates.
Pay good money, get good candidates.
So true. Contracting here, no help or materials. This year has been a bitch.If only it worked like that...
In my department we get dozens of quality resumes, and interview at least 4 or 5 of them multiple times. Only once in 3 years here have I seen someone bail out without being told they're out of the running. Pay good money, get good candidates.
Holy shit. I think I may have to look at getting back in to the regular work force.I mean... I've hired for positions that pay $200k+ and have the same issue.
If you're paying closer to that $650-750k range, I'd relocate to Comifornia.
I mean... I've hired for positions that pay $200k+ and have the same issue.
If you're paying closer to that $650-750k range, I'd relocate to Comifornia.
What do you need someone to do for $200k+?I mean... I've hired for positions that pay $200k+ and have the same issue.
If you're paying closer to that $650-750k range, I'd relocate to Comifornia.
What do you need someone to do for $200k+?
When it comes to mutual funds investing you have to look at the 80 year history (long term). Cant look at a few years.Meh. This sounds like what the TSP guru with 80k followers suggest. Had everyone sit an funds that follow the Dow and S&P and majority are down 20% right now.
That’s fine and sure, following the likely price retrace we’ll have, home/stock prices will likely come back to where they are now eventually.
For those that didn’t buy during this surge, they have equity, for now.
For those that just bought in the last 6-12 months, ouch. Hopefully they sold another property for a huge gain to fund their purchase.
Also of note, the price increases have not occurred at the same time or rate nationally.
I sold my SoCal home in 12/20 after a 20% bump. Prices have hardly changed at all since then. Still sold it for less than I paid in 2005.
The price jump in W TX and S TX had barely started then. I was under contract to sell at 269k in 5/21. Deal was a mess and I cancelled it. Sold at 365k 12/21. This particular unit was valued around 315k in 2013. I paid 229k in late 19’. Not a distressed sale. 60% profit in 2 yrs. I wouldn’t be surprised at all to see that particular unit drop down to the low 3s again.
My primary residence in TX is up about 50% as well.
The discrepancy was/is strange. I suppose this is the migration Dave mentioned. Shouldn’t really cross directly into vacation properties though.
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I feel bad for my neighbor, he listened his house at 600k back in May, he's lowered it now to 535k with still no luck on selling it. It's a nice house, but AZ is slowing down. Hopefully he'll eventually sell it.
I’m with you.What do you need someone to do for $200k+?
My office has had a position posted for almost 2 years without any quality candidates. We've had 2 come through that left before they made it through training.I mean... I've hired for positions that pay $200k+ and have the same issue.
If you're paying closer to that $650-750k range, I'd relocate to Comifornia.