Other people, when they decide to buy a house, look at one house, offer to buy it, and when they are rejected, look at another house, and offer to buy it, and when they are rejected, look at another house, and offer to buy it, but they are finally serious - it is just right

Would you call this the goldilocks method?
or the gaines method?
1 comment:
While the Goldilocks method has some obvious analytic advantages, I prefer the Three Little Pigs theorem in which the prospective buyer determines the worth of the house based on the attempts of one professional (usually wolf) to quote, "huff and puff and blow the house down," although many home-buyers these days forego the high costs of hiring a canine and try to ascertain the house's tolerances based on building materials. I would not recommend this, as modern buildings (including homes) now employ a wide variety of materials that cannot be easily categorized into traditional "Straw," "Sticks," and "Brick" groups.
Post a Comment