Transcript Document

THE APPRAISAL PROCESS
T H E I N T E R N AT I O N A L S O C I E T Y O F A P P R A I S E R S
INTRODUCTION
MEMBERSHIP OR EDUCATION QUESTIONS:
CALL 312.981.6778
OUR AUDIENCE
• Professionals – who rely on appraisals and accurate value
information
• Community Residents – who purchase appraisals to solve
problems, i.e. insurance coverage, estate planning, charitable
giving
• Collectors, Librarians, Curators, Registrars – who must wisely
manage assets, investments, archives and heirlooms
• Students and Teachers – who research objects in social and
historical contexts and design new curriculum
PROFESSIONALS
• Better serve your clients by
•
•
•
•
Understand what makes an appraisal compliant
Know what you are asking your clients to provide
Be able to qualify the documents for review
In many cases lawyers and estate planners do not understand the
appraisal process
• Reduce the risk of making decisions based on faulty value
conclusions or hiring an unqualified appraiser
• Expand your professional practice with additional value added
services such a personal property valuation, art advisory
contacts, collection management, etc
PROFESSIONALS
Financial Planners and Advisors Need to Look Beyond Real
Estate and Securities and Assist Clients with “Other Assets”
from the Balance Sheet
• Personal Property Values & Passion Investments
• Art/Antique Collection
• Automobiles
• Luxury Goods
• Wine
• Jewelry/Watches
• Coins/Stamps
COMMUNITY RESIDENTS
Solve immediate problems such as
• insuring art and antiques
• determine estate tax liability
• making charitable donations
• processing damage claims
• distributing assets equitably
• settling divorce or bankruptcy litigation
COMMUNITY RESIDENTS
• Become a savvy consumer by knowing what should be
included in the appraisal report
• Understand the appraiser’s credentials so you can hire the
right appraiser for the job
• Understand the various levels of value for your intended use
COLLECTORS, CURATORS & LIBRARIANS
• Understand the true value of your collection or the holding
for which you are the steward
• Learn to increase or downsize collections intelligently by being
an informed trader, buyer and/or seller
• Expand your network of resources to become a sophisticated
champion for your collection
STUDENTS AND TEACHERS
• Discover new topics for scholarly research
• Expand the curriculum by designing new courses and
enhancing existing classes
• Be part of the emerging and interdisciplinary academic field of
the study of material culture
DO YOU KNOW YOUR
COLLECTION?
MEMBERSHIP OR EDUCATION QUESTIONS:
CALL 312.981.6778
KNOW YOUR COLLECTION
Documenting a collection will not only enhance the value of
individual objects in the collection but add context and interest
to your collection.
•
•
•
•
•
Where was it purchased, when and for how much?
Is the original invoice on file?
Who owned it previously? Was it inherited?
How did the original owner come by it?
What is known about the maker or artist?
KNOW YOUR COLLECTION
• Has it been appraised? When, by whom and at what valuation
(insurance, market, replacement)?
• Has the object been published? Where, and by whom?
• Has it been included in any exhibitions? When, where,
curated by whom?
• Where is it now?
• When was it sold, for how much?
• Does it have any unique identifying numbers from previous
owners? (museums call these “accession” numbers)
EVALUATING YOUR COLLECTION
MEMBERSHIP OR EDUCATION QUESTIONS:
CALL 312.981.6778
14 POINTS OF CONNOISSEURSHIP FOR
THE DECORATIVE ARTS
Developed at Winterthur and published as a book called
Evaluating Your Collection by Dwight P. Lanmon from the
Winterthur Decorative Arts Series.
14 POINTS OF CONNOISSEURSHIP
DEVELOPED AT WINTERTHUR
• Overall Appearance
•
•
•
•
•
Does it work
Ornamentation complement the form
Pleasing form
Graceful
Unity of parts to the whole
• Form
• Shape
• Mass
• Proportions
14 POINTS OF CONNOISSEURSHIP
DEVELOPED AT WINTERTHUR
• Ornament
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
Color
Figure of wood
Texture,
Turnings
Carvings
Engraving
Enameling
Printed design
14 POINTS OF CONNOISSEURSHIP
DEVELOPED AT WINTERTHUR
• Materials
•
•
•
•
•
Woods
Surface coatings
Adhesives
Hardware
Know what was used and during each decorative arts period
• Finish
• Original
• Color
• Layers
14 POINTS OF CONNOISSEURSHIP
DEVELOPED AT WINTERTHUR
• Color
•
•
•
•
Color Changes
Exposure to air
Pollutants
Sunlight
• Craft Techniques
• Quality of craftsmanship
• Techniques and practices of the period
• Congruency of parts (single maker, mixed parts)
14 POINTS OF CONNOISSEURSHIP
DEVELOPED AT WINTERTHUR
• Trade Practices
• How items are marked or labeled
• Excise and Tariff laws
• Craft Organizations
• Function
• Reason for existence
• Why was the object made
• Intent of the artist
• Style
• Features define style
• Features may link object to a period (i.e. Baroque, Rococo, Neo
Classical)
14 POINTS OF CONNOISSEURSHIP
DEVELOPED AT WINTERTHUR
• Attribution
•
•
•
•
Signatures
Labels
Stylistic
Take caution as labels can be applied and signatures can be fraudulent
• History of Ownership
•
•
•
•
Sales Receipts
Sales Catalogs
Exhibitions
Family history
14 POINTS OF CONNOISSEURSHIP
DEVELOPED AT WINTERTHUR
• Condition
•
•
•
•
•
Natural aging such as softening of edges
Wear (logical pattern and location)
Patina
Repairs/Restoration –Sympathetic/Unsympathetic
Level of acceptance of wear and damage
• Evaluation
•
•
•
•
•
Aesthetic value
Intrinsic value
Is it culturally important
Rarity
Worthy of Purchase
14 POINTS OF CONNOISSEURSHIP
DEVELOPED AT WINTERTHUR
Conclusion and Determination
based upon the 14 points
APPRAISERS & APPRAISAL
ORGANIZATIONS
MEMBERSHIP OR EDUCATION QUESTIONS:
CALL 312.981.6778
APPRAISER DEFINITION
• An appraiser is a professional who specializes in providing
opinions of value (appraisals) and valuation services in an
independent, impartial and objective manner
• Professional appraisers have taken courses and have been
trained in appraisal theory and methodology as well as
specific product and specialty knowledge
• ISA appraisers must take classes, pass exams, and subject
their reports to peer review as well as meet USPAP and
minimum experience requirements
WHY HIRE AN APPRAISER
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
Purchase Insurance Coverage
Property Damage or Loss Claim
Donations and Gifts
Selling an Item/Purchasing an Item
Estate Planning
Equitable Distribution for an Estate
Estate Taxation
Collateral for a Loan
Desire to know
WHY HIRE A DESIGNATED APPRAISER
• Education
• Training
• Experience
• Legitimacy
• Code of Ethics
• Current and up to date
in
• Appraisal Standards
• Market Trends
FOUR RECOGNIZED APPRAISAL
ORGANIZATIONS
•
•
•
•
International Society of Appraisers (ISA)
Appraisers Association of America (AAA)
American Society of Appraisers (ASA)
Royal Institute of Chartered Surveyors (RICS)
We recommend to only hire a designated appraiser from one of
these four recognized appraiser organizations.
INTERNATIONAL SOCIETY OF APPRAISERS
• Largest personal property appraisal organization
• Best appraisal principles, theory and methodology in the
profession
• Appraisal Foundation Sponsor
• Code of ethics
• Only personal property
• Training/Annual Conference
• Requalification requirements
• Professional development
INTERNATIONAL SOCIETY OF APPRAISERS
• National Network of Qualified Appraisers
• Industry recognition for the best appraisal theory and
methodology program
• Antiques and Residential Content Programs
• Fine Art Programs
• Specialty Studies Pathway
• USPAP Trained and Tested
• Website specifically designed to search for appraisers
• The best annual conference
OTHER APPRAISAL ORGANIZATIONS
•
•
•
•
•
•
Typically smaller organizations
Lower standards
Diploma mills
Lack of training
Lack of professional development
Many are dealer-centric (conflict of interest)
NON-AFFILIATED APPRAISERS
• Very Often Lack Training in:
•
•
•
•
Appraisal Theory
Methodology
Principles
Markets
• Many Times Dealer Associated
• No/Limited Professional Development
• Limited Contact with other Appraisal Experts and peers
AUCTION HOUSES AND APPRAISALS
• Auction Houses
• Used to giving auction estimates and not other levels/standards of
value
• May lack appraisal theory and methodology understanding and
experience
• Conflict of interest (looking for consignments)
CODE OF ETHICS
Members of recognized professional personal property
appraisal organizations, such as ISA, all adhere to a strict
societal and USPAP code of ethics and conduct
THE APPRAISAL FOUNDATION
• Establishes, improves and promotes the Uniform Standards of
Professional Appraisal Practice (USPAP)
• Disseminates information on USPAP and appraiser
qualification criteria
•
•
•
•
To the profession
State and federal agencies
Users of appraisal services
Related industries
• Sponsors activities relating to standards and qualifications
• International Society of Appraisers is a sponsor of the
Appraisal Foundation
USPAP
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
Uniform Standards of Professional Appraisal Practice
Comprehensive set of standards for appraisers
Ethics
Competency
Record Keeping
Scope of Work
Jurisdictional Exceptions
Development Standards
Reporting Standards
USPAP CODE OF ETHICS
• Must not perform an assignment with bias;
• Must not advocate the cause or interest of any party or issue;
• Must not accept an assignment that includes the reporting of
predetermined opinions and conclusions;
• Must not misrepresent his or her role when providing
valuation services that are outside of appraisal practice;
• Must not communicate assignment results with the intent to
mislead or to defraud;
• Must not use or communicate a report that is known by the
appraiser to be misleading or fraudulent;
USPAP CODE OF ETHICS
• Must not knowingly permit an employee or other person to
communicate a misleading or fraudulent report;
• Must not use or rely on unsupported conclusions relating to
characteristics such as race, color, religion, national origin,
gender, marital status, familial status, age, receipt of public
assistance income, handicap, or an unsupported conclusion
that homogeneity of such characteristics is necessary to
maximize value;
USPAP CODE OF ETHICS
• Must not engage in criminal conduct;
• Must not willfully or knowingly violate the requirements of
the RECORD KEEPING RULE; and
• Must not perform an assignment in a grossly negligent
manner.
WARNING SIGNS
MEMBERSHIP OR EDUCATION QUESTIONS:
CALL 312.981.6778
DO NOT HIRE AN APPRAISER IF
• The appraiser claims to be associated with an appraisal
organization and they do not come up on the site’s appraiser
search
• The appraiser belongs to a lesser recognized organization or
does not hold a designation from a recognized organization
• The appraiser does not belong to an appraisal organization
DO NOT HIRE AN APPRAISER IF
• The appraiser claims to be USPAP “Certified” (USPAP does not
certify appraisers)
• The appraiser has no appraisal theory or methodology
training
• The appraiser is not USPAP tested and requalified every two
years
• Is banned from practicing before the IRS
• If the fee is based upon a percentage of the valuation
• The appraiser values and offers to buy
THE APPRAISAL
MEMBERSHIP OR EDUCATION QUESTIONS:
CALL 312.981.6778
APPRAISAL DEFINITION
• An appraisal is the act or process of determining value,
estimating cost, or calculating the present worth of forecasted
earnings
• An appraisal report is a written documentation of the same
• An opinion of value which can be express as a specific
amount, a range of numbers, or a relationship to a previous
value opinion or set amount
• Appraisals are opinions based on an informed judgment
which are supported by facts, analysis and processing of
relevant factors
INTENDED USE
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
Insurance - Collection
Insurance Damage/Loss Claim
Donation
Estate
Equitable Distribution
Estate Planning
Liquidation
Acquisition
Loan Collateral
Pre Move Inspections
ELEMENTS OF A QUALIFIED APPRAISAL
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
Name and Address of the Client
Intended use
Intended Users
Name, Contact Info and Qualifications of the Appraiser
Signed Certification
Scope of Work narrative
Effective date of the report and value
Appropriate Market
Objective
Value Being Sought and Definition
IRS QUALIFIED APPRAISAL (DONATION)
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
Detailed Description of the Property
Physical Condition of the Property
The Expected Date of Contribution
Terms of Agreement Relevant to the Property
Name, Address, Tax ID # of Appraiser & Fee Arrangements
Appraiser Qualifications
Statement Appraisal was prepared for Income Tax Purposes
Date of Which Property Was Valued
Appraised for Fair Market Value, Basis for Value, Comps
Method of Valuation used to Determine FMV
IRS QUALIFIED APPRAISER
• Appraisal Designation from a Recognized Professional
Appraiser Organization or
• Has otherwise met minimum education and experience
• Regularly Performs Appraisals for Pay
• Meets other requirements as prescribed by IRS Regulations
• Is not been prohibited from practicing before the IRS at
anytime over the three year period ending on the appraisal
date
THE APPRAISAL PROCESS
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
Initial Consultation
Scope of Work and Intended Use
Inspection & Inventory
Critical Assumptions & Limiting Conditions
Research
Comparable Data
Value Adjustments and Value Conclusions
Report Writing
Compliance and Ethics Reviews
OTHER SERVICES
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
Consultant
Brokerage (Acquisition or Disposition)
Advisor
Collection Management
Downsize Assistance
Oversight Services (conservation, framing, shipping storage)
Condition Reports and Annual Inspections
OTHER SERVICES
Litigation Services
• Support appraisal report
• Appraisal review
• Technical analysis
• Assist client in a legal matters (integrity and objectivity must
be maintained)
• Expert Witness
• Serve as arbitrators or mediators in disputes
MARKETS AND VALUE
MEMBERSHIP OR EDUCATION QUESTIONS:
CALL 312.981.6778
PRICE, COST & VALUE
• Value – the monetary worth of something: the amount of
goods, services or money that something will command in
exchange within a certain market
• Value must be justified
• Price – the amount someone is asking for an object
• Price is not necessarily justified
• Cost – the amount someone paid for an item
• Cost, like price is not necessarily justified
APPROACHES TO VALUE
• Market Data/Sales Comparison
• Cost
• Income
MARKETS
• Retail
• Wholesale
• Orderly Liquidation
• Distress Liquidation
(values can be different in each market place)
AUCTIONS
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
Depending on timing can conflate multiple markets
Traditional
Online
Condition
Selling
Buying
Appraisals
MARKET TRENDS
Changes in Values due to
• Economics
• Changes in Taste
• Geography
STANDARDS OF VALUE
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
Fair Market Value
Marketable Cash Value
Liquidation Value
Market Value
Actual Cash Value
Salvage Value
Liquidation Value
INSURANCE COSTS
Estimating the cost to
replace an item of
personal property with
an exact duplicate,
suitable substitute or
manufacture with exact
duplicate or suitable
substitute
• Replacement Cost
• New
• Used (Comparable)
• Reproduction Cost
• Repair or Restorations
Cost
AFFECTS ON VALUE
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
Condition
Provenance
Markets
Individual Item vs Collection
Singular or Group (i.e. single chair or set)
Value In Place / In use
Appreciation
Depreciation
Authentication
EXPERTISE AND COMPETENCY
MEMBERSHIP OR EDUCATION QUESTIONS:
CALL 312.981.6778
GENERALIST APPRAISERS
• A generalist is an appraiser who appraises a broad range of
properties
• Generalists are critical to the appraisal profession, often
appraising large estates and other complex assignments that
encompass many areas of knowledge
• When necessary, a competent generalist consults with and
acknowledges specialists and experts in creating a thorough
appraisal report.
SPECIALIST APPRAISERS
• A specialist is an appraiser who primarily concentrates on a
specific property and regularly performs appraisals of that
property type
• A specialist often has additional education in a limited and
dedicated field
• A specialist usually has more knowledge and experience than
a generalist in a particular property type, but is not as
knowledgeable as an expert in the field
EXPERT APPRAISERS
• An expert is an appraiser with comprehensive and
authoritative knowledge of or skill in a highly concentrated
field as a result of extensive education and experience
• Expertise is normally gained after many years of formal
education, self-study, market experience, scholarly research,
presentation and publication, or a combination thereof
• Only an appraiser working at the highest levels within a field
should be considered an expert
APPRAISER VS AUTHENTICATOR
• An appraiser is usually not the authenticator but in certain
instances can be
• Training in the logic and reasoning required to support the
opinion
• Has proper credentials and experience in the appropriate
specialty
• Appraisers identify
• Many clients and collectors assume the appraiser is also an
authenticator
PROVENANCE
• French term meaning history of ownership of a valuable
object
• Previous Ownership
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
Dealers
Collectors
Auction houses
Dates
Exhibition History
Mention in Books and Magazines
Catalog Raisonne
Impact on value
PROVENANCE
A full provenance provides a documented history that can help
• prove ownership
• assign the work to a known artist
• establish the work of art's authenticity
AUTHENTICATION
•
•
•
•
Broadly, the act of proving that something is true or genuine
Market may determine authenticity
Dealers may warrant authenticity
Object deemed authentic or
•
•
•
•
Fake
Forgery
Copy
Misattribution
AUTHENTICATION VS IDENTIFICATION
• Qualitative
• Scholarly
• Imprecise
• Opinion
• Subjective
• Extrinsic
• Inexact
• Subject to change
• Quantitative
• Scientific
• Measurable
• Factual
• Objective
• Intrinsic
• Exact
• Fixed
WHY AUTHENTICATE
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
When provenance is not clear
Valuable work being donated
Value would change after authentication
When fakes and forgeries are known to exist (Dali prints)
Important works being offered
Client needs to know
Insurance
Historical accuracy
NOT ALWAYS RELIABLE SIGNS OF
AUTHENTICITY
•
•
•
•
•
•
Signatures
Older Attributions
Unvetted Exhibitions
Auction Sales
Gallery Sales
Certificate of Authenticity (COA)
CERTIFICATE OF AUTHENTICATION (COA)
•
•
•
•
Beware
Not always what they appear
Some will have inappropriate values connected to them
Some COAs are self-serving and used to deceive
FAKES, FRAUDS, COPIES &
MIS-ATTRIBUTIONS
MEMBERSHIP OR EDUCATION QUESTIONS:
CALL 312.981.6778
FAKE/FRAUD/FORGERY
• A forgery is normally defined as a work of art presented to a
buyer or audience with the intention to deceive
• Fraudulent intention is necessary for a work to be a forgery
• this distinguishes forgeries from honest copies and merely mistaken
attributions
• Usually a forger creates in the style of a famous artist and
tries to sell it, often in collusion with an unscrupulous dealer
• Forgers rarely execute an exact copies of existing authentic
original object
• such works are in most cases impossible to sell to informed buyers.
FAKE/FRAUD/FORGERY
MARTIN JOHNSON HEADE, BY KEN PERENYI
FAKE/FRAUD/FORGERY
FA K E O N T H E L E F T ( C H I P S TO N E C O L L E C T I O N )
FAKE/FRAUD/FORGERY
FA K E R O L E X O N T H E R I G H T
COPY
• Reproduction
• Revival example
• In the sytle of
• Not intended to deceive
• May be marked as a
copy
MISATTRIBUTION
•
•
•
•
Incorrectly Identifies an object
Authentication not done by an expert
Scholarship changes
Error or mistake based
INSURANCE
MEMBERSHIP OR EDUCATION QUESTIONS:
CALL 312.981.6778
INSURANCE POLICIES
•
•
•
•
Homeowners Policy
Scheduled “All Risk”
Blanket “All Risk”
Art Title Insurance
HOMEOWNERS INSURANCE POLICIES
AND APPRAISALS
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
Unscheduled
Typically limited to 50% of dwelling coverage
A “Deluxe” Policy may be needed for collection coverage
Deductible typically applies
Determine value after loss
May have sub-limits for collectible classes
Policies differ by company
SCHEDULED “ALL RISK” COVERAGE
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
Sometimes called Fine Arts or Valuable Articles Policy
Is in addition to homeowners policy
Predetermined or agreed amount (losses are pre-qualified)
Each item listed individually (an appraisal may be necessary)
Typically includes breakage coverage for fragile items
Typically automatic coverage for new acquisitions
Typically no deductible
Markets may change and client may become over/under
insured
BLANKET “ALL RISK”
•
•
•
•
•
Written on total dollar amount
Items not individually listed
No deductible
Breakage coverage for fragile items
Burden of proof of value falls on insured (In event of a loss an
appraisal may be crucial and/or necessary)
• Per-item dollar limit (many times set at $2500 unless
increased based on client needs, or is combined with a
scheduled policy)
ART TITLE INSURANCE
• Art Provenance/Chain of Title Risks
• Theft - contemporary or historical (e.g., WWII)
• Illegal import or export
• “Classic” Title Risks
• Security interests
• Creditor liens
• Authority to sell
• Coverage is for the face value of the policy plus the cost to
defend against a claim.
• Appreciation of the value of the art can be addressed via
policy endorsement.
ART AS AN INVESTMENT
MEMBERSHIP OR EDUCATION QUESTIONS:
CALL 312.981.6778
ART AND ANTIQUES AS AN INVESTMENT
Three Schools of Thought
• Buy Art for the Love of the Art
• Buy Art as an Investment
• Buy for Cultural Significance
ART AND ANTIQUES AS AN INVESTMENT
For Financial Returns
• Emerging Artists
• Art From Emerging Countries
• Portfolio Diversification
• Alternative Investment
• Undervalued and un-identified objects
• Buy and Hold (Long term investment strategy)
• Buy and Sell (typically contemporary art which is has a more
volatile trend, than other segments such as old masters)
ART AND ANTIQUES AS AN INVESTMENT
Passions Investments
• More than a traditional financial investment
•
•
•
•
financial return
Enjoyment of ownership
Potential Tax Benefits (i.e. foundations)
Social Benefits
• More than philanthropy
• Socially responsible
• Involvement beyond financial such as decisions, participate in the
management, etc. far more than a straight-forward charitable donation
in the past
ART AND ANTIQUES AS AN INVESTMENT
Investing in Art
• Art is a commodity, with risk and volatility
• Requires knowledge and $$$
• Buyer Beware – Research, know value and what the artist is
known for
• Additional cost of ownership/buying/selling such as appraisals
storage, insurance, maintenance, and auction or gallery fees
• Invest in art through an art fund
• Insurance and possibly art title insurance
• Estate Planning (trusts and foundations)
ART AND ANTIQUES AS AN INVESTMENT
If you are a novice or even a seasoned pro
• Research
• Train your eye
• Be an informed and savvy buyer
• Hire an art consultant
• Hire a qualified and experienced art appraiser such as a
designated member of the International Society for
Appraisers
ART AND ANTIQUES AS AN INVESTMENT
Mei Moses All Art Index – repeat sales index
ART AND ANTIQUES AS AN INVESTMENT
• Given the recent prices at the top of the market, there is more
interest from collectors, investors, banks, wealth managers,
estate planner and the IRS to look at art as an investment
Francis Bacon, “Three Studies of Lucian Freud”, oil on canvas, in 3 parts,
painted in 1969, sold in Nov, 2013 at Christie’s NY for a record price of
$142.4 million
WHY HIRE AN ISA APPRAISER
MEMBERSHIP OR EDUCATION QUESTIONS:
CALL 312.981.6778
ISA APPRAISERS
ISA Appraisers have all of the necessary appraisal skills,
including
• Connoisseurship
• Experience
• The professions “gold standard” of Appraisal Training
ISA APPRAISERS
ISA has three designation levels, our highest and most
demanding level is the
• ISA Certified Appraiser of Personal Property (CAPP)
ISA APPRAISERS
The other two ISA Designation Levels are
• ISA Accredited Member (ISA AM)
• ISA Member (ISA)
ISA AND CONNOISSEURSHIP
• Product knowledge acquired through hands on experience
• Not necessarily classroom related
• Hands on study, examination and comparison of the relevant
material over such a sufficient period of time that the
appraiser is able to effectively discern the relative quality,
condition, craftsmanship, market level and
authenticity/authorship, if applicable.
• Competent to pass critical judgments in an art, particularly
one of the fine arts, or in matters of taste
ISA AND EXPERIENCE
• Appraisal Experience
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
Theory
Principles
Methodology
Report Writing
Observation of Property
Product Experience
Practical Contact
Comparison of objects
Identification
ISA AND APPRAISAL TRAINING
• ISA Appraisal and Educational Programs are considered the
best in the profession, including
• Appraisal Theory
• Appraisal Methodology
• Appraisal Principles
• Testing
• Peer Review
• Requalification
• Classroom Programs
• On line Learning Management System Opportunities
HIRE AN ISA APPRAISER
Select from the best trained and widest
network of personal property appraisers.
ISA Appraisers, the GOLD STANDARD for
personal property appraisers
YOUR FIRM
• List Experience & Qualifications
THE END
MEMBERSHIP OR EDUCATION QUESTIONS:
CALL 312.981.6778
C O N TA C T I N F O H E R E
THE APPRAISAL FIRM
MEMBERSHIP OR EDUCATION QUESTIONS:
CALL 312.981.6778