Wow, The BVs I do are much easier than some of you make it. Let me give a couple of people some insight from my perspective,
1. Getting the shops...Smart phones can monitor the MSC website. The person with the fastest internet connection can self schedule them within 1-3 seconds of the jobs being posted. So If you wait for the email, you can be a backup. There are so many in my market, that it easy to make a day of the assignments on $5.00 gas (5-10 assignments)
2. They are mandated by the FTC.
3. There are specific questions about this being a business with a foundation. If the business does not have "roots" that is to be reported and applicable photos taken and submitted. I call this the "Hinky Factor." A temporary office in an executive suite is a flag issue and the job instructions clearly inform the field agent as to what their course of action is.
4. Part of the process is to see if sensitive documents and reports are accessible to the public. Just because a location is a financial institution or a Government office does not insure that files are not left open on desks and work stations. I have seen a couple of locations where you could sit in the lobby and read sensitive information left open on a desk in the next room. Also lap tops that have the files on them are to be checked for securement to the desks. Laptops are stolen very often and if they are not secured or encrypted, sensitive information can walk out the door with them. The locking cabinets and files are basically the same issue. Can the janitor come in a get your identity and sell it or maybe go shopping on eBay with a credit card number?
5. Destruction of files is also verified. Recently a real estate broker in the Seattle area recycled 500+ complete mortgage files. A couple found them in a Public Recycling Bin and gave them to a local TV news Station. Google this and see the video clips. So part of the assignment is to verify that a shredder or locked and bonded shredder box is on the premises and being used.
6. Call back number. Has anyone heard of "Magic Jack?" It costs a whopping $20.00 per year; to have a call back number for all shops, audits and follow ups. It comes with email reported voice mail. I can listen to and forward any and all messages left on it via email. No transcribing needed. I can also make calls on it from my lap top in the field. No cell minutes used and no worry about having to talk to this person when I do not want to.
7. The know it all guys... I have encountered these people. Most of them know the drill and can walk a new agent through them. A different BV is required for every relationship a company or agency has. You will find the same BV for the same office for every lender they write mortgages for. So if Mortgage company A writes mortgage contracts for Banks B, C D & E then four separate BVs may occur at the same location. So why would the Company not know what to expect? This could easily be the tenth time a verification was conducted this year.
Sometimes I am amazed at the fear factor, I read on these posts. The MSCs that I do work for have training modules that explain exactly what to look for and what not to look at.
I read one post in this thread where the agent was exceeding the scope of their authority and clearly did not read the “Do Not’s” in the guidelines and instructions. If a QA call is made to the business and it is reported that you exceeded your authority you could be prosecuted and sued. Read the don’ts and restrictions before you post a statement like that in an Internet searchable public forum……my advice to that poster is to edit their post immediately and to think twice before bragging about violating your authority here.
I hope this clears up more questions than it generates.