FNC, Inc and Bill Rayburn are Busy
Connecting Appraisers and Lenders (Part One)
By Charlie Elliott, Jr., MAI, SRA
In an
attempt to address some of the technological issues
within our industry connecting appraisers and lenders,
who better to contact than one of the industry’s
leaders in the field? This month’s column, as well as
that of next month, will be devoted to an interview
with one our industry’s true technological pioneers
Bill Rayburn, CEO of FNC, Inc. In addition to being
the CEO of the company he founded, Bill holds a Ph.D.
in finance and the CFA (Certified Financial Analysis)
and MAI (Member Appraisal Institute) designations,
three of the most sought after credentials in the
finance and appraisal industries.
I
first met Bill when he did an appraisal seminar in
Charlotte. He made one of the most dynamic
presentations I have ever heard, and that is saying
something when the subject matter is as dry as that of
real estate appraisal.
Bill, how did a Mississippi college professor
get interested in real estate appraisal to the extent
that he went all the way to obtaining a MAI appraisal
designation?
You could say my
foundation in real estate came straight from the
cradle. My daddy was a real estate developer and
builder in southern Mississippi, so I grew up with
real estate. My educational background was in finance,
real estate and insurance, with my primary focus being
financial institutions.
I started doing work
for financial institutions on the collateral side, and
doing market analysis and feasibility studies on large
real estate. I just plain needed the expertise that I
gained while obtaining my MAI.
What prompted the idea of starting a company
that would become one of the premiere
mortgage-appraisal-system companies in the country?
Before founding FNC
and alongside our professorial careers, Dennis Tosh
and I did seminars for major banks and state banking
associations around the country on how to apply the
Financial Institution Reform, Recovery and Enforcement
Act (FIRREA). Around 1994/95, one of the bankers asked
us, “Can you build me one of these systems like the
one you are talking about?” I said “Absolutely!” We
came home and I remember Dennis saying, “Where are you
going to get this? You don’t know how to write
software!” And I said, “No, but I have a banker who
has money and there are a lot of smart people around
here. We will figure it out.”
We approached two of
our colleagues, also professors at Ole Miss. One was
an MIS (Management Information Systems) professor
named John Johnson who knew technology, and one was an
economics/statistics professor named Bob Dorsey who
knew operations. So we got together.
We went to work on
the software. Our first two employees were Ph.D.
students whom we hired part time. One of them is now
our chief technology officer and chief software
architect, in charge of the design on all our systems.
We worked on this software for three years, with the
University of Mississippi incubating us and
Mississippi investors helping us financially. Our
first big customer was Charter One Financial in
Cleveland, Ohio.
FNC has come a
long way from what must have been just an ambitious
idea, to a large national company. Would you care to
expound a bit on some of the challenges you have faced
as a start-up company as well as any slam dunks which
you have experienced?
A couple of the
challenges we faced as a startup have also been
blessings. Our headquarters is in Oxford, Mississippi.
In the past, we’ve gotten a lot of questions about
that – Oxford is way, way off the beaten path when you
consider the traditionally thought of technology
centers in this country. But Mississippi has been good
to us.
Our investors come
from this region, and without them we wouldn’t have
been able to get off the ground. A lot of our talented
folks are connected to Mississippi – either former
staff or graduates from the University of Mississippi
or folks who used to call this home and moved away,
but then came back to work for FNC.
And finally,
Mississippi has turned out to be the perfect place to
house our secondary disaster recovery facility. Our
primary data center is in California, and clients used
to be really glad to hear that – they didn’t want
their data in Mississippi. But after 9/11, Oxford,
Mississippi is a good place to have data. Like I said,
it’s off the beaten path.
Another challenge
we’ve faced is that our sales cycle and our
installation/implementation cycle are long, and were
especially so during the last three years of record
volumes. Mortgage originators were so covered up in
application volume that it was all they could do to
get the paper in the door, processed, and out the
door. They didn’t have time to think about anything
else. Both of those issues have begun to resolve
themselves. Lenders have more time to be proactive
about technology that will make them more efficient
and risk averse. And we’ve developed a
fast-installation plan that’s going strong right now
with three of our new clients.
Our challenges have
turned into slam dunks, a lot of them. And we have a
lot of slam dunks. We have systems in place or in the
works at four of the top 10 mortgage originators and
five of the top 10 sub-prime originators in the United
States. We worked with the Appraisal Institute to
develop what is now the recognized standard for
communication and storage of appraisal information –
AI Ready. We have thousands of appraisers and title
providers and flood providers and inspection providers
and AVM providers and other vendors connected to our
lender clients through our ports. We have absolutely
fantastic people on board. We have a lot of successes
and we’re thankful.
Would you care to comment on the number of
employees that you have or the national client base
that you serve?
FNC has offices in
Oxford, Miss. (the headquarters); Costa Mesa and
Carlsbad, Calif., as well as onsite technical staff at
several clients and telecommuters working from home
offices. We have 230 employees.
Our clients include
Allstate Appraisal, Ameriquest Mortgage Company,
AmSouth Bank, Aurora Loan Services, Bank of America,
Centex, Countrywide, Frost Bank, Greenlink (the vendor
management arm of Wachovia), IndyMac Bank, Just
Valuation Inc., Key Bank, LMS/RBC Mortgage, Option One
Mortgage Company, Quicken Loans Settlement Services,
Union Bank of California, Washington Mutual, Wells
Fargo and others.
The report of my
interview with Bill Rayburn concludes with next
month’s column.