Veteran real estate agent Cari Linn says it's easy to spot clients on their first trip to the Twin Cities — they mangle the pronunciation of city names and marvel that the area outside the two downtowns isn't filled with farmland.
But those who have done a little homework often mention a community they saw on Money Magazine's Best Places to Live list, such as Eden Prairie or Chanhassen, and Linn believes being on the list gives a city an edge.
"I absolutely think it adds an advantage to a buyer's perception," she said.
First published in 1987, Money's annual ranking of top cities is probably the country's most widely read quality-of-life barometer, measuring housing, jobs, schools, safety, climate, leisure activities and a host of other criteria. Chanhassen, Apple Valley and Savage made the most recent list, which was published last month and focused on towns with 10,000 to 50,000 people.
"People love reading this kind of stuff," said John Adams, a professor emeritus at the University of Minnesota's Department of Geography, Environment and Society.
But while they may be entertaining, the studies can lead to overly black-and-white assumptions, Adams said. "They convey the impression that one place is Nirvana but that other place over there is the pits."
The precise methodology of Money's rankings aren't known but appear to vary from year to year, leading to abrupt changes in rankings.
Plymouth landed at No. 1 in 2008 and No. 11 in 2010, but it was absent from the list in 2012, the last time cities of its size were ranked. The community has had one of the Twin Cities' strongest housing markets, partly because the Wayzata School District, which serves most public school students in Plymouth, is so popular with parents that open enrollment has closed in many schools.