Internet Battleground for Future of Residential Real Estate
Real estate agents are gearing up to face the biggest shift in their industry since it's beginning. No longer the first in the path of homebuyers and sellers, agents have gone from top feeders to the bottom feeders with real estate consumers in just a few years. I started in the real estate business when agents were top feeders and the keepers of the information. Multiple Listing Services® began migrating to the Internet at the millennium. Most agents in my first realty office said the Internet wasn't going to change anything, because we still had the telephone like books with available homes for sale. Consumers had to call us to start their search to purchase a home. Buyers started calling from out of town on a property and they hadn't driven by it, they saw it on the Internet. This started the shift of the consumer having access to the same information as the agent. Proactive agents and virtual brokerages saw the writing on the wall and began Internet marketing efforts and captured new market share by being early adopters and listening to their new web-based consumer. Today traditional brokerages and their agents are scrambling to get in the path of Internet real estate consumers, who number seventy-four percent of all buyers in 2004 according to the National Association of Realtors® Profile of Home Buyers and Sellers. Many of these late adopters have to compete with thousands of real estate websites and e-marketers who have been honing their position for the last five years to be the first in the consumers path when they start their home search. Large newspapers hold brokerage licenses and own real estate websites to capture real estate consumers and sell these leads back to agents, now the bottom feeders. Real estate trade associations are fighting back against the Internet real estate pioneers with changes to state real estate license laws to restrict and define their roles in lead generation and interactions with consumers. Large Internet powerhouses with non-traditional real estate brokerage business models will give a whole new face to residential real estate by the year 2010. Mark Nash is a residential real estate author, broker and commentator. He has been featured on CBS The Early Show, Bloomberg TV, CBS Dow Jones Market Watch, and Smart Moves by Ellen James Martin. His latest book 1001 Tips for Buying and Selling a Home is available online and in bookstores nationwide.
MORE RESOURCES:
There is something emotionally charged about the buying and selling of New York high-end real estate. How else to explain the juggernaut of reality TV shows about high-end brokers?
After 30 years of marriage, Sharon and Michael Newman decided it was finally time to move from the Catskills to New York City.
The house, designed by the architect Eric Fisher, looms over the street like a big industrial arm.
A town house in Dallas, a midcentury modern in Rhode Island and a Tudor in Denver.
For a century, Roosevelt Island housed a grim penitentiary. It was demolished in the 1930s.
More borrowers are opting for fixed-rate loans with terms other than the standard 30 or 15 years, especially when it comes to refinancings.
Two more glass skyscrapers are added to a group of towers on the waterfront of Long Island City.
Insurance coverage for a co-op unit; when a tenant is ‘blacklisted’; a co-op is smaller than estimated.
The market for $500,000-to-$600,000 houses in Westchester has become especially active.
A shaky real estate market means more sellers are providing buyer concessions, from gift cards to help with paying property taxes.
Houses of worship are adaptable to residential and other uses as congregations dwindle.
Nearly two million Americans could benefit from mortgage relief from the nation’s biggest banks, as part of a broad government settlement to be announced on Thursday.
A cold war-era satellite relay station is for sale in California after a Silicon Valley mogul gave up on plans to turn it into a weekend home.
How can I make my front porch more appealing to buyers?
Court hearings meant to protect New York homeowners from foreclosure are hopelessly slowed by endless paperwork and requests for additional information.
The Bay Area and Silicon Valley expect the windfall from the Facebook stock offering to make their in-demand region even hotter.
A Ditmas Park co-op, Upper East Side co-op and an Upper West Side condo.
A 10-year-old house with six bedrooms in Montvale, N.J., and a renovated four-bedroom in Bronxville, N.Y.
Prices in some parts of the country are still off by as much as 25 percent from their 2007 peak.
Trinity Church is the largest landlord in Hudson Square and is part of the effort to rezone the area to residential from manufacturing.
Rising oil prices and a boom in shale exploration are leading companies to add office space in the Houston area, most notably Exxon Mobil.
Ms. de França is the president and chief executive of Douglas Elliman Development Marketing, which focuses on new residential developments.
Meet the real estate broker’s interns: an ambitious group willing to do anything, earn nothing and wake up early on a Sunday to fluff the couch cushions at open houses.
Gray Burton lives in a 250-square-foot space he furnished with antiques he’s been collecting for years.
A photogenic Westchester suburb with high-profile residents is also known for its art museum and a performing arts center.
Wealthy investors are wiring millions of dollars to New York to snatch up a piece of 157 West 57th Street - what will be New York City's tallest residential building, with 90 floors overlooking Central Park.
An apartment at the Trump International Hotel and Tower, opposite Central Park, was bought anonymously through a limited liability company.
Homes in Dallas, Rhode Island and Denver.
A Ditmas Park co-op, Upper East Side co-op and an Upper West Side condo.
A 10-year-old house with six bedrooms in Montvale, N.J., and a renovated four-bedroom in Bronxville, N.Y.
Compare the cost of renting and buying equivalent homes.
For recently divorced men, a new breed of decorators offers help navigating a strange new world.
Plants that light up the winter garden can be found at Broken Arrow Nursery in Connecticut, which has long been a favorite of gardening geeks.
A sister in need drew the painter Beverly McIver back home to North Carolina, unaware that a new beginning was in store for both of them.
A jewelry designer finds striking new objects for storage.
Timothy Sakamoto and Jochen Repolust are part of the small but growing niche making mobile apps focused on specific works of architecture.
To promote an auction of 20th- and 21st-century design, the interior designer Stephen Sills has created a preview exhibition in an apartment at the Apthorp.
Fishs Eddy now sells plates acquired from the archives of the now-defunct Syracuse China Corporation, many more than 100 years old.
The designer Russell Greenberg creates custom baby rattles with ends shaped like profiles of mom and dad.
|