Real Estate Listings in Summerville are available
from the websites below
Reinventing Real Estate, Part 1: Online and
Empowered Consumers Are Taking Charge and Paying Less
By Charles Warnock
For decades,
the real estate world turned in a predictable manner. The roles of
buyers, sellers and real estate professionals were fairly well defined
and transactions followed a predictable path of yard signs, newspaper
ads, open houses and miles of paperwork.
Recently, online and empowered consumers have changed the game. Real
estate professionals now face issues similar to the ones that have
transformed the retail, personal finance and travel planning
industries. As technology advances and new business models evolve, the
real estate industry has begun to transform itself from providing
traditional, carefully controlled “agent-centric”
transactions to new “consumer-centric” practices.
The following is a look at some of the recent industry trends and how
buyers, sellers and investors can expect to benefit. The
“Five Ds” that are driving change in real estate
are:
1. Disruption – Over the past 10 years, the Internet has
matured into a powerful platform for delivering real estate
information, forever changing the interaction between buyers, sellers
and real estate professionals.
2. Displacement – The popularity and acceptance of
self-service and consumer-direct business models is being felt by real
estate professionals, who are striving to develop attractive new
offerings for Web-savvy consumers.
3. Demanding consumers – You now have more real estate
knowledge, tools and resources at your fingertips than ever before.
More savvy consumers tend to be more independent and demanding.
4. Downward pressure - Traditional real estate commissions of 5-6
percent of a property’s sales price are facing downward
pressure.
5. Developing alternatives – The real estate industry is
transforming itself to provide targeted services and exciting new
options that add value for consumers. Disruption
“We are going to see our industry go through dramatic
transformation via the Internet and consolidation of agents and
companies.” – eRealty Times Columnist Dirk Zeller
Some industry observers have adopted Harvard Business School professor
Clayton Christensen’s term “disruptive
technology” to explain recent developments in real estate.
Though it’s easy to point to the World Wide Web and advancing
technology as the main changes in real estate, that’s only
part of what’s shaking things up. Essentially, the real cause
of disruption is not just technology, but technology-enabled real
estate consumers.
Web-enabled consumers
According to the National Association of Realtors (NAR), more than 72
percent of homebuyers now begin their home search online. The
popularity of online real estate ads surpassed newspaper property
listings back in 2001, and the gap is widening. Less than one percent
of buyers first learned about the home they purchased on the Internet
in 1995, while in 2004, that number passed 20 percent.
According to a California Association of Realtors (CAR) survey, 97
percent of respondents said the Web helped them understand the buying
process better and 100 percent said using the Web helped them
understand home values better. Web-enabled homebuyers like you are
taking a more active role in researching homes and neighborhoods. You
also now spend less time with real estate professionals once you have
completed your research. Internet homebuyers also used the Web
effectively to filter out properties that did not interest them,
visiting 6.1 homes on average versus 15.4 for traditional buyers.
Today, you can view photos and detailed information for hundreds of
properties in the time it used to take to visit a single one. And the
Web provides much more opportunity than simply moving print listings
online. The growing availability of residential high-speed Internet
connections has boosted the popularity of virtual tours and interactive
maps, providing consumers with powerful and flexible visual search
tools.
In addition to making home searches easier, automated valuation model
(AVM) software is making a big impact in how properties are evaluated.
AVMs, which generate valuation estimates by analyzing and comparing
property information data, are becoming increasingly sophisticated and
accurate. While not considered a substitute for human appraisals, AVMs
are gaining popularity because they are inexpensive, easy to use and
produce valuation estimates in minutes. Now AVMs, used extensively in
electronic mortgage approval processing during the recent refinancing
boom, are becoming available on real-estate Websites aimed at
consumers. This is a significant development for independent sellers,
who often find it challenging to price their properties correctly when
selling on their own.
The MLS goes public
“In real estate, MLS data sits at the apex of the change,
specifically the MLS information that is pushed to the Internet every
minute of the day.” – Bradley Inman, Publisher of
Inman News
Once an exclusive tool for real estate professionals, the multiple
listing service (MLS) has in recent years become a very public platform
for real estate listings. The MLS is the nation’s most
comprehensive database of properties for sale – four out of
five homes sold in the United States are listed on the MLS. MLS
properties are available to agents and brokers worldwide, and are now
accessible via consumer Web sites such as Realtor.com, WSJ.com, Excite,
Netscape, AOL and MSN. MLS listings also appear on local, regional and
national brokerage Websites through Internet Data Exchange (IDX)
agreements that allow participating Realtors to share listings and
display them to consumers. Even though only licensed realtors can list
property on the MLS, the system has begun to figure prominently for the
$110 billion independent seller (for-sale-by-owner or FSBO) market.
About 13 percent of real estate sales are now FSBO, conducted without a
broker’s assistance.
Type “flat fee MLS” into any major search engine,
and you’ll see dozens of real estate professionals willing to
list your property in the MLS for a fee. If you are willing to pay a
commission of 2-3 percent, you can attract the attention of thousands
of agents who will show your property to prospective buyers. You can
then reduce the cost of the sale to about half a traditional 5-6
percent sales commission, plus the cost of the MLS listing. If you find
an independent buyer working without an agent, you could make a sale
with no commission at all and pay only an MLS listing flat fee.
Displacement
Currently, about 2.4 million real estate licensees operate nationally,
according to the Association of Real Estate License Law officials. The
NAR has more than one million members, up from about 760,000 members
five years ago. Many real estate professionals and industry observers
expect a significant decline in this number because some tasks
traditionally performed by agents and brokers can now be done more
quickly and easily by Web-enabled consumers.
“Historically the fundamental driver of the real estate
industry was the control of information. The real estate agent and the
real estate office were the only sources of comprehensive information
on which properties were for sale and those who might be interested in
buying them. With this control revenues were practically guaranteed.
Moreover, because this exclusive control was akin to a monopoly by
virtue of the multiple listing service (MLS) any firm of any size could
serve the customer equally well. As a result, the number of real estate
companies grew without regard to market efficiencies.
Simply put, the traditional model is too inflexible. Consumers are
seriously questioning the value of a real estate agent. They frequently
feel that many of the traditional tasks undertaken by the agents are
now either no longer required or can be done by the consumer
themselves.”
– Swanepoel & Tuccillo, Real Estate Confronts
Profitability
The quotes above, from a popular report on emerging real estate
business models and dwindling profit margins, highlight a number of
issues traditional real estate professionals are now facing. And if the
real estate industry has grown historically without regard to market
efficiencies, the issue has only been compounded since 2001, as new
agents signed on in droves, lured by low interest rates and
skyrocketing home prices in many areas. It’s likely that the
number of traditional real estate agents will decline, while new types
of real estate jobs will be created to deliver value to Web-savvy
customers.
NEXT in Part 2 of 2: - Demanding Consumers, Downward Pressure and
Developing Alternatives
----------------
Charles Warnock is Marketing Communications Manager at Homekeys in
Miami, Florida. Homekeys is a non-traditional real estate Web site that
helps consumers buy, sell and save thousands on real estate. Learn more
at http://www.homekeys.net. Charles writes frequently on real estate,
finance, advertising and marketing communications.
|
|

|