Main | The MLS mess and how to dig out of it »

July 16, 2008

Real estate search has no meaning

Today, all online real estate searches start with a 30,000-foot view of the earth, then pull you into states and cities. If you’re lucky, you get neighborhoods that you can understand in the terms that you have in mind. After this, you must draw parameters around your preference for number of bedrooms, bathrooms and square footage.

But when is the last time that a buyer stepped into a real estate agent’s car and laid out their desires like this? When seeking our next home, we tend to think more about our lifestyle. We want to be able to walk our kids to elementary school and not have to go more than five blocks to get basic grocery items, as an example. A park would be nice.

This is the way we think about buying our next home. This is the way we think about where we want to live. Yet, no MLS systems or real estate search sites capture information this way, let alone enable agents and consumers to search in this manner. Agents include descriptions next to listings, but people rarely pay attention to those due to the twisted meaning of phrases like “cozy and comfortable,” which means small and cramped, or “urban and hip,” which often means crime-ridden and grungy.

What’s missing from real estate is a system that helps push matches to consumers based on their lifestyle choices, their demographic. These systems exist within other verticals. Just look at Amazon, where you can search for a book and be led down a path that offers other books you may be interested in based on what other people who looked at this book also looked at or purchased.

Everyone in real estate has the same product with no different ways of presenting it.

One way to solve this problem is to build systems that capture this information, systems that capture and quantify what defines a livable neighborhood based on buyers’ real preferences. This system needs to capture what the buyer tells an agent when they first meet. “We want a nice, quiet neighborhood where people are friendly and kids have a place to play together. We want a house that fits our family of four, with room for grandma when she visits.” This, rather than “2,000-square-foot rancher with four bedrooms on a quiet street.” See the difference?

It is critical that real estate search systems begin to capture information about what is just down the street or three blocks away, what a school that’s rated a “four” really means, what a buyer is really looking for when considering their next move.

Maybe it’s a wiki that captures this lifestyle information. Maybe it’s agents taking note and quantifying the livable aspects of neighborhoods. Or maybe it’s deeper integration of various data into real estate search. Whatever the technological answer, it needs to infuse meaning into real estate search. If Amazon can do this for books, it can be done for homes and lifestyle.

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Comments

john beck

i suggest you to try explore some of the real estate guru's like john beck , jim fleck and many more well i used john beck's amazing profits for buying and selling real estates .

John Beck Teleseminar

If you do quality search on real estate , you will see the competition and growing demands in this field , majority are taking interests as this in ongoing and important in every season .

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