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« Soo Many Passwords and Useless Accounts | Main | Carnival of Real Estate XXX »

Thursday, February 15, 2007

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Comments

Ooh, another list! I like lists. Why limit it to reality television?

Endora will cast a death spell on you (and Sam won't care).
Bob Newhart will hang up on you.
Ernestine will disconnect you.
The one-armed man will strike again. You.
You'll have as much money as Cliff Clavin does after Jeopardy!.
Geraldine will become enraged and order Killer to, well....
Ozzie Nelson will actually ground you.
You will be launched to the moon, Alice.
J.R. will live. You won't.
You'll suffer the big one, Elizabeth.
You'll trip over an ottoman and break your neck.
Cliff Huxtable will take away all of your money, one dollar at a time.
You'll be dead, Jim.
A large, colorless balloon will chase you down.
You'll receive a bankruptcy note, signed by Epstein's mother.
You'll lose your #1 dime.
...

Colleen,
Great article (once again). I particularly like this quote - "Failing to adapt to the changing environment will result in the loss of customers to competitors." I think that quote holds true for every business in pretty much every industry. Businesses that don't adapt to their environment will cease to exist in the long term.

That is very interesting George.

Thanks, Drew, you make a really good point.
Wish I could say the same to you, George, but... way to work a Cliff Huxtable reference in though, that is impressive.

Real estate has traditionally been about doing deals where there is some asymmetry in the information the buyer and seller have about the transaction. I don't think Web 2.0 is going to eliminate that basic situation. It's not like buying and selling stocks where the buyer and seller may know just as much or little about the stock. I cringe when I hear people talking about how they used e-bay to purchase a property sight unseen.

With that in mind, I think all the talk about a reduction in the role of a real estate agents is overblown. Real estate agents are necessary to smooth out what is a fairly complex transaction. Also, so much information about specific properties on the internet is rather old - for example listings on real estate agent web sites are often out-of-date.

A good example of how web 2.0 can be used to help smooth out a transaction, while at the same time not reducing the role of the real estate agents is: www.realtyjuggler.com it's an online organizational tool for real estate agents. They use it to track their listings, clients, yard signs, closings, promotions, lockboxes and basically everything they need to do starting from the first handshake when they meet their client until the last handshake at closing.

It's good that there's an increasing amount of information available to buyers and sellers on the internet. However, I don't thiink that reduces the role of the agent at all. If anything, in increases pressure on the agent to provide additional services - e-mail updates, a constantly up-to-date web site etc.

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