Real Estate & The Internet
The Real Estate business is truly unique in the sense that most
people will only engage in it once or twice in their entire
life.
And since purchasing property is such a complicated matter, Real
Estate businesses have laboriously pursued every means to make
this transaction as easy, and as informative as possible.
This explains the plethora of agents, advertisements, listings,
open houses, and gimmicks realtors employ just to attract
potential buyers, who, understandably so are squeamish about
jumping headlong into such a big investment without thinking
everything over.
However, there is great satisfaction in being able to close a
successful deal with a client. This is especially true when the
client is satisfied and heartily recommends the agent/broker to
his friends who may be considering purchasing homes too.
Transition to the Information Age
Today's buyers and sellers turn to the Internet first. To be
competitive, Real Estate businesses have started to tap into the
power of the internet. Successful websites will more than pay
for themselves with the business it generates and the time it
saves.
The beauty of the internet is that it puts so much information
in the hands of users in an instant and in the comfort of their
homes. On the flip side, sellers are now able to push that
information to the buyer table reliably, instantly, and most
importantly inexpensively.
Real Estate businesses should realize that potential buyers
nowadays desire to see many options. Before deciding on
purchasing a home, they now do research on the internet,
scanning for good deals and supporting information to help them
weigh their decision.
If a Real Estate business does not adapt to this need, or to the
growing power of information technology, it may find itself
lagging behind the competition.
Inexpensive Advertisement
In America alone there are close to 70 million users of the
internet. What business would not want to have advertising
mileage in this medium? The cost of advertisement on this medium
may cost anywhere from nothing to a few hundred dollars.
In any rate that still makes for a great deal.
Instant Communication
A buyer seeks information, what does the agent do? In the older
days, they would fax documents, call long distance, send snail
mail, and such. This sort of communication made facilitating a
sale sometimes tedious and backbreaking.
Today information architecture allows buyers and sellers to
shuttle mail, images, data, and others at a snap. This too is,
like internet advertisement, inexpensive.
Realtors can pitch to not just one buyer at a time, but as many
as can access his website. And the good thing about that is that
he does not have to repeat himself for each customer.