As far as I can tell, the RE.net has been advocating for better broker Web sites for as long as there has been an RE.net. Many articles and posts focus on the twin pillars of eCommerce — Search + Content — but many brokers still have Web 1.0 sites or, worse, Web 1.0 sites tarted up with gimmicks to look like Web 2.0 sites while offering the same old stove-piped database search of the same old IDX content.
I started my company to bring common sense eCommerce strategy and Best Practices to Real Estate. To be honest, it has been harder than I thought it would be to get brokers to play ball and, lately, I have been thinking about why that is.
I’ve found that brokers are unique creatures in many different ways, but the most frustrating thing for me when it comes to improving Web marketing programs is that many of them seem to operate on the principle that ignorance is bliss because its cheap. Our clients are the exceptions that prove the rule, but even among them the pace of acceptance and progress varies widely.
Let me put a finer point on that by comparing a project in the real world with what often happens in the Oz of Real Estate:
I just started a new integration project for UVEX Sports. This project will replace the Web-based Business to Business (B2B) platform they are currently using with one that is hosted in-house and tied directly to their enterprise management software. UVEX sees a huge benefit in making the information and functionality that their software holds completely accessible to sales reps and customers via the Web. This is a significant upgrade over the current platform and a really, really good idea.
This exercise is understood by UVEX’s management, consultants and vendors as an integration project. Integration projects have two basic components:
- Technology Integration: Integrating existing systems with new software and hardware.
- Business Integration: Teaching management, customer service people, sales reps, and retail buyers to use the new system and make room for it in their day to day running of the business.
Once the project is complete, UVEX’s management understands that the system will require an on-going investment to maintain it and, crucially, manage it so that they get the maximum return on their investment. They also understand that the cost of all of this is going to be greater than the system they are replacing. Its Business 101.
(The guy who runs UVEX Sports USA is no dummy when it comes to free publicity, either, which is why he OK’d a 25% discount when you order from UVEXSports.com and enter “bloodhound” in the discount code field on the checkout page. The offer is good through the end of July. Their melanin sunglasses are excellent.)
Let’s contrast my UVEX experience with what I often encounter when I talk to brokers:
Brokers typically look for a new Web site when their current Web site generates few, if any, leads. Usually, they, their agents or both think another broker in their market has a “better” Web site, or a “cooler” one. They think a new Web site will generate more leads. It probably won’t, but there is no shortage of Web site vendors who are happy to run with this assumption.
All a new Web site will do is give them a better looking version of the problem than they had with the old Web site. This happens because many brokers refuse to see the problem for what it is: A fundamental lack of technology and business integration.
It gets worse — try to explain it in those terms and the only thing that breaks the glaze over the eyeballs is when they get wide-eyed at the suggestion that properly integrating their Web site with their business is going to cost more than the useless site they have now. All bets are off when I explain that quality content doesn’t create itself and success depends on getting agents and admins on board with new responsibilities that require new skills and that means — The Horror, The Horror! — management and accountability. Recently, a broker said to me, dismissively, “Maybe you should be a Real Estate broker in your next life.”
I guess the perception is that I am an unrealistic idealist. They wish.
The reality is:
- Compared to a project like UVEX’s, Real Estate broker Web site integration projects are usually pretty straight-forward and relatively inexpensive.
- No real change is possible unless broker/owners (and their senior managers, if there are any) are willing to demonstrate the leadership that is required to push change through their organization.
- Nothing worthwhile in business works unless its managed properly (I know, “Duh”, right?). Putting a dedicated, preferably experienced, eye on the Web marketing ball is crucial to having a successful program.
- Each of the above has a cost associated with it. The benefits outweigh the cost by an order of magnitude, but the bar is set by the vendor who sold them the Web site they have that doesn’t work. It makes me wonder if they would go to a Porsche dealer and demand to pay what they paid for the Hyundai they are trading in because both are cars.
And that is the difficult, sad conclusion that I am coming to: Many brokers really don’t want a Web site that works. They may nod their heads and agree that the benefits are obvious and necessary, but unlike businesses in the real world, businesses like UVEX who understand both the benefits of integration and the costs associated with it, they aren’t willing to put their money or their time where their mouths are.
This, I think, more than anything else, is what makes many of today’s remaining old school Real Estate brokers the modern day equivalent of the dinosuars who were on Earth after that asteroid hit the Yucatan. Dead dinosaurs walking.
Michelle Minch, Moving Mountains Design Home Staging says:
John: I am not a REALTOR or real estate agent, but I have a lot of interaction with them and with brokers. I also live and work in one of the most forward thinking, technology embracing cities in the world. It is beyond me why there is so much resistance among many in the real estate community here to step up and catch up with current technology. If I’ve heard “I’ve sold hundreds of houses this way and there is no reason for me to change now” once, I’ve heard it 100 times. And you know what, those are the agents who have no current listings, and who spend a lot of time lamenting the “bad real estate market” and “what am I going to do now”. Thanks for posting this. Now every time I run into another agent who has an outdated, poorly functioning web site and no listings, I will picture a brontosaurus lumbering toward oblivion.
July 14, 2008 — 11:24 am
Greg Swann says:
I doubt this is news to you: Real estate brokers do not behave like sane, rational businesspeople because real estate brokerage is a cartel, not a business.
Individual Realtors or boutique brokers can behave sanely, but the normal real estate broker gains nothing from sane management and loses nothing from insane management — rather more the contrary in most cases.
The business, for most brokerages, consists of bilking dewy-eyed idiots of their savings and milking every possible penny from the few hardy survivors who accidentally learn how to sell real estate despite their brokers’ bovine indifference.
Getting in bed with the government was the worst mistake the real estate industry could have made — but don’t hold your breath waiting to see it corrected. The good news is that upstarts like us are going to put the NAR and all of its collusory cartelettes where they belong.
The one thing the NAR never understood was the power of capitalism to wipe out the ugly consequences of systemic crime. I can’t tell you what this means for your business, but it bodes nothing but good for consumers.
July 14, 2008 — 12:34 pm
Bawldguy Talking says:
Is this the place that advertised the dinosaur kibble?
July 14, 2008 — 2:57 pm
jaybird says:
Well said, Greg.
Jeff, you’re hilarious.
July 14, 2008 — 7:03 pm
Thomas Johnson says:
“UVEX’s management, consultants and vendors”
Most RE Brokerages:
Management= The guy that gets all the newspaper leads and picks off the low hanging fruit and tosses the rest aside, generating enough income to keep the doors open but not enough to pay a consultant or build a relationship wit his vendors, because he spends all his time getting all the newspaper leads, picking off the low hanging fruit while discarding the rest. If there is any cash left after the above cycle, a grocery store cart, bus bench or a load of IB #1 postcards go out.
As a practical matter, I bet UVEX has a revolving credit facility to provide cash flow so that they can actually employ consultants. Well run RE brokerages burn cash like a spendthrift trophy wife. Ask Glen Kelman, and Kelman knows what he is doing. Even without the advantage of the low barrier to entry and cartel pricing, managing a RE brokerage profitably, is no mean feat.
July 14, 2008 — 8:19 pm
John Rowles says:
Thomas – Good point, and there are other places where the analogy breaks, but the contrast is still striking to me. Also, its that lack of internal resources combined with the lack of trusted consultants that leaves brokers open to being suckered by vendors who know its easier to sell them what they *think* they want instead of what they need.
Greg – I don’t know what it means for my business, either. But we have been able to find traditional brokers looking for answers, and I am hoping that trend accelerates as they see the cartel that has propped them up crumbling around them.
July 15, 2008 — 4:06 am
Greg Swann says:
> But we have been able to find traditional brokers looking for answers, and I am hoping that trend accelerates as they see the cartel that has propped them up crumbling around them.
The team concept within a brokerage is a business — not necessarily a well-run business. The team concept carried out at the brokerage level is a business. And the “other” Redfin idea — salaried agents — is a business. When real estate runs into normal business-like incentives, it behaves sanely.
Am I correct in thinking that your biggest obstacle is MLS systems that will only allow you to sell at the brokerage level, not to individual agents or teams?
July 15, 2008 — 7:01 am
John Rowles says:
Yes, that is the case in most markets, and it is one of the series of obstacles we face.
Our sales process is sort of like “American Gladiators”, except without the lycra. Or the opportunity to knock your opponent off a tightrope 50 feet into a pool of water with a big padded stick.
July 15, 2008 — 11:54 am
Ryan Hartman says:
John,
Thanks for the post.
I’ve been thinking about our competition a lot as I build our recruiting website (CitySpaceIsThePlace.Com) and I was excited to find an opportunity to share your awesome dino metaphor on one of the site’s pages..
July 24, 2008 — 12:30 pm