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In dentibus anticis frustrum magnum spiniciae habes*

Kevin Boer, Broker Owner, 3 Oceans Real Estate, Inc. ()

February 4th, 2007 · 11 Comments

Sufficiently warned by Michael Price about the quality and content of entries submitted to this week’s Carnival of Real Estate, let me dispense with my gratuitous Latin phrase by boldly placing it in the title…and assuring you that my post has absolutely nothing to do with spinach in your dentures.  It’s just that I couldn’t find a Latin translation site that would reliably render the following headline: Creative Internet Advertising Your Broker Never Thought Of.

One of the first things you learn from many of the old-timers in the business is the importance of listings, for at least two reasons:

  1. Your “sales force” — the other agents in your area, some of whom may have competed with you for the listing — does much of the legwork of showing the property to prospective buyers.
  2. Having a listing gives you an “anchor” from which to further advertise yourself: an ad in the paper, a sign in the front yard, a brochure, a neighborhood mailing, an appearance in the MLS. This may well lead to further business for you…and as a side benefit may even help you sell the home.

The buyer’s agent, alas, has no such anchor. The fact that I represented the most recent buyer of 123 Main Street doesn’t offer a good opportunity to advertise myself. The new owner — my client — is unlikely to allow me to put a “Buyer Proudly Represented by” sign in his front lawn for too long, and if he did, he’d be inviting a host of unwanted guests, thinking the home is still for sale. I could send out a postcard to the neighborhood, trumpeting my success, but postcards are a pretty ineffective marketing mechanism unless you send them out regularly and for a long time. I could take out an ad in the local paper announcing my success, but that’s unlikely to generate any calls since the public has been trained to look in the paper for listings, not recent sales.

The excitement, the story, the marketing value of a transaction has always been quite firmly on the listing side. The buyer’s side is, well, yesterday’s news. While that makes sense, it’s not in sync with the fact that a home spends only a tiny fraction of its life as a listing. During the vast majority of the time in which the home is not on the market, shouldn’t there be some way of getting some marketing around my involvement in the purchase of that home?

The answer, of course, is “Yes.” The Internet does indeed present an opportunity for buyers’ agents to strut their success. At least two examples come to mind.

  1. Sites like HomeThinking.com ask clients to rate their agents’ performance. The “anchor” for this rating and the (hopefully!) positive exposure is not only the listing side of the transaction, but also the buying side.
  2. Zillow and its AVM brethren potentially present another such opportunity, though those sites don’t currently have such functionality. While most real estate sites concentrate on today’s news — the listings — Zillow’s inventory is all homes, not just homes that are currently for sale, and the history of those homes has some marketing value. If I wanted to highlight my buying agent experience in a particular neighborhood, I could — for a fee, of course, — perhaps add a virtual “Buyer of this home proudly represented by…” sign that would appear next to my past transactions.

Increasing the marketing value of the buying side of a transaction is unlikely to fundamentally shift the balance of power from the listing side, but it certainly does present an interesting new form of online advertising.

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* Translation: You have a big piece of spinach in your front teeth.

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Tags: Advertising · Business of real estate · Homethinking.com · Online advertising · Real estate · Zillow

11 responses so far ↓

  • 1 Michael Price // Feb 4, 2007 at 11:28 am

    I love it! I think BHB will too! ~MP

  • 2 REBlogGirl // Feb 5, 2007 at 9:20 am

    Oh, Boer… a man after my own heart. After 8 years of tedious Latin study, it warms my heart to see the time honored language used so eloquently. Now to the post, very interesting. I like the idea of thinking outside the box and coming up with a way to leverage the buyers interest in online advertising.

    Here’s my favorite Latin phrase:
    Estne volumen in toga, an solum tibi libet me videre?
    Is that a scroll in your toga, or are you just happy to see me?

  • 3 Carnival of Real Estate #28 // Feb 5, 2007 at 7:58 pm

    [...] Greg Latin-phile Swann and his pack of writing hounds took charge of the ticket booth at this week’s Carnival of Real Estate — and did a bang-up job, considering the competition the Superbowl presented for their attention.  Yours truly made the top 10, influenced no doubt by the pandering Latin title of my post, In Dentibus Anticis Frustrum Magnum Spiniciae Habes.  Hey, even Bloodhounds are influence-able! [...]

  • 4 john harper // Feb 6, 2007 at 10:00 am

    Kevin - one other plus of having a listing - when you place a classified ad whether in print or on Craigslist or Zillow or what have you - always put an ad about what you have to offer with it.

    When you successfully represent a buyer write a post about it that features the kind of buyer - first time, move up, etc. Adding this type of content to your database is good fodder for the longtail

  • 5 » Check Out the Carnvials!-Silicon Valley Real Estate Blog, Bay Area: 1SiliconValley.com by Steve Leung // Feb 7, 2007 at 7:36 pm

    [...] - The BloodhoundBlog hosts the Carnival of Real Estate this week and selected When Not to Buy a House as a "winner."  Fellow winner Kevin Boer at 3 Oceans kindly mentions me on his blog and sets up a punchline in his article targeted towards agents, In dentibus anticis frustrum magnum spiniciae habes. [...]

  • 6 Zillow's New Product Release Misses A Golden Opportunity | 3 Oceans Real Estate, A Boutique Real Estate Brokerage Serving the San Francisco Bay Area // Dec 20, 2007 at 8:02 am

    [...] I’d really like to see from Zillow is something I’ve talked about before: addressing the advertising needs of buy-side Realtors.  The Sellsius twins have weighed in on this issue as [...]

  • 7 Roost is a new real estate search engine | 3 Oceans Real Estate, A Boutique Real Estate Brokerage Serving the San Francisco Bay Area // Jan 27, 2008 at 11:45 am

    [...] clever. I really like this part of their business model, for reasons I’ve explained before: The current real estate business model heavily favors the listing side of the equation, and I’…. If I’m a small brokerage in Sacramento, and I currently only have, say, 5 listings, I could [...]

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  • 10 Roost Levels The Playing Field Between Listing And Buy-side Brokers, But (Speaking From Personal Experience!) How Long Before An MLS Strangles It? : Domus Test Test Test // Jul 19, 2008 at 8:50 am

    [...] clever. I really like this part of their business model, for reasons I’ve explained before: The current real estate business model heavily favors the listing side of the equation, and I’…. If I’m a small brokerage in Sacramento, and I currently only have, say, 5 listings, I could [...]

  • 11 Zillow Undergoes Another Upgrade…But Here’s What I’d Really Like To See! : Domus Test Test Test // Jul 19, 2008 at 8:51 am

    [...] I’d really like to see from Zillow is something I’ve talked about before: addressing the advertising needs of buy-side Realtors. The Sellsius twins have weighed in on this issue as [...]

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