Buying a home is not about information.
If you've ever bought a home, you know this is pure fact. Searching on the Internet for a house may be about information, at first, but the act of actually BUYING the home is not. It never has been. It never will be.
Sex And Real Estate, by Marjorie Garber, beautifully illustrates why.
If you read my first three posts on this book, Sex and Real Estate :: Part 1, Sex And Real Estate: The House As Beloved, and Sex And Real Estate: The House As Mother, you already understand the major cultural reasons why buying a house is such an emotion filled decision.
The fact that we "fall in love" with houses can't be ignored at any level. And while the first two chapters of Sex And Real Estate clearly speak directly to the real estate industry, the final chapters are dedicated to illustrating the depth of our cultural and literary fascination with homes. They focus on the concepts and archetypes of home in literature and culture throughout history. And while these final chapters do contain nuggets that a real estate agent or home stager could benefit from greatly, they are harder to find. The final chapters are the material of college literature courses, not business reading. I enjoyed it, don't get me wrong, I'm just not sure everyone will as much as I am sure everyone will love the intro and first two chapters.
The House As Body, chapter three, came close to matching the chapters one and two but left me searching for analogies that I shouldn't have had to search for. Chapters, four through through seven, The Dream House, The Trophy House, The House As History and The Summer House, were all literary and historical treasure troves, but they served simply to amplify what The House As Beloved and The House As Mother so clearly and easily illustrated.
This reinforces something I said earlier - after reading just the introduction. I said that the introduction to the book is worth the entire price. After reading all of it, it's even more true. So, you want to get the most from this book in the shortest amount of time? Buy the book and read just the intro and first two chapters. You'll still think it was a deal.
Buying a home is NOT about information.
It's about emotion.
So those selling the home need to understand this at the action level. But sadly most don''t. The vast majority real estate marketing that I see completely ignores this. And it's simply wrong. Loreena Yeo hit the nail on the head with her post, Sell A Lifestyle.
I will scream the next time I see someone put "front of house" as the description on the photo of the front of a house. I'm not talking about a figurative, silent scream. I mean a real physical outburst. It floors me every time. "Living Room" under or over a photo of the living room. WOW!
But it goes further than that. The vast majority of the listing posts I read on AR and nothing more than a regurgitation of MLS data that someone could find on Realtor.com, or Trulia, or Zillow. It does NOTHING to distinguish the unique and compelling aspects of the house that will make someone want to come see it more than they want to see a house with the exact same specs listed by someone else. And it certainly does nothing to distinguish the agent from other agents.
This kind of purely information laden language is powerless. It whispers, "me too," when, with just a bit more effort, it could be screaming, "ME ONLY! I'M THE ONE. I'M THE HOME YOU'VE BEEN LOOKING FOR."
And by default, "I'M THE REAL ESTATE AGENT YOU NEED. I'M THE REAL ESTATE AGENT YOU WANT."
For me, this Garber quote from the epilogue ties it all neatly together:
"Perhaps increasingly, for busy people, space has come to substitute for time, and the house becomes the unlived life. In an era when the "welcome mat" and the "answering machine" all-too-often stand in for personal greeting and human voice, the house - with its "living" room, "dining" room, "family" room and "media" room - is the place where we all too often stage the life we wish we had time to live."
If you don't believe this, then just keep on pumping out data. Keep on putting "front of house" on photos of the front of the houses you sell. Keep on writing as if a home could be defined by stats and numbers.
But if you recognize that buying a home is really about emotion, about an ideal, about a hope, about a dream... then take action NOW to make sure you do everything you can to ensure your writing paints the picture of a home, not just a house.
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