National Real Estate Sites Hurt Consumers
Thank you to Diann Tonnesen, Prudential Americana Group Realtors in Las Vegas, Nevada who hit the nail on the head. Lot's of wasted time and frustration for the buyer in this transitioning market, since the information is out of date. Kind of reminds me of the real estate magazines. The listing deadline is a couple of weeks before print...then it is distributed for a month! May I also suggest that a serious buyer contact an experienced REALTOR to help them find the right property with the minimum amount of frustration...
As the old saying goes, the early bird gets the worm. But if you are a consumer using one of the national real estate sites like Zillow, Trulia, Homes.com, Redfin or Realtor.com to find a home, not only are you missing out on a gourmet breakfast, you are actually paying through the nose to go hungry!
As agents, we get requests all the time to check out properties that prospective clients have found on one or all of the sites above. They have just spent hours upon hours perusing the web looking for the right deal.
What the average buyer fails to realize is that these 3rd party national sites only get updated every five to seven days!
This means that even in a "buyer's market," by the time the best deals are listed on the national sites, they are already under contract. In a competitive seller's market like most areas of the country are now experiencing, even a delay of literally minutes can mean it's too late to put an offer in and cost thousands of dollars. The Las Vegas real estate market has had almost a 5% price increase over the past month. Consumers that wasted a month looking for a home on the national sites during that time can now expect to pay $10k more for a home in the $200k price range.
So why do buyers use these national real estate sites?
The name brand recognition that comes from massive billion dollar TV advertising campaigns and expensive search engine marketing that the local sites can't compete with.
Plus it looks like the national sites have a lot more listings than the local real estate sites, so consumers feel like they are being offered more "choices." But the national sites include the contingent or "under contract" listings as well as those that are actually still available to bid on. In many cases, under contract properties make up two thirds to almost three quarters of the listings on the national sites!
Don't get me wrong, if you are just trying to get a general feel for prices in different areas of the country, the national sites make it easy to compare more than one real estate market on the same site. But the national sites are in business for one reason only - to make money. And the only way they can do that, is to come between the agents and their prospective clients and then charge the agent for the "privilege" of connecting them with the client. And the national sites have so much money for advertising, it is easy for them to beat out the local professional agents on the search engines.
As a buyer, if you are actually serious about shopping online for a home, find an experienced agent with a great web site that is updated at least daily and does not include "contingent" listings on their site. Better yet, have that agent set you up to receive properties through the MLS the exact instant they hit the market so you have a decent shot at a purchase.
Another hint - don't use an agent that comes recommended as a "local expert" by one of the national sites. That agent that is paying a hefty monthly fee to the national site to be proclaimed a local expert, whether they are or not. In most cases, well established Realtors will NOT have to pay to be called a "local expert."
Diann Tonnesen
Prudential Americana Group Realtors
Over 30 years of experience helping families call Las Vegas "home!"
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