From the monthly archives:

September 2006

MLS Registration Required - Not here folks!

by Jay - The Phoenix Real Estate Guy on September 19, 2006

Hamlet said the question is “to be or not to be”.

Yeah, well forget Hamlet. To require MLS registration or not: THAT is the question!

(For those that don’t know, MLS means Multiple Listing Service/System. The big giant data base that includes most homes currently for sale)

At last count, there are over 3.2 bazillion real estate web sites out there. Most have an data feed to their MLS that allows web site visitors to search homes on the local MLS. (And those that don’t have it, should).

Some real estate sites require visitors to “register” prior to getting access to the MLS search, some don’t. Registration usually entails providing your name, email address, phone number and occasionally a commitment to give up your first born child.

On our main web site, ThompsonsRealty.com, no registration is required. I’ve tried it with and without registration and I’ve found that my visitor count drops off dramatically when I require registration. And given the names I get with registrations, those that do register all seem to be related to Disney characters.  I must have a dozen different email addresses for Mickey Mouse and his friends.  Some guy named Ben Dover registers frequently too.

I’ve talked to a lot of people over the years about requiring MLS registration and gotten a plethora of opinions.

Proponents of MLS registration say things like:

  • Don’t give everything away for free
  • Serious buyers will register
  • What’s the point in having a website if you don’t capture visitor information
  • You can’t convert visitors to clients if you don’t know who they are

Opponents of MLS registration argue:

  • If you require registration, people will just go to the next site that doesn’t
  • You get too many bogus registrations
  • Internet buyers tend to be a long way off from buying and want to remain anonymous in the beginning
  • There are other ways to capture visitor information
  • If you provide great service, the serious buyers/sellers will identify themselves

I get visitors to my site every single day that find us using search terms like “Phoenix MLS search no registration”, “Arizona MLS no registration”, or even plain old generic “no registration MLS”.  We rank #1 on Google for “Phoenix MLS search no registration”. When I required registration, not one single visitor arrived by searching for a site that requires registration. 

*Many* real estate agents have said to me, 

Jay, you’re nuts. You HAVE to require registration to capture leads! 

To them I say, “fooey”.

First, I don’t believe people inherently WANT to register on any web site. I hate registering on web sites, which is a main reason I have a hard time asking people to do it on my site.

Second, I’m a big fan of the Internet. I’m a bigger fan of free information. A person armed with information is a powerful person. I like to arm my web site visitors with information. I have enough inherent trust in humanity that if I provide a potential home seller or buyer with information then they will appreciate that, see that I’m an all around swell guy, and flock to us to help them buy or sell real estate. 

And finally, I know that if you provide great customer service, they will come.

Several of my digital pals have written on the subject of the MLS. Todd Tarson expounds in I am not a philosopher. Jeff Tomlin has a great piece on the Future of the MLS. Judy Orr talks of MLS’s forbidding agents to use the term MLS on their web sites (!) and how her MLS *forces* her to require registration. (Not all MLS’s are created equal.) And Cathleen Collins over on the Bloodhoundblog opines more eloquently than I could ever dream of.

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Carnival of Real Estate #10 is up!

by Jay - The Phoenix Real Estate Guy on September 18, 2006

This weeks Carnival of Real Estate is up at BlueRoof.com. Greg Tracy out of Utah has a great blog, and we encourage our readers to check it out!

One of our blogrollees, Todd Tarson is the Pick of the Week! Congrats Todd!

Other blogrollees, Maureen Francis, Greg Swann, and Joel Burslem were also were selected as top picks. All three of these (and others in the Carnival) are great blogs. Lots of excellent reading is to be found at this weeks Carnival.

What is a blog Carnival? In a nutshell, it’s a collection of posts on a select topic. There are hundreds (thousands?) of Carnivals happening in the blogosphere. Here is the Carnival of Real Estate FAQ.

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I Need Technorati Help!

by Jay - The Phoenix Real Estate Guy on September 16, 2006


I don’t understand what’s going on at Technorati…

The blog’s URL, http://www.buygilberthomes.com is not to be found in their blog directory. However, you CAN find this URL in their directory, http://www.buygilberthomes.com/?p=96 — which of course leads to a specific post on this blog.

I have “claimed” buygilberthomes.com on Technorati (I did this over a year ago). It tells me that it was last updated something like 159 days ago.

I have not claimed the post #96 “blog”. It tells me it was updated hours ago and is showing the previous post as it’s most recent. In moments, it will be showing this post as belonging to http://www.buygilberthomes.com/?p=96 but NOT http://www.buygilberthomes.com

What gives? Why does Technorati think one entry from this blog is the home of a blog, yet it doesn’t recognize that the true home of this blog even exists?

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Weekend Reading List

by Jay - The Phoenix Real Estate Guy on September 16, 2006

Need to catch up on your real estate reading this week? There’s been some great blogs out there….

Running Into Oncoming Traffic over at the Real Estate Tomato is a quick read on things to do to get your blog moving along. These tips would apply to any blog type, it’s certainly not limited to real estate. As a complete aside, I used to love Frogger.

Zillowblog has some interesting census trends/demographics, complete with versions of Zillow’s nifty “heat maps”. (Phoenix doesn’t crack the top five for oldest median age. Obviously they didn’t do the counting in the winter.)

Dustin Luther, Greg Swann and Joel Burslem take a critical eye to Windermere’s new map based MLS search. It’s a beauty. The techno geeks at Century 21 would do well to emulate this thing. The techno geeks at Century 21 should…. oh, never mind. I’ll save it for another day.

There’s been some BlogBuzz this week around buyer’s agency, dual representation, et al. Jim Duncan sums it up nicely, including links back to other’s thoughts.

And Todd Tarson opines on MLS data accessibility. I’m all for it. Why not get our seller’s property out to as many people as possible? Isn’t…that…the…point???

A couple of new (to me) bloggers have hit my radar screen in the past few weeks. Maureen over at MIOaklandCounty not only has finally given up Blogger and has a spiffy new WordPress blog, she’s also found a great list of tips to get your home ready for sale. And Jonathan Dalton spins up a great analogy between real estate and my favorite sport, poker.

Both Maureen and Jonathan are also active bloggers on ActiveRain, a superb “social network” for real estate professionals. If you are in real estate in any shape, form or fashion, you should join! (disclosure notice: I get “points” if someone joins ActiveRain using this link. Points get you nothing but bragging rights and my shiny face on the Arizona page. Jonathan is under the delusion that he’s going to catch me in the points race, so please sign up with this link so I can continuie to dominate him.)

So there you have it, oh avid readers. These selections should keep you going for quite some time, particularly of you follow the internal links. Also, don’t just stop at these posts. Read anything in any one of these fine blogs and you’ll find expertise, knowledge, humor and some great writing.

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Stupid MLS Listings

by Jay - The Phoenix Real Estate Guy on September 14, 2006


I don’t understand. If you are a real estate agent with a $1,000,000 plus listing in Scottsdale, why would you put it in the Multiple Listing Service with ZERO pictures of the property, and nothing about the home in the description? Are the room dimensions in the listing? Of course not. Showing instructions? Nope.

Thinking maybe the listing agent just (for whatever reason) wanted to get it into the MLS and planned to come back later and put in some information, I scroll to the bottom of the page, only to find the homes been on the market for 43 days.

So much for that theory.

Then there is the $9,000,000 listing in Paradise Valley. It has a description, including this gem: “Wtr/Fea w/F/P”. I think that means “water feature with fire place”? In the description it says, “Never seen before Pool/Spa design”. Well, I guess anyone searching for the home won’t be able to see the never seen before design because THERE’S NOT A SINGLE PHOTO IN THE LISTING!

I should probably cut the listing agent some slack about the photos. This is a new construction home after all. It was listed 569 days ago but was just completed in July. So the listing agent has only had 19 months to download a photo of the lot, the view, the home under construction or some sort of visual. Maybe a floor plan? And since it’s only been complete for 2 months, why should there be a photo of the never seen before pool design?

These are Stupid MLS Listings. Are they done by stupid real estate agents? I don’t think so. I think they are done by lazy real estate agents. Any agent capable enough to secure a multi-million dollar listing is bright enough to know they really ought to have a photo in the MLS. I hate to diss my agent brethren, but the fact is, there are some lazy agents out there. Jason Ungos has a web site tool just for them. In her ActiveRain blog, Sherri Welborn reports there are lazy agents in Middle Tennessee. Danger! They may be lurking everywhere!

Photos in listings are what people look for. This is not news folks. RealtyTimes wrote about this in 2004. Taking photos and uploading them to the MLS isn’t all that difficult. Using a tape measure and getting room dimensions was mastered by my son at age eight.

If you can’t use a digital camera, try reading Digital Photography for Dummies. If you can’t use a tape measure, either ask an eight year old or buy yourself a laser tape measure.

Sellers out there, ASK your agent to see your entire MLS entry. If there are no photos, poor descriptions, missing information, whatever, then it’s time to have a serious talk with your agent. If that doesn’t work, talk to their broker. YOU know what people want to see when they go on-line looking for homes. Make sure your agent does your home right!

Just make sure the photos they take look a little more professional than this one.
Sellers, you can help your agent by moving your truck off the front lawn…

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