Showing posts with label Internet. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Internet. Show all posts

7/30/2019

Here Are Important Tips For Your Online Home Search

Hunting for a new home online is a great place to start your search, but it should not be your end all be all. Good listing agents are excellent at highlighting the best features of the home, but keep in mind there may be more than meets the eye. To make the most of your time and efforts and gather a well-rounded picture of home listings online, keep the following three things in mind.
  1. Stay up to date. When you start your search, make sure you find a site that pulls up-to-date listings directly from the multiple listing service (MLS) where real estate agents actively post their most current homes for sale. Many online resources update less often or fail to remove listings that are off the market, making it more difficult to sort through the clutter.
  2. Pictures can be deceiving. Real estate photographers are experts at showing a home in the best possible light. Many use tools and strategies to boost appeal, such as a fisheye lens to make areas look larger and creative editing to make colors and textures really pop. But, often listings will not contain photos of unappealing parts of the home, like small closets or outdated bathrooms.
  3. See it to believe it. Once you find what appears to be your dream home online, call up your REALTOR and schedule a showing. You want to take the opportunity to vet the home in person and explore every part of it before beginning the offer process. Your REALTOR will help you cover all your bases and will ask questions you may not have thought of.



Julia Huntsman, REALTOR, Broker | www.juliahuntsman.com | 562-896-2609 | California Lic. #01188996

3/26/2007

Internet Home Searches

Trulia.com's March 2007 report about consumer online search behavior can sometimes be more about curiosity than serious looking:
According to Trulia's search data, consumers continue to search online for both "dream" and "deal" homes. Of the top 10 most viewed homes on Trulia.com, the most popular was a three-bedroom home in Rockingham, North Carolina listed at $18,590. Also on the list was a 15,000-square-foot Beverly Hills mansion listed at $24,950,000 - more than 1,300 times the price of the Rockingham home.

However, sellers should take note that industry data does substantiate that about 70% of homebuyers do start their search online, compared to about 10% just a few years ago. So that means the better presentation given on the the web whether through the online real estate multiple listing service or other listing services, the more you might find an actual buyer for your property. Not only does this reach a wider audience than print advertising, it also affords the prospective buyer a look around the property through multiple photos, but also the opportunity for instant mobility by e-mailing the listing to virtually anywhere.

3/04/2007

Automated Property Searches

The Southern California MLS system -- Tempo -- has just completed a merger with the MLS system covering the San Fernando Valley, making the Southern California MLS one of the largest multiple listing services in the nation. That means an easier search for you when it comes to finding properties in Los Angeles and Orange Counties, and beyond, including Riverside and San Bernardino.

You may either go to the property search function on my website at www.juliahuntsman.com, or have automated property updates sent to your e-mail tailored to your specific search criteria, i.e., square footage, bedrooms, baths, zip code, city, Thomas Guide number, year built, and other factors. This includes condos and townhomes, houses, units, and commercial property. If you do your own search through my website, you will be receiving information that is current within a few hours as it is updated throughout the day. Do you want to know more? Just call me or e-mail me so I can help you as soon as possible.
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2/06/2007

Pros and Cons to Calculating Your Home's Value Online

This article is straight from The Wall Street Journal's real estate section. Right off, it makes the point the property owners have come to see their home like it's a stock, with an equity value to use as a pool for more acquisitions. Read on to see how the author tested out several online systems for arriving at a value, to find out that a very broad range was quoted instead of one specific price. A single price, however, was quoted through the Zillow.com and Realestateabc.com sites. (Through my own experience, I can tell you that Zillow may quote a price not agreed with by me in my own market analysis, whether too hight or too low.) An offsite appraiser was finally contacted, and the appraiser's opinion lowered drastically after he visited the home to a range that approximated that of Zillow.com's and Realestateabc.com's estimate. Be aware though, that even though sites that use property tax sales as the basis for their database, and which would be the same one's a Realtor would use, do not include other important condition information--the sale amount alone does not tell all, just as the appraiser's estimate changed after he saw the house.
Oneline estimates are great tools, but should be almost always considered as a preliminary ballpark figure at best, as sometimes the value of your home could be very greatly overestimated or underestimated.

2/02/2007

If More Information About Teeth Became Publicly Available, Would You Fire Your Dentist?


Something that a lot of internet users have a misconception about is that property listings that are available for public viewing on the internet are not in the public record, as some people actually have told me they believe, i.e., they won't be found at the court house as a recorded property deed is. Furthermore, they don't seem to realize that sellers have a choice as to whether or not to put their listing into internet sites or just keep it within the local MLS of their agent, as advantageous as wider internet exposure may be for them.

The proliferance of sites that supply listings, i.e., Trulia and Zillow, just to mention two out of what are probably hundreds if not thousands, are not necessarily a complete databsse of REALTOR-listed properties through an MLS system. Again, they can be a viable source of information for everyone, but they depend on property tax records, which ARE public records and therefore available to anyone, and manual entry of listings by owners or agents. MLS's cooperate with various sites to allow their listings to be shown on other internet sites, and brokers may have an opt-out capacity. Why? Because a listing agreement belongs to the listing broker and is a contract between a seller and his/her listing broker/agent, not a public document to be found in the public record. That is what is behind every REALTOR's representation of a property. With the spectacular rise in real estate values and internet use came many others who wished to be a part of the REALTORs' business of representing their clients like never before. This leads into the current debate going on about MLS's and control of them, as housing values and sales are currently a huge factor, if not a driving force, of the economy.

In the United States, but not necessarily in all other countries, we no longer live in a world where showing a property means driving over to a listing broker's office to get their list of properties, and then driving on to another broker's office to get theirs. That's why the multiple listing services came about as far back as the 1930's--before an internet was even conceived of by the average person. The merging of MLS's, even if there is one national MLS, will still not eliminate the need for professional assistance in viewing, buying and selling homes. Or I may as well start drilling my own teeth and fire my dentist.

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2/10/2006

Zillow.com is a Zing

The new Zillow.com site seems interesting, but in the end doesn't seem any more unusual than any other site based on local property tax records data, which is sometimes inaccurate in itself. This site happens to combine with aerial photo technology so that you can see the exact location, and it gives you an estimate of value. But that doesn't necessarily sync with the current market value, so the viewer should be careful about making final conclusions without further investigation. An average or a median price for a zip code area does not give spccific value for a specific property, any more than the selling price for the last market sale is the same as today's market value.
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