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Emerging Trend: One Size No Longer Fits All
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Source:
IRED.com, Inc. ©2000- Pat
Rioux
The real estate business model of "one size fits all"
is being challenged in the industry as consumers are demanding and getting what
they want - unbundled services. Whether you call the new models fee-for-service,
flat fee service, discount brokerage, or alternative brokerage, the full service
model of yesteryear will give way to more consumer options in the millennium.
The
good news for traditional offices is that the full-service package will not
disappear as many home sellers and buyers will still need a full complement of
service and due diligence. The time constraints and the lack of knowledge about
complicated real estate transactions facing many home sellers and buyers will
reinforce the need for full-service brokerage.
Many home sellers with
their "do-it-yourself" caps on, on the other hand, are wondering what
they can do to cut down on the workload of the agent and
thus, save money. Items like showing the house, taking phone calls and holding
Open Houses, for example.
The proliferation of dot com real estate
services offering discounted and fee-for-service business models are part of
this emerging trend (ziprealty, ehomes, eRealty, econobroker, etc.) and it is
expected that some of the traditional companies will follow suit.
Predictions
of an increase in 'for sale by owner' sales have proactive agents and firms
considering how to tailor their full service programs to meet the new consumer
demand for assistance with select services from the full package. Coldwell
Banker has announced plans to experiment with fee-for-service in select markets
in the first quarter of 2001.
According to an Internet survey conducted
by Mike Russer, a/k/a "Mr. Internet", 85 percent of those responding
to his recent poll reported that they are interested enough to take a course on
the subject.
Julie Garton-Good, author of "The Frugal HomeOwner's
Guide to Buying, Selling, and Improving Your Home", has done research about
the hours real estate agents work to perform the various services they offer to
home buyers and sellers. Her findings show that it takes about ten hours to
negotiate a sale between a qualified buyer and a 'For Sale By Owner' seller.
Real estate consulting is expected to flourish in the millennium as
real estate agents start to charge for the many tasks they now perform for
sellers and buyers 'on contingency' of a sale. Julie believes that the bottom
line is that consumers will get what they want as the real estate industry
catches up to the financial industries' move to unbundled their services.
As
the result of her research on emerging trends for unbundled services,
Garton-Good has created a real estate consultant program, "Consumer-Certified
Real Estate Consultant" (C-CREC) through the National
Association of Real Estate Consultants® (NAREC®).
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