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2006 Update:Online Real Estate Advertising


Description: According to the Borrell Associates' report "2006 Update:Online Real Estate Advertising" despite a 36 percent increase in available inventory to advertise, real estate advertising has grown less than 4 percent since 2001. This is one category ripe for change, and it appears that the transition is underway."2006 Online Real Estate Advertising” details underlying dynamics in the market that point to dramatic changes in how agents, brokers and apartment operators are spending their advertising budgets.

Real estate advertising has remained virtually unchanged at $11.6 billion. Home sales have slowed down, meaning agents have more inventory to advertise but less money to spend on that marketing. Despite the hype about Internet advertising, there is plenty of room for growth: Most agents don't even have a Web site or advertise online. Online real estate advertising will grow to a $2 billion category this year and swell to $3 billion by 2010, surpassing the long-time leader, newspapers.

The Borrell Associates' report includes a real estate agents survey of their online and newspaper marketing habits.


Contents: Executive Summary

Chapter 1 - Trends in Real Estate Advertising
Figure 1.1: Real Estate Ad Spending, 2001-2010
Figure 1.2: Total Real Estate Ad Spending By Media Type, 2005-2010
Newspaper Outlook
Figure 1.3: Online vs. Newspaper Audience and Advertising Share 20057
Figure 1.4: Real Estate Ad Revenues Online, Newspapers and All Other - 2006 vs. 2010
Realtors Embrace Technology
Figure 1.5: Top 20 Real Estate Web Sites
Figure 1.6: Web Sites Where Realtors® Place Their Listings
Figure 1.7: Methods Real Estate Agent Used To Sell Home
Figure 1.8: Most Agents Still Don’t Advertise Online
Figure 1.9: Agents’ Spending Plans for 2006 vs. 2005
The Rental Market
Figure 1.10: Top 10 Rental Web Sites
Figure 1.11: Apartment Management Ad Spending by Media (2004-2006 & 2010)
Spending by Brokers, Agents and Developers
Figure 1.12: Brokers, Agents & Developers Ad Spending by Media (2004-2006 & 2010)
Private Party Advertisers
Figure 1.13: Private Party Ad Spending by Media (2004-2006 & 2010)

Chapter 2 - The “Free” Listings Phenomenon
Free Listings Sites Grow
Figure 2.1: Online Rental Listings Count
Where’s the Revenue in Free?

Chapter 3 - The Dawn of Real Estate Web 2.0
Figure 3.1: Homebuyers Value of Web Site Features
(Percentage Distribution)
For Sale By Owner Sites

Conclusions

APPENDIX A
Media Definitions

APPENDIX B
Real Estate Agent Online Usage Survey


Summary: Of all the advertising segments ripe for change, the real estate market might seem so ripe as to be nearly rotten. This is one advertising category where something’s got to change.
An overheated home-sales market has only recently begun to slow down – well beyond the predicted cyclical slowdown that should have occurred three years ago – and the proliferation of “free” listings sites on the Internet portends a collapse in the $6 billion print classifieds business, especially with the vast majority of home seekers now using the Internet to find a home.

For years we’ve heard how most brokers and agents despise their local newspapers. They’ve repeated their mantra ad nauseum: The only reason they buy newspaper listings is to appease the seller, not to sell homes. Newspaper ads don’t sell homes, agents and the Internet do. Yet, agents and brokers continued to plough money into newspaper advertising.

Toward the end of 2005, the nearly rotten started looking truly rotten. As home sales slowed down and the inventory of unsold homes grew, the Internet became the most-used method of selling a home – beating out even the old-faithful yard sign. The $11 billion spent on total real estate advertising stagnated, growing less than four percent over the past four years, while the available advertising inventory – the number of existing homes for sale on the market – rose 41 percent in the last 12 months. That metric alone is enough to stop a real estate advertising executive dead in his or her tracks.

What happens next should be quite interesting indeed. We expect that this tipping point will help propel Internet real estate advertising to a $2 billion level this year and push it past $3 billion by 2010, surpassing newspapers in terms of advertising market share.
Despite all the hype about agents and brokers already advertising on the Internet, there is huge room for growth. Sixty-one percent of agents do not advertise on the Internet. And 87 percent of agents are not buying keywords on Google or Yahoo.

There appears to be some level of disruption occurring within the ranks of the agents themselves. The real estate bonanza has brought an influx of new agents who seem hell-bent on using the Internet to reach new customers. In our survey of 535 agents, we found that 64 percent of the less tenured agents were likely to advertise online while only 36 percent of the agents selling homes for more than 10 years were likely to advertise online. The rest of the findings indicate that an Internet-marketing gap exists between newer and long-time agents.

Finally, we must note the emergence of what we call the “new kids on the block.” Sites with names that might be more fitting of rap stars – like Trulia, edgeio, Oodle and CityCribs – may wind up being the new disruptors to the “old” business models of paid online listings. With the elements of change in place, they are definitely models to watch.




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