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Trends in Residential Brokerage A Presentation to ARELLO October 19, 2008.

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Presentation on theme: "Trends in Residential Brokerage A Presentation to ARELLO October 19, 2008."— Presentation transcript:

1 Trends in Residential Brokerage A Presentation to ARELLO October 19, 2008

2 Trends  Trends in residential brokerage point towards a more competitive industry than has been the case since 2000;

3 Trends  Consolidation  Outsourcing of realty functions  Focus on consumers  Democratization of listings on the Internet

4 Trends  More price competition among realty service providers  Core services

5 Consolidation  As in previous downturns there is massive consolidation underway in terms of the numbers of sales professionals, realty firms and all forms of real estate industry professionals (title, mortgage, etc)

6 Consolidation  The number of real estate professionals has already declined by over 150,000: we expect it will decline another 100-150,000 in the next two years

7 Consolidation  The market share of leading regional and national brokerage firms, even with a decline in their sales, increased to a record level in 2007:  And was the single biggest yearly increase in the last 15 years

8 Consolidation  The level of sales in 2005: 8.3 million  The level of sales in 2008 5.5 million  The level of sales projected in in 2010 6.1 million

9 Consolidation  The level of sales will not soon again even reach 7 million  The fight for lower levels of business will drive competition to stronger levels  Some will chose not to play

10 Outsourcing of realty functions  With revenues down and the pressure to compete increasing realty firms and sales professionals are increasingly outsourcing many parts of their businesses

11 Outsourcing  Technology outsourcing Lead management Transaction management Web hosting and design Email Lead generation Accounting and financial systems

12 Outsourcing  Marketing outsourcing  Printing and Direct mail services  Custom design  Online Graphics  Sales professional branding programs  TV and video production

13 Outsourcing  Other areas  Education and training  Finance and accounting  Recruiting  Management development

14 Outsourcing  Few realty firms or sales professionals can afford the fixed cost of full time service/product suppliers in-house  In the new competitive environment, for most realty firms, the lowest cost provider will have a significant advantage

15 Outsourcing  A growing number of leading brokerage firms are also reducing onsite brokerage management and centralizing deal documentation and review.  Less review in field with more consistent processing by full time staff

16 Focus on Consumers  The Internet and generational changes have brought about the early stages of the age of the consumer in residential real estate services

17 Consumers  If it can be known, it will be known  If it can be rated, it will be rated  If it can be shared, it will be shared  Rich Barton, Chairman and CEO, Zillow

18 Consumers and ratings  Real estate professionals are wary of online rating platforms but many are already working and more are coming  State and local associations are working to grab this space and assure professionals that it is done professionally and with some guidelines

19 Consumers  The impact of the age of the Internet in our business can be most acutely identified by looking at how much consumers believe Realtor® assurances that “now is a great time to buy” versus how much they believe their online valuation tools and other networked advisors

20 Consumers  According to the Houston Association of Realtors and other leading sites, the percentage of consumers going online to check the valuations of property now exceeds that of those looking at listings Fall 2007

21 Consumers  REAL Trends/HarrisInteractive housing consumer studies done since 2002 show the following:  The younger the consumer the less they plan to use traditional full service real estate professionals and the more they trust the Internet

22 Consumers  Housing consumers are starting the process of searching for answers to a purchase or sale 12-18 months ahead of the actual decision time  While real estate professionals are still geared to tackle only those who are deciding right now

23 Democratization of listings  The listing is a perishable asset  Leave it on the shelf long enough and its value declines

24 Democratization of listings  Leading firms of all brands, sizes and structure are finding that a broad based listing distribution strategy works well  Although several firms have discovered that the most effective way to market a listing is to advertise it under your own brand (RE/MAX, Real Estate One, etc)

25 Democratization of listings  Those realty firms and real estate professionals who defy open sharing will lose ground to those who share Refraining from using addresses Refraining from having a valuation tool Requiring online registration

26 Democratization of listings  It is not that your listings have to be everywhere all the time  It is that they should be where most real estate consumers are searching with superb content

27 Democratization of listings  It is also an attitudinal issue  If you view sharing information as negative you will have a negative view of the new housing consumer  If you have a positive view and do not fear openness, then you have the chance to succeed

28 Democratization of listings  Recent settlements between NAR and DOJ and others between Realtor® groups and FTC are creating a more uniform world for professionals and housing consumers alike  The settlements mostly ended the dispute between lower cost alternative real estate service suppliers and traditional brokerage.

29 Competition  It was competition for listings among traditional sales professionals that brought down commission levels in the 1995-2005 period:  1991National average 6.1%  2005National average 5.0%  Source REAL Trends, Inc

30 Competition  It was competition among real estate brokerage firms that increased the average commission sharing between realty firm and sales professional  199568.0%  200774.8%

31 Competition  PS  That 5% swing from 1995 to 2005 for realty firms was equal to 75% of their profit from 1995

32 Core Services  Housing consumers have increased their use of realty firms and sales professionals who offer a full package of services NAR study on One Stop Shopping, May 2008

33 Core Services  Housing consumers continue to seek real estate firms and real estate sales professionals who provide “full service” more than any other segment of service providers (73%, 2006) REAL Trends/HarrisInteractive

34 Core Services  Recent court actions are threatening the ability of brokerage firms to engage in one stop shopping (Minnesota, Colorado, etc)  Also court cases in Alabama and other jurisdictions are threatening pricing decisions by brokerage firms when packaging or bundling services

35 Conclusion  The industry will be made of fewer and larger real estate enterprises in the years ahead even if the number of sales professionals does not decline substantially

36 Conclusion  Battles between regulators and the real estate industry have created a competitive environment on the use of the Internet  There will be more, not less, information available to consumers on the Web in the years ahead than has been available in the past…..including sales professional and brokerage firm ratings by consumers.


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