The National Association of Realtors released their latest real estate marketing findings at the end of March. The recent surveys showed that the marketing shift continues towards Internet marketing and away from traditional newspaper marketing.
Using real estate websites to view listings of homes for sale increased 10% from the last NAR survey. Now only 10% of home buyers don’t use the Internet to do their home search. Newspaper advertising and magazine ads only attract 12% of the surveyed new home searchers.
What is interesting is that $5 billion was spent chasing 12% of the market and $3 billion was spent chasing 90% of the market. Hmmmmm. What is strange about that picture? One wonders if the newspaper advertising is done to please the seller that all marketing efforts are being made and the real estate website advertising is done to really find the active buyers. 17% of Realtors apparently had the same thought, according to a Classified Intelligence survey, and don’t spend on newspaper advertising.
From an Inman survey 18% of the Realtors surveyed plan to invest over $10,000 over the year in real estate Internet marketing. On the other end of the spectrum, 20% plan to spend less than $1000. What would be interesting is if we could correlate these figures to the agents’ success ratio, full-time versus part-time real estate agent, and the volume of leads they get from agent websites. In short, which camp more describes the real estate agents and brokers that are deriving copious leads from their realty and agent websites?
As the advertising venue shifts from print to Internet, real estate websites, if they aren’t already, will become the prime avenue for home buying market leads. A foreseen benefit to web savvy real estate agents is that this continued marketing shift will lead to the creation of new technologies and gadgets to help Internet marketers.
May 14
This entry was posted on Wednesday, May 14th, 2008 at 11:36 am and is filed under Real Estate Marketing, Real Estate Web Sites. You can follow any updates to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. Responses are currently closed, but you can trackback from your own site.