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2012 NAR Profile of Home Buyers and Sellers: Home Searching

by Houston Agent

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The home search process, as the 2012 Profile of Home Buyers and Sellers found, is increasingly conducted via the Internet; does that threaten real estate agents?

By Peter Ricci

Real estate has undergone a radical change in the last 15 years, but perhaps no area of the industry has changed more dramatically than that of how prospective homebuyers search for properties. What used to be exclusive information on the MLS is now largely public on sites such as Trulia, Realtor.com and Redfin, and homebuyers’ use of that information has completely changed how real estate works…or has it? In our latest look at the 2012 Profile of Home Buyers and Sellers from the National Association of Realtors, we’re looking at the home search process, and what it says about today’s crop of prospective homebuyers.

Searching for Homes in the Technological Sphere

Unsurprisingly, the Internet was the dominant medium in the Profile of Home Buyers and Sellers, with the majority of homebuyers utilizing it for a variety of tasks:

  • Ninety percent of homebuyers now use the Internet in their home searching (a slight increase from 2011), and for prospective homebuyers aged 44 or under, that number jumps to an incredible 96 percent.
  • The Internet dwarfs other forms of communication; compared to the 90 percent of buyers who use the Internet, just 53 percent use yard signs, 45 percent open houses and – bad news for newspapers – 27 percent review print or newspaper advertisements.
  • The ratios are similarly disjointed on how homebuyers first learn of the homes they purchased: 42 percent said the Internet, compared to 10 percent for yard signs or open houses; 6 percent from a friend, neighbor or relative; 5 percent from homebuilders; 2 percent from the seller; and a mortifying 1 percent from a print or newspaper ad.
  • In terms of what sites are visited the most, local metro MLS websites were the most popular, with 54 percent of homebuyers utilizing them, followed by: 51 percent for Realtor.com; 47 percent for real estate agent websites; 39 percent for company sites; 27 percent for syndication sites; and, in a definite sign of the times, 13 percent for mobile/tablet apps and 12 percent for mobile/tablet websites.

Agents and the Internet in the Profile of Home Buyers and Sellers

So, where does all this leave agents? Thankfully, as widely-used a tool as the Internet is, it does not seem to have reduced the need for real estate agents among homebuyers. Though 90 percent used the Internet, 87 percent used a real estate agent, and though 42 percent learned of their property through the Web, 34 percent learned from an agent. And, most important of all, 91 percent of buyers who used the Internet ended up purchasing through an agent.

Jack Haymes, an agent with Register Real Estate Advisors, said that he uses the Internet to complement his focus on serving his clients.

“I listen to what they say and try to meet their desires,” he explained. “I do this with information from the Internet, so they feel more comfortable.”

At the end of the day, though, Haymes said the Internet is a major plus to his real estate business, and he does not see it as a threat; to demonstrate his point, he said an old Realtor would search for properties using a car, whereas a new Realtor uses a keyboard.

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