eugene oregon real estate blog

Technology, trends, and editorials.

Trulia launches Street View, Eugene not cool enough?

Filed under: Marketing Online, Real Estate Photography, Tools — luke at 7:03 am on Friday, April 11, 2008

So Trulia has incorporated Google maps’ Street view into their listings. Here’s an example from a listing in Portland. It’s not exactly a tour of the home. In fact, you can hardly see the home from the street, but it does give you an opportunity to tour the neighborhood without driving to it.

I’m sure that Trulia would like to have a street view for Eugene as well. Unfortunately Google has focused almost all of its Oregon-based Street View photography efforts on Portland, as you can see from this map. If that changes, and Eugene gets Street View images, you will be the first to know!

Popularity: 57% [?]

Trackback - Trulia’s Jamie Glenn

Filed under: Marketing Online — luke at 7:11 am on Wednesday, August 8, 2007

Agents and sellers that are new to online resources…this is a helpful video. Skip to the 20 min mark, the rest is conference fluff.

Popularity: 23% [?]

(Mini) tech vendor in Fall Creek

Filed under: Agents, Marketing Online, Tools — luke at 11:51 pm on Friday, January 26, 2007

I like to see technology companies in Oregon thrive, so here’s a little plug for a company in Fall Creek Oregon called Insite Virtual Tours

Here’s what they did for the Campbell House. Obviously the Cambpell House isn’t for sale, so not entirely focused on the buying and selling homes, but that’s ok. They claim to limit the fish-eye factor, something that the market can definitely use, although I noticed a little fish-eye business going on. It’s probably the nature of 360′ views to give you a little of that no matter how flat the lens.

$100-200 to “merchandise” a home worth $300k or more seems like a no-brainer. Provided the marketing costs don’t add up too quickly! A good enough reason to put together a Marketing Plan.

Popularity: 24% [?]

New products from Trulia

Filed under: Marketing Online, Statistics, Tools — luke at 9:51 pm on Tuesday, January 9, 2007

Megan over at Trulia alerted me today to two new products they’ve released - Local Heatmaps, just what it describes, and Trulia Trends, a PDF showing the latest pricing trends for MLS listings, year-over-year as of Jan 07.

The new heatmap charts are fantastic and definitely deserve to be blogrolled. I especially like that for the week ending Jan 3rd, Lane County is the most popular location for home searches on Trulia.

As I’ve mentioned before, I especially like the neighborhood growth data by week. This can give buyers or sellers useful information. Especially if a neighborhood appreciates at double-digit rates for longer than 6-9 months, and continues that trend with the latest weekly data. Or in the case of buyers, if the latest weekly data shows a significant decline in price.

Popularity: 14% [?]

Photos, stretching, and dating

Filed under: Agents, Marketing Online — luke at 8:42 am on Tuesday, January 9, 2007

Reba Haas with Rain City Guide started an interesting thread It started with a post about photos and ends with a discussion about whether or not the public can trust such photos.

Home sellers would not fault an agent for removing a dumpster from a photo or using a little extra light to give the place more panache. What’s interesting about this debate though is that it’s happening at all, and in a public forum.

I feel compelled to point out that there are MUCH better products out there than paint, if you plan to edit or resize photos (ethically). Paint is especially bad at pixelating a photo after resizing it. I recommend IrfanView instead. It’s a solid shareware applications that’s nearly as good as photoshop, but without all the complex layers and tools.

True, this post is not really about dating. But the trackback is. It’s about putting your best foot forward (like you would on a date) using best practices and better tools. Also, cutting out the old fisheye pictures, or limiting their use. Do buyers really like those shots? I personally can’t stand them. Zillow and the Web2.0 real estate startups are proof that buyers want the best information they can get, not more fluff in the form of overworked camera angles.

Popularity: 33% [?]

Here’s the vflyer - That’s not $50, that’s $50 trillion. We’ll call this sample an “overlay”

Filed under: Marketing Online, Tools — luke at 11:13 pm on Wednesday, December 20, 2006
My little cabin
Main Photo
Somewhere on the eastern seaboard.
Features
Bedrooms: 14
Bathrooms: 12
Parking: 3
Year Built: 1901
Garage Size: 1
Pricing
Asking Price: $50.23
Flexibility: Firm
Attributes
Appliances
Range/Oven
Full Refrigerator
Sink Disposal
Microwave
Trash Compactor
Interior Amenities
Fireplace
Kitchen Island
Exterior Amenities
Patio
Grass Lawn
Tool Shed

Popularity: 31% [?]

vFlyer - post your home to multiple sites at once, for free

Filed under: Marketing Online, Tools — luke at 7:32 pm on Monday, December 18, 2006

vFlyer offers a sample.

This service allows agents and sellers to upload a classified ad, distribute it, and export to HTML or PDF to post on a website. The first step involves basic information any free service would request. For some reason they don’t require last name (?). They ask that you create an account name hosted by their server at vflyer.com. Such as mybiz.vflyer.com. The form detects in real-time if an account with that name has already been created.

After submitting the form they request that you check your email for a confirmation code. Probably to prevent spam. My gmail account didn’t consider it spam, which was helpful.

Next up you’re directed to a “create form” page in. They give your four steps, and they are indeed easy. Select a category for the classified ad, then fill in all the text forms in step two. You can “add attributes” by filling in a simple text field and checking that option.

Then it’s time to choose a template from 14. Oddly, the preview for each templates wasn’t working for me. Sometimes it did, but there was a long delay.

Once you’ve completed all the information, added attributes, uploaded pictures or created a gallery…it’s time to post. vFlyer lets you post to Oodle, Propsmart, Edgeio, Trulia, Googlebase, Vast, and Others. Others means that you want to add your flyer to all upcoming partners. This could be worded a little better - “Other” sounds as if you can select from a long list of second-tier online classified sites. Not sure why craigslist isn’t here, although I imagine it’s because craigslist likes to be different..

Next post will feature a sample and the final impression!

Popularity: 7% [?]

$1.7 million Eugene home on Youtube.com

Filed under: Homes, Marketing Online — luke at 10:13 pm on Thursday, October 26, 2006

It’s very difficult to find videos about Eugene homes on youtube.com. The site is not designed for niche markets. Sounds like an opportunity! See the video below, how simple it is. The granularity of youtube.com is annoying, but the presentation is far better than a static image and some text.

What exactly is home sales merchandising? It’s the same as any other sort of merchandising, and it’s getting far better. With Zillow’s latest functionality, agents and sellers may someday offer a video walk-through, important documents, neighborhood history and statistics, etc. All in one place.

Popularity: 16% [?]