The House Nextdoor - Where Real Estate and Real Life Meet

We Put Popular Real Estate Advice On Trial

Anthony Harris & Barbara Giglio Season 2 Episode 10

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0:00 | 33:34

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Open houses, staging, new construction, and Zillow have all become lightning-rod topics, and we’re done pretending the answers are simple. Recording from a comedy club, we bring the same energy we see in the market: a little chaotic, occasionally funny, and very real about what actually moves a home and what just creates noise.

We go head-to-head on the claim that open houses don’t sell homes. One of us pushes back hard, with real examples of buyers who walk in “just to look” and end up writing an offer. From there we get honest about home staging: why great staging can raise perceived value and help a buyer feel the lifestyle, and why virtual staging often backfires by warping scale, hiding the true floor plan, and making a listing feel fake.

Then we tackle new construction versus older homes, including build quality, pre-COVID versus post-COVID materials, and why a solid outdated house can be a better long-term play than a shiny box with shortcuts. We also unpack how Zillow and other home search apps can make buyers worse at buying: inaccurate data, Zestimate confusion, decision fatigue, and the “click tour” moment that drops you into a lead funnel buyers don’t see coming.

We close with a rapid-fire pricing game: strategic pricing versus sabotage pricing, and what we watch for on day one. If any of these topics have ever stressed you out, hit play, then subscribe, share with a friend who’s house hunting, and leave a review. Which hot take do you agree with, and which one do you want to fight us on?

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Comedy Club Cold Open

SPEAKER_00

Welcome back to the house next door.

SPEAKER_01

Where real estate meets reality.

SPEAKER_00

I'm Anthony Harris.

SPEAKER_01

And I'm Barbara Julio. And here we are in our studio again. And we're okay, we're in a comedy club, so let's talk about that.

SPEAKER_00

So are we just going to keep doing jokes every episode? Is that a new thing? Because we're in a comedy club. And they have to be cheesy.

SPEAKER_01

Yeah, I guess so. I don't think the comedians who come here are cheesy. No, but we are. No, we are. But I feel like it's an homage to them letting us use their space because I don't think there's any other realtors that are doing a podcast. So it's all comedians. So we have to give like a little shout out to the comedians with cheesy shows.

SPEAKER_00

Or they'll just roll their eyes in the other way.

SPEAKER_01

Yeah, okay. Yeah.

SPEAKER_00

So are you ready?

SPEAKER_01

Yeah, I'm ready. This is our stand-up moment, folks. Hang tight. There we go. Me, me, me, me, me, me, me, me, me.

SPEAKER_00

These poor people in their car. Why did the buyer bring a flashlight to the showing?

SPEAKER_01

Um, you actually told me the answer and I forgot.

SPEAKER_00

Because in this market, they need to look for hidden value. Uh uh. That's good.

SPEAKER_01

That is so good. So yeah, but this is I'm really excited to be in here. It's called the Creek in the Cave. If anybody I've been here before.

SPEAKER_00

I haven't. We need to come to a comedy show.

SPEAKER_01

I have been here before. My friends um who are in the comedy, like they go to all the things and they know all the comedians. I don't even know. And and like I guess his name, it's Theo Vaughn. He's pretty like famous. Did I say that right? Theo Vaughn. Yeah. Um, so he just dropped in, you know, while somebody else was doing a set that I can't remember their name. But um and everybody flipped out. Everyone was like, oh my gosh, oh my god. I'm like, what? What's happening? I have no idea. I'm like, and I I he was a big name and I just didn't know who he was. And um, so he was funny. He was so funny. I was like, oh, that's really cool. But it was I didn't fully appreciate it as much as the people around me because I just didn't know.

SPEAKER_02

Yeah.

SPEAKER_01

Um, and then I went home and I told my son, I said, I think his name was Theo Vani's mom. So, like, how did you not know who that was? And I'm like, Because I only watch Bravo and only listen to people. So there is my pop culture.

SPEAKER_00

Million dollar listing.

SPEAKER_01

Had like one of the housewives gone up on that stage, I would have been like, oh, oh my god, oh my gosh. And then everybody else would have been like, Oh, who's that?

SPEAKER_00

And you'd be like, it's it's whoever. I was trying to come up with one of their names. I don't know. Myra, Myra, is that the one on the traders from Dubai?

SPEAKER_01

But that's not really right reality TV. I'm talking the Housewives franchise, Summer House, um, uh The Valley, um Ladies of London, The New Rain. Um, let's see what else do we have. Um, Southern Charm. Oh. So yeah. I'm in it.

SPEAKER_00

You told me I need to watch Southern Charm.

SPEAKER_01

No, you need to watch The Ladies of London, the New Rain. Okay. And I I like I am, I follow them. Like, I follow the gossip on social media. Like I'm a junkie for reality. For reality TV. It's the it's how I unwind. It's like, so I I read, and you know what the books I read, I try to read um, you know, kind of informative books, and then I'll have like a little fun, cozy romance novel that I read. So I try to like balance being smart with just rotting my brain out. And so Bravo is like me rotting my brain out. Like I have a hard day, I'll pour a glass of wine, and I'm like, oh, somehow this drama is soothing to me.

SPEAKER_00

Them screaming at each other and throwing their champagne just brings you joy. It's bomb to my soul. Because you can say it could be worse.

SPEAKER_01

It could be worse.

SPEAKER_00

And my husband, he'll be like, living in a multimillion dollar mansion.

SPEAKER_01

I know he's like, how can you even watch this? It makes my skin crawl. It's so irritating. And I'm like, oh, it's like so relaxing.

unknown

It's so relaxed.

SPEAKER_00

So here's the problem.

SPEAKER_01

But I think it makes me more prone to fight with him, like about drama stuff, because sometimes I'm like, ooh, I want a little drama. Well, you looked at me weird. You still love your ex-wife, right?

SPEAKER_00

Dun dun dun dun dun dun. Oh, so I've I've attempted to learn the piano.

SPEAKER_01

Right now? Like you're learning now?

SPEAKER_00

Well, last week I last week I was at my friend's house and they have a little piano. Oh, okay. And so there's this app that you can get, and it um it gives you like where you play with it, and it'll tell you if you're right or wrong on the notes. So I can go learn dun dun dun dun.

SPEAKER_01

So are you honestly? I know we gotta get to our episode, but I need to know this. Are you gonna learn how to play the piano? I think you should.

SPEAKER_00

We'll find out. Stay tuned. Do you know what I want to learn how to play? Beethoven. No, he's dead.

SPEAKER_01

No, I want to learn how to play the Renaissance uh recorder.

SPEAKER_00

Oh like it's a real thing.

SPEAKER_01

I want to sit on my patio.

SPEAKER_00

You're poor neighbors that are 10 acres away.

SPEAKER_01

I live on five acres, and we've got all the deer and turkey. You would scare them away. They'd commit suicide. Oh, and I'm gonna sit there with my Renaissance recorder and be like, I just like be in that moment. I think that's cool. And then supportive.

SPEAKER_00

Where are you gonna find this recorder?

SPEAKER_01

You can get them on my Amazon.

SPEAKER_00

Oh, well, you get your your your corn on Amazon.

SPEAKER_01

Yeah, my husband is not supportive of this. He's like, great.

SPEAKER_00

When he gets mad at you, you just play it.

SPEAKER_01

Okay, let's get to our episode, shall we?

SPEAKER_00

I guess.

Real Estate Hot Takes Setup

SPEAKER_01

You know, although I think the Renaissance recorder is more fun. Um, okay, this is a good episode because uh it's kind of about we're making some bold statements and then we're gonna talk about whether or not you know, like this. Okay, so real estate hot takes. Agree with me or fight me on this.

SPEAKER_00

Fight. I always say violence is the answer.

SPEAKER_01

He's so violent, our young Anthony. That's why I can be my worst self with you.

SPEAKER_00

We embrace it.

SPEAKER_01

So I'm gonna just kind of drop some bold statements. We may or may not agree with them, and our listeners may or may not agree with them, but let's just talk about them. Yeah. And so, okay, good. There are things that yeah, this is our bravo. This is our bravo episode. Okay.

Do Open Houses Really Work

SPEAKER_01

First hot take open houses don't sell homes, they just generate leads for agents. Okay.

SPEAKER_00

I disagree.

SPEAKER_01

You disagree? Tell me why.

SPEAKER_00

I don't bite me on this. I will. Okay. I don't love them. First of all.

SPEAKER_01

Well, you didn't have to say it that strongly.

SPEAKER_00

You said bold statements.

SPEAKER_01

This is true. This is true.

SPEAKER_00

But I think that the more people that come through your house, the more likely of them talking about it, uh taking pictures of it, yeah, sharing it, that might hit that end buyer.

unknown

Okay.

SPEAKER_01

So just more eyes on it.

SPEAKER_00

I don't think it really sells the house itself, but it gets publicity for the house.

SPEAKER_01

Yeah. So don't you think that serious agents or serious buyers already have agents and they're just gonna come see it with their agent?

SPEAKER_00

Yes. But I think it's those homes that they don't realize that they'll like.

SPEAKER_01

Yeah.

SPEAKER_00

So yeah. You know how many people are bored on a Sunday and go on Zillow and figure out what open houses are and just go to them?

SPEAKER_01

Absolutely.

SPEAKER_00

Yep.

SPEAKER_01

So I'm acting like I don't like open houses, but they sell houses. They absolutely sell houses. It's sold. Um, most of my listings have sold from an open house. And in fact, my last listing that uh just closed was sold from the open house. And the buyers were coming through. It was a Sunday, they didn't want to bother their agent, and um they weren't even really ready to buy. They were they knew they were gonna buy and they were gonna buy in a couple of months, but they were like, let's just go see. They fell in love, they figured out that they didn't need to buy to they didn't need to sell to buy, and they put an offer in. And had I not had that open house for that day, they would not have come out.

SPEAKER_00

This is a little selfish of me, but I I want to be the one that sells the house, like because I can talk a whole lot better about my listing than a buyer's agent.

SPEAKER_01

Yeah, we're selling the listing because that is true. When you have somebody host your own open house for you, like you're the listing agent, but you have you know agents that'll say, Hey, I'll host the open house for you, I'll give you feedback, I'll really try to sell the house for you. What they're really doing is trying to generate leads, they're trying to get other people in the neighborhood who may want to list their house. Unrepresented buyers who may not want to buy this house but will want to buy another house. Or buy that house. So, or maybe buy that house, but they're not selling the house as hard as you're gonna sell it. You're standing in there and you're you work for you, you work for your sellers.

SPEAKER_00

And I like to be able to know the feedback, especially the first day on market, is I'm getting to hear from real buyers what their thoughts are.

SPEAKER_01

Absolutely. And you can see it on their faces too, how they're reacting like to the smells and to the rooms and all that. So I think I don't love them. I don't love them because sometimes you get there and you know nobody shows up. But you get more.

SPEAKER_00

I still love the one that we did together. Yeah, that was fun.

SPEAKER_01

Nobody showed up, but we had so much fun.

SPEAKER_00

It was the derby, it was the horse derby.

SPEAKER_01

It was like this weekend, it's the anniversary of the open house we did together.

SPEAKER_00

And the dog ran out the front door.

SPEAKER_01

That is the last open house we did together, period.

SPEAKER_00

Um, and we had champagne.

SPEAKER_01

We had champagne and we were on camera. My client my client was watching us the whole time.

SPEAKER_00

Comedy. Um we're comedians. Bravo! The camera follows us to go.

SPEAKER_01

Yeah, that was our reality show. Kate Katie watching us on her camera.

SPEAKER_00

Katie's a good Bravo name.

SPEAKER_01

She is. So, um, so I do I do feel like they are very effective. I don't love them. I do like them more now that we're not really allowed to put open house signs out because I hate it. He hated that.

SPEAKER_00

She it made her whole life.

SPEAKER_01

Oh, I know, because I hate signs. I put them in, I'm all sweaty, I'm all upset.

SPEAKER_00

You're running late to the house. There's someone waiting at the front door as you jingle your keys.

SPEAKER_01

And when you're trying to put signs in the ground when it's 105 degrees and it hasn't rained in 48 million years.

SPEAKER_00

And you're taking your sledgehammer.

SPEAKER_01

Yes, no. So I was really, really happy when that whole like and people still put signs out, and it's no big deal, but I lean hard into it. I tell my sellers, I'm like, no, it's illegal, and we're gonna follow the rules. Yeah, and ethical realtors truthfully, it has not affected my traffic at all because everybody finds it on online. So I've had wonderful open houses without having to put those horrible signs up. And so, do you think there's a difference in a luxury home open house versus having them for entry-level homes?

SPEAKER_00

100%.

SPEAKER_01

So I don't always do them for my luxury homes. Yeah. Because those people are gonna be It's people who want to see a luxury home.

SPEAKER_00

Yeah.

SPEAKER_01

And usually luxury home buyers are not, you know, they have their agent, they're not really doing it on a whim. Um, it's a more intentional buyer.

SPEAKER_00

Um one of my best um open houses was at a luxury home, though.

SPEAKER_01

Yeah, I remember you said that.

SPEAKER_00

And I felt like most of them were qualified. Um, there were a few that were probably not qualified, but most of them were, and it was such a good experience.

SPEAKER_01

Well, that's good.

SPEAKER_00

I it's c not common.

SPEAKER_01

It's not com I had one for my luxury listing in um in Realm Rock, and which it sounds funny. Oh, there's a luxury property in Realm Rock, but there is. There is, yeah. And um it was a lot of neighbors, it was a lot of people wanting to just see the house. Oh, I love this house. Oh, it's not my budget, it's not my budget. I think we got one person who is actually qualified to buy the house. So that it it's it just depends. That's something you have to gauge.

SPEAKER_00

And it depends on market, too.

SPEAKER_01

Yeah, it's something you have to gauge, yeah. You have to gauge, but entry-level home all day long because these are the people who are like, well, maybe we can afford a house. The masses. Oh my gosh, look at you being an elitist. Oh, it's the others who are going through the homes.

SPEAKER_00

No, I did not.

SPEAKER_01

Well, I was gonna say it's for people who might be on the fence about if they can afford a home or not, and then they see, and then they go, Well, let's talk to a realtor. And oh, hey, look, we can do afford it. But they weren't ready to call a realtor to look at a house yet. So it's a great opportunity of the masses. Okay, second hot take, Anthony.

Staging Wins Virtual Staging Fails

SPEAKER_01

Staging. Okay, and we have strong opinions about staging. Staging is overrated. Just use virtual staging.

SPEAKER_00

Yes, uh, all day long. No, just kidding. I was gonna start a fight.

SPEAKER_01

Oh, yeah, let's go.

SPEAKER_00

Um, staging it is important, I think, in all price points. And I think sellers, if you want to maximize your dollars, staging is the way to do it. Staging and paint.

SPEAKER_01

Yeah, staging and painting. Does wonders and yeah, because people need to visualize what the home looks like. So when people we're selling space and we're selling a lifestyle. So when people that's why you don't want your personal effects in the house too much, like pictures, because people will walk in and then immediately they'll feel like they're in somebody else's house. But you put everything very generic and you try to stage. When we stage, we have professionals come in, interior designers who know how to create more space and make it so when a buyer comes in, they have an immediate emotional connection to the house and they can visualize their life there and not like, oh, there's no room for the TV. That's why the clo that's why the couch is blocking the fireplace and the TV's on that. Well, no, no, no, no, no, no, no. One of our listings, yeah. No, no, no, we don't want to highlight that. So you highlight these, you know, you you set up conversational spaces, warm, cozy spaces, and make sure there's lots of room and it looks like a show home. And that's you want people to come in and go, oh, and then that way they don't notice some of the other things. Like maybe it needs pain.

SPEAKER_00

Well, and that's that's why I tell my contractor, like my flippers, yeah, is when you put staging, it covers up the imperfections. Whenever you go into a house that was just renovated, people expect 100% everything's gonna be right.

SPEAKER_01

Yeah, that's true. So and it and it staging creates that wonderful, like we said, emotional connection. Now, virtual staging, I have a real problem with virtual staging.

SPEAKER_00

Because it all looks the same. I can get seated about that. And the freaking chairs are taller than the lamp. Well, it's taller than the chairs.

SPEAKER_01

It is so deceiving, and I can't see what the room looks like because I'm looking at these stupid graphics of furniture that doesn't even go in the house and it's like a Barbie house or something. And I just I just want to see what the room looks like. I'm like, okay, if you were too cheap to get real staging, then just don't get any staging and let me see what this floor plan actually looks like.

SPEAKER_00

One of my listenings has virtual staging.

SPEAKER_01

Well, you need to stop that, Anthony. Take that down today.

SPEAKER_00

Something that I did was virtual staging, then the next picture is not staged.

SPEAKER_01

Well, I hate that no, I hate it it's so distracting because then I'm like, oh, this this is this looks like a Barbie Malibu house. And like one of the historic houses I was looking at. Uh-huh. Well, it's historic and it has like. No, that's real staging. They just have had it on the market so long that furniture has moved in and out of that one. But it's ancient and it's antique now. Yeah, they had all of this like very modern furniture in the 1907 dilapidated house in Smithville that when you walked in, you were like, oh no. And the staging, the virtual staging was very distracting and made it look a lot better than it was. So I find it to be very, very distracting.

SPEAKER_00

That's the one you sent me.

SPEAKER_01

Yes. Ian you've been in that house, so you know it doesn't look like that. Yeah. So in some ways, it can also be very deceiving, I think. So I think we need to get rid of all virtual stages. You do it. And uh there are certain homes we shouldn't stage, right? I mean, we do agree on that. Yeah.

SPEAKER_00

So for me, it's it's a house where like you're not gonna get the return from it, or well, i it's such a hard house.

SPEAKER_01

Like, you know, you uh one in particular. They wanted me to stage, and I'm like, no, I'm not staging this. The house had been lived hard in for 20 years. It was very, very large, it's extremely dated, and they weren't willing to do anything at all. So and I pay for staging for my clients. So that's something that I pick up. That's part of my stage that's part of my life. Well, all the time.

SPEAKER_00

Well, it depends now.

SPEAKER_01

Well, maybe I don't know. The jury's still, but um, I wasn't willing to put an investment of about you know four thousand dollars if they weren't willing to put an investment.

SPEAKER_02

So the return, yeah.

SPEAKER_01

So the return wasn't there, and I honestly think staging would have made it it would have highlighted it that it was even more of an awkward house to try to put furniture in and make cozy. Yeah, I could see that. So there are certain houses, yes, it took a long time. And then sometimes if it's a certain price point, like oh, really, you know, we're we're under three. I'm not gonna stage under three. I'm just gonna make sure it looks clean and yeah, sellers could, but a lot of times they don't have that room because they have to net what they need to net. So um, okay. This is our third hot take. So we're for staging, and we hate virtual staging.

SPEAKER_02

Okay.

SPEAKER_01

Build okay, here's our third hot take. New

New Builds Versus Older Homes

SPEAKER_01

homes are overrated. Give me a solid outdated house anytime. Cite me on this.

SPEAKER_00

I think we agree. Give me an outdated home. No.

SPEAKER_01

Oh, wait, no, that is what we're saying.

SPEAKER_00

Like, you want a new home?

SPEAKER_01

I don't agree with you.

SPEAKER_00

She doesn't even know what she likes and what she doesn't. She just wants drama.

SPEAKER_01

I just wanted some drama. Like, disagree with me. We agree with everything. Everything we agree on.

SPEAKER_00

Well, I want a new house now.

SPEAKER_01

Okay, now you want a new house. Oh, you have no style. You just want a big white box. I do.

SPEAKER_00

Three stories with steep stairs, please.

SPEAKER_01

So, yes, but I have I bought my last two houses before this one were new construction. And um the reason it was just one of them we got to build ourselves, and it was kind of semi-custom. And so that was such a fun process. So I do, I do think it, you know, once in your life it's nice to do that.

SPEAKER_00

Because that's more custom.

SPEAKER_01

Like whenever I think of new home, I think of a Lenar, a dear hor in a but I'm telling you, that was the most poorly constructed house out of all of the homes we've owned. And it was one of the most expensive.

SPEAKER_00

Crazy.

SPEAKER_01

And so, and it was built during COVID, so I'll give it I'll give it that.

SPEAKER_00

Don't give it that.

SPEAKER_01

But our Lenar house that that we had in um Cedar Park, like like back in 2005, was built better than this beautiful, very expensive custom home on an acre. Yeah, yeah. And so there is something to be said for that. I mean, when the wind blew, the house would creak. It shouldn't be creaking like that.

SPEAKER_00

Oh shoot, no.

SPEAKER_01

Oops. There's no defect. There's no defect. There's no defects, it just wasn't as built as nicely as it could have been. No, but no, it's for staple. Yeah. Well, and I didn't, and I actually called the builder about it, and they said, How come the house creaks so much when the wind blows? And he said, Oh no, it's supposed to do that.

SPEAKER_00

And I'm like, So you don't need to disclose anything.

SPEAKER_01

And I'm like, I'm not really sure it's supposed to do that, but okay. But yeah, there was a lot of things that we ended up having to repair on it. Um and we shouldn't have, it was a brand new home. Yeah, we shouldn't have. They put no GFCIs in, we had to put those all in. Uh, they forgot to put a vent in the casita roof. Oops. So we had to put that in. It was, it was just, it's nuts. And when I had my cabal house in Cabayo Ranch built by MI Homes, um, love that builder. And I almost went to work for MI Homes uh several years ago. When I just I have these moments in real estate, you know this, you have them too, where I'm quitting. I'm done. I'm getting out of jail. Or we go to other people I'm breaking out. Yeah, I'm like, that's it, I'm done. This is what I'm gonna do. And so I was interviewing with MI, I got the job, and I was about to cross over into the the other world and with a set hours and a steady paycheck.

SPEAKER_00

Um yeah, but you don't have set hours as a new home. No, you you that is really a lie.

SPEAKER_01

And so I was talking to the VP of sales in yeah, you do. I was talking to the VP of sales, and he said, I cannot build the house that you live in now for the same price at all. Not even like the same price. He's like, I can't build that house anymore. He said, I wish I could, but I just don't have access to those materials and all of that. He's like, we used to be able to build such a solid home. And not saying that they're not building a solid home now, but it's just not to that same caliber that the older homes were.

SPEAKER_02

Yeah.

SPEAKER_01

And so, really, when you're looking at some of these homes pre-COVID, they are built so solidly.

SPEAKER_00

Well, just go to a lumber store. Yeah, you can tell a big difference from between between before COVID and then after. Yeah, just quality of lumber.

SPEAKER_01

Quality of lumber, yeah. And so it's it's very interesting, but I would say new homes are great in many ways, and they have their place, and not all of them are built poorly at all. That that's not what we're saying, but there's something to be said for a nice old, you know, 1975 gal.

SPEAKER_00

I literally was gonna say 1975 or 70s.

SPEAKER_01

That's my that's me. I'm personifying the house to be me. Um but you know, there's something to be said for old construction, it's quality, and you can always come in and make those homes your own. But you know, the other uh side to that is getting construction, like getting. Contractors just to come out and do work on houses right now is really, really hard. And trying and it's expensive. So, you know, the good, the bad. But fight me on this. I think an older home is better.

SPEAKER_00

Yeah, I do too.

SPEAKER_01

Okay, fourth hot take.

Zillow Data Myths And Scroll Fatigue

SPEAKER_01

Zillow has made buyers worse at buying homes. Yes. Yeah, we both agree. Like we we haven't been able to fight each other on anything, but except when Barbara says lies. When I say lies. Except for, you know, maybe our listeners. Maybe our listeners are like, no, that's not true.

SPEAKER_00

True.

SPEAKER_01

And now we're gonna tell you why it is true.

SPEAKER_00

Yeah, because we're always right.

SPEAKER_01

So Zillow, in your opinion, how has Zillow made buyers worse?

SPEAKER_00

Um I think it gives them way too much information that might be inaccurate, might be accurate. Nobody knows. Nobody knows where the data comes from.

SPEAKER_01

Well, that's because we're a non-disclosure state.

SPEAKER_00

Yeah. Well, but also like the flood zones, the schools, the like they have all those date all those data points or old pictures.

SPEAKER_01

This is true.

SPEAKER_00

And as realtors, we have no control over that. As a listing agent.

SPEAKER_01

We don't. We do not. Yeah.

SPEAKER_00

And what are we supposed to do if it has like one of my clients keeps telling me Zillow has the wrong number of bedrooms?

SPEAKER_01

Good luck trying to get anybody on the phone to answer your question. And you're you are, as a list agent, you are a prisoner to what Zillow does with your listing. Whether they choose to show it, because that's a whole thing. If they get wind that you put the house on private exclusive or you come you put it some on some avenue coming soon, they will not put your house on Zillow. And then that's almost like it's a death nail to you know, visibility. So many people use Zillow. And so we have such little control as listing agents. And really it sellers should know that that they are a huge monopoly that are trying to control what homes are seeing and how you see them and how you interact interact with them.

SPEAKER_00

Yeah. And they have Zillow showcase that will show that property over any other property. And that's just a agent paid for it.

SPEAKER_01

Yeah, the agent paid for it.

SPEAKER_00

So they're forcing you to look at what you're looking at. Right. We're going off in a tangent.

SPEAKER_01

No, but that but that's what makes them worse buyers. Is because what they're seeing is very controlled by a corporation. And so they're missing other homes by just focusing on that search engine and that avenue. And and also, yeah, certain homes are getting showcased and put in front of them just because they paid money. They paid $650. Yeah. Or they send them leads. Exactly. And so I think that's definitely affects the variety, the true inventory. And then you're right, since uh Texas is a non-disclosure state, we don't disclose when a house closes what it sold for. Other states do, so then Zillow will be a little bit more accurate there. But it's just a guest, it's a zestiment, a guesstimate. And the zestament is never really in the range. And and I get I get people who will send me Zillow comps, like so I'll get a seller who will who will say, Oh, I'm sending you comps. And I'm like, Oh, really? Okay, so why'd you hire me? But okay, send me your comps, this will be great. And then they send me Zillow comps, and I'm like, okay, first of all, that isn't even in the same school district. That is on a golf course. You you are not on a golf course and you don't have a pool. Anyway, I type in.

SPEAKER_00

And they actually and they actually gave 50,000 in closing concessions.

SPEAKER_01

Right, that you didn't see, and those aren't what they close. Yeah, so anyway.

SPEAKER_00

Um so Zillow makes buyers worse.

SPEAKER_01

They do. It makes it worse because they don't.

SPEAKER_00

I think it goes with other online platforms too, not just Zillow, but there's and yeah.

SPEAKER_01

And then

Click Tour Lead Funnel Explained

SPEAKER_01

you also have like you decision fatigue because you're sitting there and you're it's like dating, left or right. You're looking at all these houses and you're looking at all these areas, and you start searching on the map. Oh, what's over here? Oh, what's over here? And then it's like Little Red Riding Hood. Yeah, you suddenly you're looking, you you were in Austin, and now you're in Brenham. Yeah. And you're like, I I want to go look at this house in Brenham. And then you're in Lockhart. And you're in Lockhart, and you're like, but I have to be at work in Austin, and it's only a two and a half hour time. I think that's perfect.

SPEAKER_00

And I gotta be in the office eight days out of the week.

SPEAKER_01

And so by the end of a Zillow scrolling session, people are completely overwhelmed on what they can afford, where they should live, what's in their price range, what's close to work. And you just get to where you just put it down and you go, ah, I can't even think about that right now. I can't think about it, I don't even know where to begin. And it's just because you got down this weird Zillow rabbit hole. It's sort of like when I plan vacations. Like I'll start planning the vacation and then I'm like, oh, oh, and then I'm like done. I'm like done. I can't, I can't do it anymore. You know, I'm like, I you know, we are going here and then we're going here and then we go here, and I'm like, I just need a travel agent. Can we just get a travel agent again? Can we bring back a travel agent where I can be like, I want to go somewhere fine and this is where I want to go, book it all for me. Get me a car and then tell me. Give me the itinerary and give me the itinerary. I miss a good old classic travel agent.

SPEAKER_00

And they're coming back.

SPEAKER_01

Well, I hope so. And Blockbuster needs to come back too. I'm just gonna say that.

SPEAKER_00

Going to get a Friday night movie with a box of candy that I don't need.

SPEAKER_01

Yes.

SPEAKER_00

And popcorn that was in the skillet thing.

SPEAKER_01

And then I'm gonna text my travel agent and say, plan me a vacation. I want old school life. But so I'm just saying we're going to House in the Perry. Yeah, so Zillow is part of that whole and then gosh forbid you hit tour.

SPEAKER_00

What happens when you hit tour?

SPEAKER_01

You when you hit tour, you go into a crazy call cycle. You're like, did you ever see that? So I did see this SNL um skip where it was who's that guy? Who's from Schlitzkrieg?

SPEAKER_00

Schlitzkrieg? Dan Levy?

SPEAKER_01

Yes. No, the sun. See, again, I don't know things.

SPEAKER_00

I don't remember.

SPEAKER_01

Anyway, um, he's with homest.com. He's the spokesperson for homest.com. Anyway, he's talking about like Zillow and it's like a porn, you know, like you're like all, oh, talk to me with your two bedrooms. Like, like it's just going on. And look at all this room to grow, you know, like it's just like tele reading it like it's some sort of sexy ad or something. And then it says, like, if you really, you know, get serious, you can hit click tour. And then on the other line, it's like, hi, this is Barb. Would you like to see a home? That one's not available, but I got another one for you. And he's just like, Thanks. And then she calls right back. So it's like the people And that's exactly that's exactly what happens. So as soon as you hit tour, you are connected with Barb on the other line from ABC who will sell you a home. And there's certain brokerages that are Zillow brokerages, and you and there's agents who pay for the Zillow leads. And the thing is, is that the the buyers think they're contacting the list agent or somebody affiliated with that listing, and really they're just getting routed to an agent who's a leads agent, who's gonna pick them up and you know, go meet them at this house. And then if they kind of go, oh, pay and I can say I didn't really mean to do that, they will hammer that person. So the rule is because I've worked for Zillow brokerages before, you have to contact them three times a day um for three weeks.

SPEAKER_00

Insane.

SPEAKER_01

And sometimes do double callbacks.

SPEAKER_00

Nope.

SPEAKER_01

So you will get hammered.

SPEAKER_00

That's not me.

SPEAKER_01

So if you really need to see the house, just reach out to a realtor who will help you.

SPEAKER_00

Yeah.

SPEAKER_01

Speaking of which, so you don't you don't go into this Zillow leads funnel where you're assigned to an agent who will hammer you. And then if you don't work with them, you go to a leads pool where um random, where their uh their inside sales will hammer you. And then when it does come time to actually buy a house, they're gonna push their lender on you to use because there's rewards and benefits for it. So really it's not in the best interest of the consumer. And yes, Zillow, come after me, fight me on it. Let's do it. I might have just lost my license for all this, but I said it. Our license is Yeah, I said it.

SPEAKER_00

You know, they don't rule us.

SPEAKER_01

They don't rule us, so they try. If but yeah, there it is. Yep. Okay, I said I said some hard stuff about Zillow. It's fine, but that's the real that is the reality of what it is when you call. And I I don't I don't think it's fair that the consumer doesn't know that.

SPEAKER_00

And I also don't think that it's fair that the consumer doesn't know that whenever they get connected with one of their brokerages, that Zillow gets a big chunk of the commission.

SPEAKER_02

Yes, true too.

SPEAKER_00

And so it's not fair to the realtor, to the seller, to the buyer, to anybody, in my opinion.

SPEAKER_01

Yeah, it's it's definitely a benefit to Zillow as a and I think the consumer is the one who's getting missed who's missing out on all of it.

SPEAKER_00

And I think there should be disclosures about it.

SPEAKER_01

I think there needs to be disclosures about it. It's it's a monopoly. Where are we? Yeah. Okay, so it's game time.

Pricing Strategy Or Pricing Sabotage

SPEAKER_01

Yay. Okay. Pricing it. Okay. Is this strategic pricing or is this sabotage pricing scenario? And we only have three of these. Okay. Okay. Listed high to leave room to negotiate later.

SPEAKER_00

You said listed high, sabotage.

SPEAKER_01

Sabotage, yes. There is this old school belief that happened back in the 1800s where you would list high to sell to negotiate. And that's not really true, 1800s, but I was like, No, you know your history. No, I was actually making a joke. And then heywenzillo.com. We haven't in this market, especially in Austin, listing high to negotiate down to the price you want. You won't get people in. It hasn't worked in 20 years. Nope. And it's not going to. And then the other one is price right at the market, day one, knowing that markets can shift. Yes.

SPEAKER_00

Strategic.

SPEAKER_01

That's strategic. Yeah.

SPEAKER_00

And being ready.

SPEAKER_01

Yes, sorry, I got a tickle in my throat. And being ready to pivot. Okay, and here's the other one. Start low and create value and potentially a bidding war.

SPEAKER_00

Strategy. Because it's only it only works in certain circum or situations.

SPEAKER_01

And it can blow up on you.

SPEAKER_00

It can sabotage you, but there's one agent in Austin that will list it like 30% under market value on all his listings. And they all have 10 offers on them.

SPEAKER_01

But do they get to the market value?

SPEAKER_00

I really don't think so.

SPEAKER_01

Yeah.

SPEAKER_00

So it is a very because whenever a buyer comes in, telling a buyer in this market that we need to go 100,000 over list price, it's tough. They're gonna look at me like I have a third eye.

SPEAKER_01

Right. And and sometimes it's a good strategy, but sometimes it's like, okay, you get all these offers in, all your 10 offers are coming in at your list price. That's not listing it low. That's telling you where the market value is. And you have to be prepared for that. And sometimes people aren't prepared for that. All right.

SPEAKER_00

Well, awesome.

Final Thoughts And Sign Off

SPEAKER_00

This is great. This wraps up our studio session. Our studio sessions, yes. And until not wrapped up, but our first session.

SPEAKER_01

Yes. So until next time, thanks for joining us.