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Blog · August 15, 2018

Property And Dangers Of A Digital Footprint

Property and dangers of a digital footprint

Before the Internet, properties were primarily marketed via newspaper advertisements, signs and in agents’ windows. These mediums had a remarkable and often overlooked advantage over modern forms of advertising – they left no easily traceable marketing or sales history (a digital footprint).

There is an old saying ‘nothing is as useless as yesterday’s newspapers’. In the newspaper age, an owner could dip their toe in to test the waters. If they didn’t like the result, they would take the property off the market or reduce the price. Without a digital footprint, there was very little long-term harm to the value of the property. The marketplace quickly forgot.

Conversely, the Internet remembers everything and forgets nothing.

Properties advertised in Australia appear largely on two majors: realestate.com.au and domain.com.au. CoreLogic, the parent company of RP Data and the largest supplier of property information in Australia, receives routine advertising and known property information from both sites, resulting in an easily accessible pool of information.

Why should this be a concern for property owners?

Before the Internet, the only indication a property had been on the market for an extended period was a faded card in a real estate window or a crooked, worn sign in the front yard. Once removed, these two signals faded quickly from the marketplace’s collective memory. An owner could have another attempted in twelve months and few would remember the previous attempt.

Now – the Internet creates a digital footprint, a record of a property’s advertising and pricing history for all to see.

A digital footprint intensifies the danger posed by an extended marketing period.

Significant long-term damage occurs to the property’s recorded history and eventual selling price if it is launched onto the main real estate portals at an inflated price and does not sell. As a rule, the price of a property drops if it is viewed more but not purchased.

One click on realestate.com.au will lead a user to the number of page visits, giving a buyer an early idea of a property’s time on market and desirability.

Has it sold in the past and for how much? Did the property get passed in at auction? Why hasn’t it sold? Is there a reason why so many people looked at this property and not bought it? Why has it been withdrawn from sale? The answers to these questions always increase a buyer’s negotiating power.

Previous Post: « Knowledge, Power and Real Estate Advertising
Next Post: The Dangers In Establishing A Market Price »

Blog · November 22, 2018

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Blog · October 25, 2018

The Deceptiveness of Public Auction

Public auction is the most deceptive method used to sell property in Australia. Right now the projects are showing up in reverse chronological order – the most recently published are at the top. But since this is a portfolio, you might want to put your most impressive projects at the top, …

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Blog · September 15, 2018

The Dangers In Establishing A Market Price

Establishing a realistic market price can be fraught with danger. The intentionally inflated price quoted by an agent is the most common. It is the improbable lie or the lie by omission. Other dangers that are not so obvious include well-meaning neighbours and friends, and the …

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Blog · August 15, 2018

Property And Dangers Of A Digital Footprint

Property and dangers of a digital footprint Before the Internet, properties were primarily marketed via newspaper advertisements, signs and in agents' windows. These mediums had a remarkable and often overlooked advantage over modern forms of advertising - they left no easily traceable marketing …

Continue Reading

Blog · June 15, 2018

Knowledge, Power and Real Estate Advertising

Knowledge, power and real estate advertising A dangerous trend has emerged in real estate advertising, with both privacy and price implications. Too much personal information is being revealed during marketing campaigns. Circumstances such as divorce or illness are often featured in …

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Blog · March 21, 2018

The ‘Heart Buyer’ and Rejecting Early Offers

The location is ideal, it has the right number of bedrooms and living spaces, the yard is great - it feels like the perfect home. Occasionally, a buyer matches a property to perfection. This buyer is going to live in the property. It will become their home. There is an instant and strong …

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