Sunday, March 08, 2009

The Death of Newspaper House Ads? You Betcha!


("Let's see, how many of these house ads match our price range, and bathroom requirements, and are in our kid's school district, have lots of inside pictures of the house, and can be ready without a magnifying glass?") ANSWER: NONE
A common point of discussion at my office sales meetings over the past couple years is the usefulness of local newspaper ads for our property listings and open house announcements.

The debate is this: some agents feel that the local newspaper ads are absolutely necessary to maintain a presence in the local real estate market and the consumers' minds. The managing broker (our boss) and the real estate company (Baird & Warner) are making decisions that are shifting our advertising resources AWAY from print newspapers and INTO the internet.

The reality is indisputable; most buyers start their home search on the internet. Most buyers have already done much research into a home search ONLINE before they set foot in an open house, let alone contact a real estate agent. And the demise of the traditional newspaper is either on the horizon for some papers, or already here for others. And for those that are still functioning, their size and volume of advertising is dramatically down. Our local weekly paper, published by the Pioneer Press, has shrunk to a mere shadow of its former self. Indeed, the Pioneer Press organization has recently SHUT DOWN several of its northwestern community editions! The Chicago Tribune, the historic daily paper, is also unrecognizable to me any more. The world has shifted to online news and advertising. Period.

So, why is this important in the grand scheme of things? Because most sellers of homes still want to see their property in a print ad in a newspaper; they think it makes a difference in finding a buyer. The print ads are very costly, and in fact provide very little results to the seller or his listing agent/broker. Put that same property into the MLS with a full service brokerage, and that property will find its way into dozens of websites that are searched daily by home seekers. If that home seeker sees an online ad for a home that provides the listing agent's contact information, the home seller has just had the best possible exposure - an interested buyer speaking directly with the listing agent.

It's time to let go of the notion that newspaper ads sell homes and tape-playing Walkman's are the best way to take your favorite music with you.

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