Chicago-based eXp agent Sean Cochran‘s real estate parody of “Friends in Low Places” garnered more than 575,000 views in one month.
Chicago-based eXp agent Sean Cochran‘s real estate parody of “Friends in Low Places” garnered more than 575,000 views in one month.
Prime time shows throw renovating in the spotlight, but could your relationship handle the heat? Home renos and building budgets put more on thin ice than cheating, new research shows.
The post Home renos and building budgets put Aussie couples on thin ice appeared first on realestate.com.au.
TPI Cloud Hosting alleges Keller Williams agreed to pay $1.8 million to develop a consumer-facing app, but never paid, then used the technology to build its app in-house.
Residents will enjoy indoor and outdoor living at a new apartment complex at Epping, which is also zoned for some of the State’s top performing schools.
The post Apartments in popular school zone near completion appeared first on realestate.com.au.
Jaime Hensley off American Real Estate ERA Powered, Charis Moreno of NextHome and Greg Fox of Better Homes and Gardens Real Estate Alliance touted the benefits of joining big franchises at ICLV.
Need advice on interviewing for your team? Verl Workman says, try to figure out if the candidate subscribes to your core values. “If they don’t give you the right answers for those, then it’s probably not a great fit,” he said onstage at Inman Connect Las Vegas.
From Zillow to Redfin and beyond, watch Inman announce the winners of the 2019 Innovator Awards in Las Vegas.
Former BRW rich-lister James Rice has sold his spectacular Brisbane skyhome to an overseas buyer for more than $6m.
The post Brisbane skyhome with killer bath tub views sells for $6m plus appeared first on realestate.com.au.
Competition for hiring top agents is intense, especially when said agents are getting propositioned with signing bonuses among other perks. Hear tried-and-true secrets for recruiting the top producers to your indie in this Inman Connect Las Vegas discussion.
A pair of lawsuits could upend how compensation works, but NAR believes the cases “are wrong on the facts, wrong on the economics and wrong on the law.”