Watch Joseph Rand outline some of the fundamental challenges facing large real estate companies and their cadres of independent contractor agents and his ideas for addressing them.
Watch Joseph Rand outline some of the fundamental challenges facing large real estate companies and their cadres of independent contractor agents and his ideas for addressing them.
Today’s luxury buyer is looking for new technology mixed in with some upgraded features. Here are five amenities high-end buyers will pay top dollar for.
During a panel discussion at ICLV, brokers share their advice on how to respond to cringe-worthy statements that question your value.
Multiple clients of customer relationship management tool Contactually are dismayed over the lack of support the company is providing existing clients since it was acquired by brokerage Compass in February.
Minneapolis and Oregon have led the way, but cities and states across the U.S. are increasingly looking at allowing multifamily units in response to supply shortages.
Zillow’s entry was in part a response to an existential threat to its business model, and much of the value it might derive is not from buying and selling houses at all, but rather by generating valuable seller leads. Which begs the question: How serious is Zillow about being an iBuyer?
The Quintin Group of Keller Williams merged with Resort Realty’s real estate sales division, expanding the New Jersey-based brokerage’s reach to North Carolina. The new enterprise will be known as Resort Realty powered by The Quintin Group at Keller Williams Realty Outer Banks.
Nick Bailey’s Denver homecoming positions him as RE/MAX’s chief customer officer, a newly created role, executives told Inman.
Central banks can see this coming, underway in several places. But they have another problem: very little room to cut rates, and desperately frightened of the “zero bound.” Thus a continuous argument worthy of Monty Python: Do we fire our limited ammunition now or save it until it’s ugly? But, if we don’t fire now, then it may get so ugly that firing won’t help.
As skyscrapers get taller and taller across Manhattan, living the high life is beginning to look less appealing, agents say.