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	<title>United Lane Corporation &#187; marketing material</title>
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		<title>Tomorrow&#8217;s listings on today&#8217;s Lane</title>
		<link>http://blog.unitedlane.com/2009/05/tomorrows-listings-on-todays-lane/</link>
		<comments>http://blog.unitedlane.com/2009/05/tomorrows-listings-on-todays-lane/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 06 May 2009 11:33:51 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>paul.carroll</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[3D Visualization]]></category>
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Blog: Mark Foreman
The constantly evolving technologies that help
us market and sell real estate all started with Gutenberg’s printing press in or around 1450. Fast forward to 2009. Fax [...]]]></description>
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<p><strong>Blog: Mark Foreman</strong></p>
<div id="attachment_247" class="wp-caption alignleft" style="width: 160px"><img class="size-thumbnail wp-image-247" style="margin: 0px 5px;" title="mark" src="http://blog.unitedlane.com/wp-content/uploads/2009/05/mark-150x150.jpg" alt="mark" width="150" height="150" /><p class="wp-caption-text">‘Virtual tours are great, but what if you don’t like the color of the living room?’</p></div>
<p>The constantly evolving technologies that help<br />
us market and sell real estate all started with Gutenberg’s printing press in or around 1450. Fast forward to 2009. Fax machines, cell phones, digital cameras and the internet have created marketing tools unimagined 30 years ago – so what will the future of real estate marketing and sales look like?</p>
<p>No one really knows, but sci-fi author and techno-visionary William Gibson once said, ‘The future is already here – it is just unevenly distributed.’ Some innovative companies are already showing a glimpse of how agents will market their listings in the not-too-distant future: 3D technology is at the center of this movement.</p>
<p>Potential buyers already have the ability access property data, photos, flat floor plans, photo tours and virtual tours online, before they venture out to physically tour the homes. In the very near future, agents will be able to walk buyers through their listings virtually. If they don’t like the wall colors or floor style, they will change them with the click of a mouse. Want to see what the rooms look like with furniture? Simply arrange and rearrange with your index finger. Just about any item in the home will be viewable in a different style or color.</p>
<p>As a Realtor for over 21 years, I have worked with a lot of buyers who look at a lot of houses that they never buy. Some just like to look. And I can’t tell you how many times I have heard, ‘My furniture will never fit in this space.’ Having my buyers ‘fit’ their furniture in the rooms before they go out and look at the homes would make a tremendous time saving. They would only then look at homes about which they already have a sense of the interior size and layout. Most of my clients end up spending a lot of time envisioning how the walls will look in a certain color, or asking, ‘What if I changed the floors to hardwood from carpet?’</p>
<p>Many Realtors already use floor plans as part of their marketing package, which add depth to the information a potential buyer uses in making a decision whether or not to go see a home. Virtual tours are great, but what if you don’t like the color of the living room? How can you tell if a King-sized bed will fit in the master bedroom? A two-dimensional static floor plan lets you see the room layout, but it won’t allow you to place furniture in the rooms or play with different wall colors.</p>
<p>A new program, being developed by the Denmark-based United Lane Corporation, will soon allow home shoppers and commercial tenants to make and see these changes online. United Lane’s software takes that 2D floor plan and converts it to an interactive virtual 3D model that then becomes an open house – 24 hours per day. No more Sunday open houses; no more asking the sellers to leave for the afternoon; no more baking gingerbread cookies to make the house smell ‘homey’. Any buyer can look at and ‘walk through’ the listing anytime, from anywhere in the world. That’s powerful marketing.</p>
<p>It’s rare when a product/concept so unique and intuitive first comes to the market and almost everyone can immediately see how this could change the face of several industries. The early version of the program is impressive to say the least, but high-definition, video-quality 3D walkthroughs are already in the development stages. And purchasing consumer products through this venue might be as easy as clicking the Dell laptop on the desk in the den and inputting your credit card info.</p>
<p>It won’t be too long before every single piece of commercial and residential property in the world will have an interactive 3D rendering of the layout available to the owner, or made accessible to the public if the home is for sale. Planting a virtual ‘For Sale’ sign in front of these homes and buildings will let the world know that this property is on the market. Potential buyers will be able to ‘cyberwalk’ down United Lane, popping into the properties they are interested in seeing. Agents will benefit by taking buyers only to homes that they have a high level of interest in. The possibilities can only be imagined…</p>
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		</item>
		<item>
		<title>Fast times at Realtor High</title>
		<link>http://blog.unitedlane.com/2009/04/fast-times-at-realtor-high/</link>
		<comments>http://blog.unitedlane.com/2009/04/fast-times-at-realtor-high/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sun, 19 Apr 2009 21:16:39 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>paul.carroll</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Marketing]]></category>
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Much of what used to be done from an office window or in the local paper has moved onto the web, and from there onto mobile phones – [...]]]></description>
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<p><strong>Much of what used to be done from an office window or in the local paper has moved onto the web, and from there onto mobile phones – a trend presenting the real estate industry with enormous challenges </strong></p>
<p>In a world of remorseless change, it’s not only new technologies, but also new techniques, working practices and skills that could prove the difference between success and failure.</p>
<p>‘The chief areas of technology that people should be concentrating on are customer relationship management systems and a marketing set-up that allows them to carry out all of their marketing from just one place,’ says real estate technology guru Professor Bernice Ross. (See also her blog in this issue of <em>Future World</em>.)</p>
<p>‘With a one-stop marketing shop they should be able to carry out just one upload that places their listing on many sites, and they should be able to do the same with their videos.’</p>
<p>Some 90 per cent of buyers now go online as part of their search, but Ross – an Emeritus Professor of psychology who coaches real estate staff – says many real estate companies do not know what is generating their online sales, neither tracking leads nor finding out what is causing their conversion ratios.</p>
<p>‘They do not know what is generating their qualified leads and they think that technology is a substitute for connection,’ she says.</p>
<p>Research recently carried out by the National Association of Realtors (NAR) has found out that 98 to 99 per cent of those people who view a property online will drive by and see it, something that Doug Garcia, the director of research for San Francisco Bay area commercial Realtors Colliers Parrish states will routinely involve the use of a mobile phone.</p>
<p>Garcia says his company is now looking at both mapping technology to guide clients to a potential property and, in the future, the use of locational tags to alert a client to the fact that they may be passing a property.</p>
<p>However, the use of smart phones and internet mobile is also presenting the real estate community with issues. ‘The President of Nokia has referred to it as iPodification,’ says Ross. ‘All of your services should be delivered to one point. Because of that, there should be two variants of a real estate website – a full-blown version and a dot-mobi version, which carries short, one-line descriptions for mobile.”</p>
<p>Ross is not alone in picking mobile technology as a rich new area. Intensive research carried out by <em>Future World</em> has revealed that real estate agents are all trying to find ways into a device that is increasingly being seen as a pocketbook. New products and systems being promoted by the mobile phone industry itself should make that process easier, allowing text messages and adverts to be sent direct to mobile.</p>
<p>Internet websites being developed for mobile by companies such as Unity Mobile (also featured in this issue of <em>Future World</em>) are being closely followed by phones – from companies such as ‘3’, which open Skype and Facebook to show who is online without connecting to the web – which offer opportunities to real estate companies to connect via mobile.</p>
<p>This interest in social networking could help evade moves by governments in the US and Europe to regulate access to mobile due to privacy concerns: people will happily supply information via social networking applications that they would not dream of providing to market researchers.</p>
<p>Which comes back neatly to one of Ross’ other tips: the use of social networking technologies like Twitter and Facebook by the real estate industry. Much has been written recently encouraging the use of social networking by Realtors, but little about why they should. The answer is simple. Not only do the systems provide valuable potential leads, which many have already recognised, they also provide localised information that can be mined to provide an invaluable lifestyle resource.</p>
<p>Says Ross: ‘What we are going to see is the growth of community information. That information will come from co-creation by users, word of mouth, the picnic and cocktail party circuit, and from people who share common interests. Real estate agents are going to start drawing on that.</p>
<p>‘There are sites that are being put together now that are looking for people who are 35-50 years old, and who either work on Wall Street or are involved in the media, film or art. The idea is that they will form a community online and that they will also want to live near each other.</p>
<p>‘It’s “Where I’m doing business” and “What is my lifestyle”. Into that you will get local information being factored in, so you will get the local restaurant owner and other people who have local businesses putting in information, and people buying a property will want to know all about that.</p>
<p>‘The real estate companies that exploit this trend will be successful because they will become the manager of my zip code; they will become experts for that area and its lifestyle.’</p>
<p>Real estate agents would then add this community-rich information to a rapidly developing data mine.</p>
<p>‘Mapping is one of those components that has been around for a long time now and it is expected,’ continues Ross. ‘One of the very interesting developments is www.rottenneighbor.com which lists bad neighbours, sex offenders and foreclosures. That is a development that I think is going to really pick up pace because at the moment anything that is pushing from the bottom up is gaining momentum.’</p>
<p>The final area of technology development identified by Ross is the evolution of 3D.</p>
<p>‘Interactive 3D will have the same sort of role to play in providing local and specific information: it will also give people a competitive edge.</p>
<p>‘I am involved in a real estate business in Beverly Hills, and if I were wanting to advertise a $3-5m listing, then I would do it in 3D because that is what would give me the competitive edge.’</p>
<p>An opinion backed by some of the most tech-savvy companies in real estate, with many now researching the potential of 3D offerings from companies like Google and Microsoft to provide views of local communities, streets and neighbourhoods.</p>
<p>Taking people inside the houses in those areas – so that they can see the view from the window – is the next logical step as technology begins to populate the virtual world.</p>
<p><strong>For those wishing to read Professor Bernice Ross’ full article click here.</strong></p>
<p><strong>For those wanting to know more about United Lane’s unique 3D technology, contact </strong><em>James.digby@unitedlane.com</em></p>
<p><strong>If you have any queries regarding this newsletter, or would like to contribute, please email Peter Warren at </strong><em>peter.warren@unitedlane.com</em></p>
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		<title>Reality check – making 3D relevant</title>
		<link>http://blog.unitedlane.com/2009/04/blog-kresten-thomsen/</link>
		<comments>http://blog.unitedlane.com/2009/04/blog-kresten-thomsen/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 16 Apr 2009 15:43:39 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>paul.carroll</dc:creator>
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Blog: Kresten Thomsen
When the word ‘3D’ appears in the headlines it is, almost    invariably, supported by crappy images that look like crappy imitations of real life. We have [...]]]></description>
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<p><strong>Blog: Kresten Thomsen</strong></p>
<div id="attachment_192" class="wp-caption alignleft" style="width: 160px"><img class="size-thumbnail wp-image-192" style="border: 0pt none; margin: 0px 5px;" title="kresten_headshot_medium" src="http://blog.unitedlane.com/wp-content/uploads/2009/04/kresten_headshot_medium-150x150.jpg" alt="kresten_headshot_medium" width="150" height="150" /><p class="wp-caption-text">‘What you don’t see is all the 3D that looks like real photographs.’</p></div>
<p>When the word ‘3D’ appears in the headlines it is, almost    invariably, supported by crappy images that look like crappy imitations of real life. We have all seen these lame ducks, either in the news or in computer games.</p>
<p>But what if you could take photographic images without the use of a photographer – or even a product? What if you could use 3D technology to produce high-end pictures of homes, furniture or materials without having to produce each product or material? Imagine eliminating the use of prototypes because you can see the end product in real life as you design it (it would certainly reduce the greenhouse effect), and then use the same technology to test user-friendliness, determine inventory and stock, and minimize losses with products that your focus group doesn’t approve of anyway.</p>
<p>The idea of taking a proposed product, testing it against the market, redesigning according to calculated focus group demands, and producing marketing material without an actual production run makes incredible sense – not only from a green tech point of view, but also in terms of hard cash. To reduce the cost of photography by 50 per cent is, in itself, highly relevant; but also to adjust your inventory according to demand is almost invaluable for anyone in the manufacturing business.</p>
<p>And then when you saw the word ‘3D’ again, you would still see all those crappy images. But what you don’t see is all the 3D that looks like real photographs – because you just don’t notice them. That’s when 3D technology becomes relevant from a user’s perspective, a designer’s perspective, and from the finance director’s perspective.</p>
<p>3D photorealism isn’t about making things look like real life; 3D photorealism is about making 3D a part of everyday life without anyone noticing. That’s when you’re really talking photorealism – when it isn’t a ‘Second Life’, but already part of your real life…</p>
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