The remarkable effect of COVID on Days on Market and Listing Photos (image intelligence reveals insights)

DOM inspiration

What’s utterly unremarkable is the days on market trend for US home sales in 2020.  Despite COVID, its steady downward trend of more than a decade has continued unabated.  The explanation is certainly multivariate, probably inconclusive, and a subject for debate for sure.  Lot’s of factors are in play, like supply and demand trends, cheap financing, and virtual real estate tech, among others.

We took a look at listing photos. 

Secrets in the Image Data

Rather than cracking the “why,” our goal was to simply gather data on the “what happened as a result.”  Did the COVID-created sequestering change how sellers presented their homes, specifically the images they posted with their listings?

THERE ARE REMARKABLE EARLY INDICATIONS that our image intelligence reveals insights.  More than 2 years and millions of images of machine learning training allows our intelligent tech to recognize not only unique architectural styles but also room types.  We analyzed MLS data for California through 2020, including over 170,000 listing images, looking for patterns in seller behavior.  Relationships in the data are emerging.

We can say with statistical confidence that the average seller in California posted 15% more photos.  Not surprising.  What’s much more interesting is the types of photos that gain prevalence.  Exterior photos increased 38%.   “Other” interior rooms (meaning not bedrooms, baths, kitchens, dining rooms or living rooms),  increased by 33%.  Hmmm.  

You might draw anthropological conclusions about the sequester changing what “home” means and how to present it.  The master bedroom, kitchen island, and 3.5 baths are not enough.  It’s the other spaces that make life live-able when locked up that need representation.  You can’t hang out in restaurants but you can hang in your yard, so buyers need to visualize “getting out” safely.

It’s too early to provide really sexy and reliable correlations linking specific rooms to market valuations or bid-ask ratios.  But image intelligence reveals insights that we are only beginning to explore.  The image below provides a stimulating hint.  Stay tuned.   

This MLS picture of a lamp was correctly categorized by Purlin’s image intelligence technology as a bedroom.

Images Never Lie but Online Appraisals Do – maximize value with image intelligence

change the question

About twenty years ago automated online home valuations became accessible to everyone.  The immediacy of the insights quickly became an expectation bred into the process and the value proposition hasn’t changed since.  Pick a home search site, enter an address, get a market value.  A branded algorithm matches location-based pricing trends with square footage.  Ta da, you have a ballpark estimate, invariably eliciting responses like, “how is our home worth so little?”  or, “how is that house worth so much?” and, “what do we do now?”

The statistical vagaries of existing solutions drove us to discover a way to answer these questions by re-inventing the home valuation experience.  It’s called StyleExplorer.  It mashes up standard valuation (size and location) with intelligent image data of all of the attributes that should contribute a home’s actual value. The new value proposition is confidence, control and guidance in understanding the optimal valuation of home, whether you are selling, renovating or buying.  The new approach changes the question from “how” the valuation was calculated, to “what does it mean” and “what can we do with it.”

do the new math

It’s a simple theorem: the sum of the rooms is bigger than whole (house).

Purlin’s StyleExplorer image intelligence allows side-by-side comparison of homes’ individual assets like architectural style, rooms, backyards, and neighborhoods.  For buyers it’s a unique experience analogous to crashing multiple open houses simultaneously.  For sellers, when done across homes with similar market valuations, the comparison will reveal valuation gaps and opportunities.   Some valuations will fall short of a home’s salient features (valuation to gain), some features will fail to look like they should (room to improve).  These immediate insights are priceless to sellers and agents nurturing process.  It’s truly the automated love child of the open house and the MVP (market value pricing analysis). 

Imagine if you are ready for a remodel.  You want to keep up with the latest designs and furnishings (and the Jones’s), or you just need some inspiration.  Looking at catalogs is helpful but feels staged, if not inaccessible.  What if you could look into rooms in the real world, that people live in, and see what your contemporaries have done with their homes?  Imagine peeking into your neighbor’s living room, or backyard, or man cave.   This tech was custom built for remodelers too.

make it a place to live, not a property to buy

Exploring what’s inside and around homes, the design touches in the photos owners have picked, taps into past or imagined experiences and makes a crude dollar value calculation for a property seem disconnected and even arbitrary.  It humanizes home valuation by dimensionalizing it – it gets to what the value of a home really means in personal terms.  With this unconscious shift from left brain to right the listing ceases to be a property to buy and becomes a future place to live.  Traditional automated appraisal solutions ignore that with a purchase this big, and this important, beyond basic requirements the emotional value will most often prevail over rational appeals.  Emotional value can compel buyers to favor one home over another, even with price disparity.  Emotional response to  image-based immersion, not clever language or negotiation techniques, powers buyer motivation. 

take it to eleven

Without your permission, the world has a value in mind for your home.  You have no control over whether it’s spot-on, a bit aggressive, or a total low-ball.  

Purlin’s image intelligence gives back control, provides guidance, and perhaps most importantly endows confidence.  It can illuminate misrepresentations and re-set home value conceptions, from a position of proof-based strength (pictures don’t lie, especially side-by-side).  It arms users with evidence of weaknesses and strengths, what’s needed, what’s possible, and what’s truly meaningful.  Sellers can feel smart and satisfied that they know clearly the value of what they are selling, glean what to showcase and how to prepare.  Buyers can explore and understand (and love) the possibilities of what they can buy.   Remodeler’s can learn how best to make their home better.  

Our new vision for home valuation based on image intelligence forwards a fundamental belief about home valuations:  they  provide context not proof; the sum of the rooms, and future experiences in them, is often greater the unexamined appraisal.  It allows you to take home value to eleven.  

“LOCATION, LOCATION, LOCATION” is not an address

It’s a feel. What’s outside a home can be as important as what’s inside the foyer. Big or small a backyard is its own, separate world. A sanctuary for reflection, relaxation and play. When looking for homes for sale, doing a home search by backyard provides a view into the neighborhood.

Neighborhood is part of Home

Seeing what surrounds that fantastic modern home (and all of the homes nearby), fills in important blanks what it would be like to live there and like that. In a perfect world you could visit and experience the backyards and neighborhoods of all of every home that you are curious about.

But the reality is that current physical restrictions make it near impossible to explore all of the properties that you find interesting. COVID-19 has made showing logistics more complicated. Time constraints are less controllable. Because of all of this, despite plenty of homes for sale, plenty of demand and cheap loans, time on the market (time it takes to sell/buy) is unnaturally long. Truth is, the very real worry that you find the perfect place after it’s gone, or after you’ve closed, still looms large.

Purlin’s StyleExplorer allows you to start with a home search by backyard virtually. Our AI combines computer vision and machine learning also learns what backyard designs you like the most. It makes getting a “feel” for a place imminently possible, and actually finding it and buying it more likely.

Real not hypothetical

There is a not so subtle benefit of this powerful tool beyond just a home search by backyard. It’s the power of peeking. And it applies to looking to buy, or looking to renovate (for you or prospective buyers). StyleExplorer reveals the actual exterior and interior features of homes in the actual neighborhood where you want to live. This is critical, because your home will be in the context of a “location, location, location,” not a designer’s website.

Home search by backyard will reveal a variety of results which tell a story about who lives there and how they live.
A Peek into the backyards of possible future (or current) neighbors in California

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How important to who you are is what your house is?

Curb appeal … status, taste or just home? Some say that architectural style of a home says something about you, like your car or your clothes.  Others care more about design, and less about outward impressions.  It’s not far-fetched to think that either type would love to search homes by style.

Unfortunately, the search for homes for sale by style is weak at best and impacted by considerable misinformation.  In other words, you never know what Google’s gonna get you because of faulty text-based descriptions of listings.  The principle source of home listing, the MLS, includes architectural style only 33% of the time.  What’s more, those descriptions are wrong half of the time.  When you search for Modern Homes in California you will most likely get a fraction of what’s truly available. And more than a few mislabelled Mediterranean, Victorian and Craftsman homes.

Images speak better than words

Purlin fixed this using pictures of homes instead of relying on sketchy or omitted text descriptions.  As a result, home styles are identified correctly 80% of the time, or 2.5X the accuracy of existing sources.* We trained our AI with millions of images to find homes for sale using a combination of advanced computer vision and machine learning technology.  Home buyers (and renters and renovators) can now do home searches by specific architectural styles. They can see what those styles look like in the actual neighborhoods they live in or are hoping to move into.

We say, “a picture is worth a thousand words, but data in an image is far more reliable.”  Even a thousand words is a meager facsimile for what your eye knows, consciously or not. We created technology that allow us to skip the awkward verbal translation.  

*Based on over 140,000 listings sourced from California MLS

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How to find the right home without knowing what you like

You like what only you like when you see it, even when you can’t put a finger on it. That one piece of fruit or flower in a field stands out and says choose me. Multiply that idea by a thousand when looking at homes in the sea of listing sameness. Imagine if you had a tool for finding a home using style, your own personal style …

Say you are looking for modern homes in Manhattan Beach, CA. Whether you are using home search site or an agent, most often homes for sale are picked for you. Very basic queries that deliver very basic results. You are left to choose which one creates the most tingles (or any?). We think this tradition is backwards. So we reversed it.

We created StyleExplorer to help you figure out what you like before forcing the “what do you want” question. It’s more than just a way for finding a home using style. It’s the first tech tool to allow you to compare the styles and decor of homes side-by-side. You can search every room, feature and view in a specific neighborhood so that there is no question which one to pick.

Image demonstrates on of the Purlin's StyleExporer's unique features when finding a home using style: displaying images side-by-side of interior rooms of different houses.

As you explore your preferences and “Peek” cool images, StyleExplorer keeps track of the details. It learns what you like to make your home searches more productive later. This unique personal style profile gets included in the overall search calculus of Purlin’s matching algorithm. That way when you search for a home to buy, your choices are not strictly defined by rational calculations and externalities. “Finding a home by style” means your consideration set is homes that you will likely like. Your search is through the unique lens of what you like, or, finding a home using style not choosing from options chosen for you.

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