| October 14, 2004 |
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In California, your friendly neighborhood real estate agent is also often somewhat of a computer geek, and that's a good thing. Tech savvy consumers shouldn't have a hard time finding a real estate agent with a computer skills set to match their own. With nearly one quarter of the state's residential real estate business generated on the Internet and 56 percent of all buyers using the Internet as an integral part of their home buying process, it stands to reason most of the state's agents have their own Web site, otherwise use the Internet as a marketing tool, use broadband Net access at home to keep up and are tech savvy enough to have avoided computer viruses. "Realtors continue to be more technologically savvy than their counterparts in years past, and have integrated numerous technological tools into their day-to-day businesses as well as real estate transactions," said California Association of Realtors (CAR) president Ann Pettijohn. "Use of the Internet and Internet marketing has increased, as Realtors respond to meeting the needs of today's tech-savvy home buyers and sellers," she added. Oct. 5 was Tech Tuesday at California Realtor Expo 2004 in Santa Clara, CA when CAR released California's 2004 Realtor Use of Technology Survey which tracked behavioral changes in real estate agents' use of technology, as well as adoption rates of hardware, software and Internet connectivity. The survey was also conducted to determine real estate agents' technology proficiency -- or geek quotient -- and their incorporation of technology in real estate practices. Home buyers who make heavy use of the Internet are more likely to be younger, have larger incomes, spend more on homes and take less of a real estate agent's time in finding a home than buyers who use the Internet casually, CAR has also found. "If you don't use technology, you will be left in the dust," says Diane Bogart, a real estate agent with Coldwell Banker in Los Gatos. To keep from falling into the digital divide, Bogart uses her Web site to promote listings with virtual home tours. She keeps her buyers updated via electronic newsletters that direct them to her Web site for the latest listings. Through RealtyTimes.com's Real Estate Update newsletter, she keeps buyers and sellers informed about the latest market conditions, buying and selling tips, home improvement, finance and credit issues and a host of other related topics. CAR also says buyers who surf the Web are more satisfied with their real estate agent than those who just mouse around. Expanding by gigabytes every year, the more lucrative market segment of more satisfied customers is enough to make any real estate agent run out and upgrade. "The Internet is my office," says Robert Aldana, a prototypical gadget-laden real estate and mortgage consultant. Mr. Aldana also hosts a community cable channel television show for real estate consumers and posts his Web address, not his physical office address on his business card. "The Internet has helped me become much more efficient and streamline my transactions. It allows you to reach more people in less time and it truly gives the client more information, faster," says Aldana. CAR's survey found:
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