There’s always something to howl about.

When It Clicks

We rely so heavily today on the internet to market our properties, but with so much information available to the would-be home buyer, our on-line ads had better pack a punch. This audience will forever be just one click away from the next property listing, and our “special” home will be all but forgotten. Galen Ward talked about the peekaboo law of home photography, and Ardell had a great footnote on the subject. Of course, Greg Swann had his own 3000-words-or-less thoughts on the topic.

Steve and I have an escrow closing today on a home that is the poster child for taking thoughtful photos to effectively market a property. This is what the home looks like from the street:

Not very inspiring, I’m afraid. It just looks like any one of another 120 or so homes on the market in this zip code today.

Here is the photo I used in the MLS and on the web as the primary photo:

This accomplished several things. It followed the peekaboo law by showing just enough to get the audience’s attention, plus it was a cleansing process which eliminated those that were water sport-averse. And, as Ardell recommends, it told a story – The story of a home with a beautiful pool. In this case, that was the story. Nowhere is it written that the primary photo must be of the driveway, and yet I would venture a guess that 99% of the agents out there succumb to this trap. If the front of the home is inspiring, then by all means use it, but if there is something better waiting for you once you cross the threshold, why not make it known?

By the way, the buyer of this home found it listed on Realtor.com and wasn’t even aware that this neighborhood existed. She wanted first and foremost (drum roll) a pool. At the initial showing, she had mentally purchased her pool, and the rest of the home was just icing that happened to convey. Had this not been the first photo she saw, she likely would have clicked on by.