HomeGain is AVM Also-Ran

homegain.gif

HomeGain launched a brand new automated valuation tool last week, it’s calling its Instant Home Valuation Tool. According to their press release, it’s “the descendant of the original instant Home Valuation Tool that HomeGain created over seven years ago.”

I’m not sure what the old Instant Home Valuation Tool did, but the new one is a fairly decent effort. Biggest plus, it returns your result very quickly. The database is positively snappy, making for a nice experience.

Overall however, I find the overall design kind of uninsipired (not a big fan of the red and green) and I can’t help but think the value range it returns (rather than a number) is kind of a cop out. A $40,000 or $50,000 spread doesn’t do me a whole lot of good if I’m really trying to assess the value of my house as an asset.

homegain-web.gif

Of course the business model is it’s offering agents the opportunity to buy advertising on the site and be the exclusive ‘featured’ agent around the results – and presumably the recipient of all the leads, should any materialize.

But the real question is, is this too little, too late?

Zillow has all but wrapped up the home valuation games in the mind of the consumer – to Zillow your home is almost the same as FedEx’ng a package or Xeroxing an article (admittedly, the latter expression has fallen out of favor a bit of late).

Cyberhomes, Fidelity’s AVM tool, runs a close second. I had a chance to get a sneak peak at what the site is planning to do, at the C.A.R. meeting last week – and count me among the new believers. (A far cry from my initial review; see Cyberhomes AVM is a Total Joke).

I think Cyberhomes is poised for big things and I hope to write more about their product in the near future, but for the time being, if you’re interested in learning more about their strategy, I’d recommend reading Transparent Real Estate’s excellent series on the service.

The only other guy on the block, eppraisal.com has an interesting approach, but I haven’t seen it gain much traction in terms of consumer traffic (see Alexa traffic graph below) – also, it kept giving me error messages when I punched in my home address… not good.

traffic1.png

HouseValues? Well, let’s not even get started on that dead model.

So, HomeGain getting into the game – does it mean anything? Well looking at the Alexa chart they still have a solid traffic ranking and it is certainly a more compelling feature than some of their other products (finding a Realtor, or clicking through to some random agent’s website) – but I doubt they’ll find much a niche trying to reposition themselves as a serious AVM site.

I think HomeGain is a little late to the party with this offering. What it may do is help keep some of their existing visitors hanging around just a little bit longer, but as far as getting new bodies I think they face a serious uphill slog.


RSS Feed for This Post7 Comment(s)

  1. housereview | Apr 24, 2007 | Reply

    Are realeasteabc worth mentioning in this space?

  2. Nicole Rufuku | Apr 24, 2007 | Reply

    Before we call HomeGain’s output range a cop out, we should first consider the answer to the following: Would a homeowner prefer to see a $40,000 to $50,000 spread on their house, or a $40,000 to $50,000 undervaluation of their home?

  3. Jesse Bilsten | May 2, 2007 | Reply

    I wanted to weigh in on CyberHomes and relay that it is STILL a total joke.

    I’ve had to “integrate” with them on multiple broker website launches and I use “integrate” loosely because so far it’s been nothing but a joke.

    Their .NET platform according to my main contact Gary cannot handle correct HTML markup and instead must maintain the design/look-feel of my customers websites via a giant image map and some horrid table code…

    I’ll give that a second to sink in.

    They “brand” my customers websites by placing a header and footer or in reality a top and bottom image map around their otherwise broken and browser incompatible code. (Take a look at Opera: it doesn’t work at all. Or IE 7: get some weird cookie error in a frame).

    Now that alone combined with the fact that it has taken me about 2-3 weeks of very frustrated communication on each “branding” to get something remotely close working would be enough to tell someone never to use this product. But then add in the fact that some of my customers are STILL getting ads served on their supposedly ad free sites after 3 weeks of complaining and being told by CyberHomes that they can’t possibly be seeing ads… and you get a just plain horrible service. And I use “service” lightly.

    Readers be wary. Cyberhomes might take a year or two to mature… if at all.

  4. hqihelper | May 7, 2007 | Reply

    At [url=http://forum-insurance.blogspot.com]Forum-insurance[/url], we are committed to bringing up to date information on all types of insurance. We have experts who are in touch with the latest trends in the insurance industry and provide weekly reports to our site. It is our philosophy for the consumer to get as much information and free insurance quotes as possible before committing to any one policy.
    Getting Car Insurance Quotes:
    - [url=http://forum-insurance.blogspot.com]Cheapest Car Insurance Quotes[/url]
    - [url=http://forum-insurance.blogspot.com]Which Cars Cost the Least to Insure?[/url]
    - [url=http://forum-insurance.blogspot.com]Car Insurance Online Quote Comparison[/url]
    It is very difficult in this day and age to find time to compare car insurance quotes due to the large amount of false advertising in the insurance world. Our car insurance quotes articles will give you an insight into the insurance market and prepare you to make your final decision. Our car insurance quotes service requires no money, obligation or credit check

  5. snoop | Oct 22, 2007 | Reply

    what about realquest.com??

  6. arizona life insurance company | Aug 10, 2008 | Reply

    Home values have really fallen in the PHoenix metro area. We’ve been fairly resistent to real estate fluctuations in the past, but not this time. Our bubble burst.

  7. Indianapolis auto insurance | May 5, 2010 | Reply

    You are committed to bringing up to date information on all types of insurance… Nice post

6 Trackback(s)

  1. From Real Estate Blogs | Jun 9, 2007
  2. From theresoldgumbootprincess | theresoldgumbootprincess | Nov 30, 1999
  3. From HomeGain launches Automated Valuation Tool (AVM) - HouseReview | Apr 24, 2007
  4. From Why HomeGain Beats Zillow | Future of Real Estate Marketing Blog | Apr 29, 2007
  5. From Jerry Lee's Friends on Blue Dot | Apr 30, 2007
  6. From Why HomeGain Beats Zillow | Apr 30, 2007

RSS Feed for This PostPost a Comment