Bobby Brooks property uses many multiple listing services worldwide to assist our clients in located the perfect property for their budget, in a specified location. Bobby Brooks Property CO-OPS with all properly licensed or registered Companies in South East Asia and Thailand
For more than 100 years, real estate brokers have worked together to help sell listings. In the pre-digital days, brokers kept “listing books” full of their local board’s available properties, which allowed each broker to promote a wider range of homes than he or she represented individually. The result was faster-moving inventory for the entire board, and everyone won. The service was (and still is) opt-in: brokers choose which listings to cross-promote. But results don’t lie, and the vast majority of properties wound up in the book.
Eventually, the listing book gave way to a brokers-only digital database, which improved performance and accuracy. When the Web came along, real estate boards acknowledged the necessity of a consumer interface, providing plug-in solutions that let users search its inventory, or licensing third-party software vendors to provide similar services.
Technology disruption in real estate is a very volatile topic, so let’s be clear about what this article is not saying. We’re not saying the Internet will eliminate the need for agents. It’s already changed the way they do their jobs, but houses aren’t cars, so an expert voice will always be important.