Features
Home-finding service
Be the estate agent that can help more of your clients find their dream homes and get ahead of the
competition.
A key feature within the Homesearch
data and prospecting platform is finding
clients their dream home.
The platform neatly gives you, the agent, access to all the real-time data you need to provide exceptional service to your clients and go that extra mile. Having 29.9 million addresses and over 24 billion data points at your fingertips allows you to access all on and off market properties, enabling you to find the right home for your client before your competitors even know it’s on the market.
By ‘home searching’ for your clients, your prospecting becomes a
highly valued service offering to them and immediately separates you
from your competition. Solving their problems becomes the most
compelling part of your valuation and leads to more instructions and
less reductions on fee. Through the valuation process, you’re
highlighting to your clients that no matter where they’re looking,
or what they’re looking for, you are the agent that is going to attack
the market for them and not only achieve them the highest price, but
also find them exactly what they need.
Identifying the home which meets your client’s key criteria is available at the click of a button
within the Homesearch platform. From finding a semi-detached property in the catchment
of an ‘Outstanding’ Ofsted-rated school through to hunting down a 4-bedroom pad within
the client’s maximum price range, Homesearch allows you to harness the power of its data to
find the right property in seconds. All with the aim of helping you increase your:
Total instruction numbers
Average fee
Valuation to instruction conversion rate
The beauty of finding homes within Homesearch is that it gives
you back control of your client’s move. You can problem solve
for them or tackle their anxieties on-the-go, wherever you are.
The platform works on PC, Mac, iPad, smartphones and smart
TVs, whether on Wifi or mobile data, in their home, at your
office or out and about. What could be simpler?