It's time for Plain
Language in Real Estate Property Search

I was reminiscing this weekend about the fun of my childhood
which largely centered on Western New York
lakes and lake cottages. It inspired to
do some research around Buffalo
and neighboring waterfront areas on the Canadian shores as well. I know the area pretty well, but I was not
sure of waterfront home values so I began to do a web search.
After completing the process, it reminded me again that
property search still has a long way to go.
When I typed in "waterfront homes for sale in Wilson, New York",
for example, I found nothing of the sort. I was sent to homes for sale in Wilson, New York
at homes.com, only one of which was a waterfront home. When I tried "waterfront homes for sale in Wilson, New York", I also
received search results for waterfront homes in Lake Norman,
North Carolina, Wilson Pond in New Hampshire and
Alabama Real Estate.
One of the search results took me to a local REALTOR'S® site
who claims to be expert in waterfront homes in Wilson, New York.
The link took me to their home page, not to a featured waterfront listing in Wilson, New York
which is what I was looking for. The site included no listings at all which
very little mention of waterfront homes in the region. Several of the other search results took me
to agents focused on waterfront property in other regions around the country.
Other times the search results took me advertising portals like homes.com or
riverhomesusa.com. While these search
results would usually return at least one home which could be considered
waterfront, other non-waterfront homes were also included.
It's time for online property search to go to the next
level. Searches need to be built around the needs of consumers, not technology.
As consumers begin to learn that they can type in specific, plain language
requests for information, property search needs to evolve to allow them to find
exactly what they are looking for. They may be looking for a neighborhood with
young children in it. They may want to find towns where you can walk their baby
to town for a daily stroll. They may
even want to look for a neighborhood with a terrific natural foods store or
even a particular brand like Trader Joe's or Whole Foods.
Sites which incorporate plain language capabilities are
going to naturally attract consumers who align well with the unique
characteristics of a listing, group of listings, neighborhood or even town or
region. I would love MLS public website
providers and IDX vendors across the country significantly enhance the
consumer's ability to conduct real estate searches exactly the way they would
like to. In some quick research I ran across a company called Powerset.com
which has just launched a new version of plain language search which was built
using technologies from the Palo Alto Research Center (PARC), a leading
technology think tank based in Palo
Alto, California. http://www.parc.com/research/projects/natural_language/default.html
Carnegie Mellon also has a significant effort in natural
language search through their Language Technologies Institute (LTI) http://www.lti.cs.cmu.edu/.
If you have run across other open source plain language
search technologies, please send them our way and we'll happy to publish them
as well.
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http://waves.wavgroup.com/001990
230 views | Posted on 2008-01-21 @ 9.53:59 am