google maps

Google Maps dropping real estate listings

Well…. It seemed like a no-brainer when Google began pinpointing real estate listings on Google Maps. It could have even been a game-changer.

But Google is pulling the plug — pulling the pins, as it were — because the effort didn’t get the traction the search giant had expected.

“In part due to low usage, the proliferation of excellent property-search tools on real estate websites, and the infrastructure challenge posed by the impending retirement of the Google Base API, we’ve decided to discontinue the real estate feature within Google Maps on February 10, 2011,” the company said in a blog post.
  • Share/Bookmark

New Google Maps “Today’s version of Yellow Pages”

Google Maps and other local business marketing and analytics features of Google’s former Local Business Center have been upgraded. The result is called Google Places.

Brian Pasch, CEO of PCG Digital Marketing, also co-founder of the new Automotive Advertising Network, walks auto dealers through the Google changes and how they can use them to market their dealerships. Any merchant, media group or local business can take advantage of the marketing possibilities here, however.

Perhaps most important is the opportunity to add your own 30-day comment to your company’s Google Maps listing. Here you can talk about your latest promotion, sale, or in the case of media the hottest story. You can also alter your sevice area, expanding your geographic reach if you wish. A handy new Google Maps feature tells you from which cities driving directions are being requested. This, says Pasch, allows dealers to plan their marketing campaigns in areas where they’ve seen an interest.

Pasch calls Google Maps “Today’s version of the Yellow Pages.”  Read the complete article to see why.

  • Share/Bookmark

 Google Maps testing targeted ads in Australia

There is no excerpt because this is a protected post.

 Bikability by Google Maps

There is no excerpt because this is a protected post.

Google going up against NAR for real estate search?

If you’re looking at properties by way of Google Maps, you’ll now find a broker place page that has all sorts of information on that listing, and while some conjecture that this could rival National Association of Realtors’ (NAR) upcoming Realtors Property Resource site, we don’t see that unless it’s much improved somewhere down the road.

It’s nice but its probably more an enhancement to what’s out there already, not a rival. We see real estate agents and brokers adding this to their branding and listing repertoire, but not replacing another online listing resources with this new Google Maps product.

Google now offers details on the property (though still not as detailed as some real estate verticals or realtor sites), photos, placement on the local map, and a Street View. You can also determine what public transportation options are nearby. While it might not rival all real estate verticals it does offers links to those that offer the listing, and consumers can send the listings to their own or friends’ e-mails. No longer must users get this Google info by pop-up, a nice user-friendly feature.

 We looked at one property for sale in Phoenix AZ, for example. We clicked on the Google Maps icon, where we saw that the property was a foreclosure with an asking price of $39,900. A 2 bedroom, 1 bath home, Realty Store was the seller agent. (The broker’s name was hyperlinked). The property is 840 square feet, we learned. From the broker’s place page we learned that about the neighborhood, where the average house value is $151, 200.

There are nearly 11,000 homes in this area, whose average income is $57,519.  The neighborhood is home to 30,436 people, with a median age of 33.  Of these, 87.28 percent are white, 2.28 percent are black. Interesting that statistics break down by Indian, Asian and Hawaiian, all with fewer than 2 percent, but the other nearly 8 percent are listed as Other, in a neighborhood, city and state with a hefty Hispanic population. That would seem a “local” look by someone without any “local” understanding.  Nearly 41 percent of the neighbors are college graduates, its crime index is 244, and the turnover in residents is moderate.

There’s another major flaw to this, though a flaw not unique to Google. This listing was posted Nov. 30, days after the property was actually sold. The listing remains live today.

  • Share/Bookmark

Redfin dumps MS Virtual Earth, moves to Google

Online real estate broker Redfin has switched from Microsoft Virtual Earth to Google Maps. The company’s blog says that “We decided to do this now because our two-year contract with Microsoft was up for renewal. We did an evaluation and figured out a way to draw a large number of pushpins on Google Maps very quickly. When we went with Virtual Earth in 2006, Google Maps was faster out of the box but slower once we started drawing on it, especially on Internet Explorer 6.”

The bottom line: “In the end, it was speed, speed, speed that convinced us to switch. In our worst case scenario of 500 pushpins on the map in Internet Explorer 6, Google Maps is 385 percent faster.”

With maps now an integral feature of the property search experience, property portals have a choice between several providers – Google, Microsoft, Yahoo!, MapQuest, and more.

Looking at the Hitwise top real estate Web site lists, four use Virtual Earth (Realtor.com, Zillow.com, ZipRealty.com and RealtyTrac.com), compared to three using Google (Trulia.com, HomeGain.com and Remax.com). Yahoo Real Estate uses, predictably, Yahoo Maps, and Rent.com has stuck with MapQuest.

  • Share/Bookmark

Gentle reminder…

Clients' passwords change with every PDF issue of Classified Intelligence Report -- basically, once every other Thursday. Look in your latest edition for the newest password.

Not a client yet? Drop us a line about becoming one.

Categories

Archives …

AIMGroup.com/jobs


eBay Classifieds Group
is hiring! See all jobs

Find media jobs!

Search for jobs in classifieds, ad sales, editorial, marketing, publishing, broadcasting, new media and more. Post your resume, get alerts and save searches!

Search listings' text for these words:

Search job titles for these words:

Employers start here.

E-mail newsletter (free!)




* = required field