Lani Rosales

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Lani is the New Media Director here at AgentGenius.com and was recently named President of New Media Lab, both of which are headquartered in Austin, TX. She has an English degree from the University of Texas (and of course used that to become a blogger) and has lived in Texas her whole life minus the semester in Spain and the summer in Mexico. She spends a great deal of energy on the AG brand as well as improving the real estate industry and is an avid Twitter user.

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22 Comments

  1. Dale Chumbley

    Lani,
    Great post. Well put. I agree about the Gen Y beginning earlier. My sister was born in ‘76 and I’d put her firmly in the GenY group. I myself am a proud, card carrying GenXer!
    Take care,
    Dale

  2. Todd Carpenter

    You’re analysis, that Redfin is going after GenY may be correct, but if so, I’ll disagree that it will work. Redfin’s business model depends on selling homes that GenY buyers simply can’t afford.

  3. Jonathan Dalton

    I pontificated?

    And it’s not 200K+ house. Look at the markets where Redfin’s currently located …. San Diego, Seattle, Boston … only way you see a 2 is by looking at the price on a mirror. There’s not enough margin to make it work in the vast majority of locales, not with salaried agents.

    Given Redfin’s market share in those areas, either there are few Gen Y buyers or they ain’t using the ‘Fin.

  4. Todd Carpenter

    I think the average numbers for Redfin need to be more like $500,000. Just look at the markets they are in, and it seems obvious. I’m not proclaiming them dead, I just don’t think they are targeting GenY buyers.

    Also, to me, lableing a GenY, or GenX person to have one trait or another seems a bit like useing one of those place mat Chinese calenders to analise a person. Since I was born in 1971, I’m a boar:

    >>People born in the Year of the Boar are honest and tolerant and make good friends, but tend to expect the same from everyone else, and more often than not they end up disappointed. They thrive in the arts as entertainers.<<

    In truth – I care very little for the “arts”, and am a complete cynic of almost everyone I meet. I’m usually pleasantly surprised that someone is a better person than I first anticipated.

    I don’t know. Your broad stroke probably fits. Lots of young people seem to have a sense of entitlement, but maybe that’s just me own perception. I try to judge people one on one. It would be interesting to see what the average age of a Redfinn client is. My bet is just north of 40.

  5. Jonathan Dalton

    > SOMETHING* is paying the bills at Redfin

    It’s called venture capital. Eight figures worth.

  6. Kris Berg

    It’s going to boil down to a matter of simple dollars and sense. I understand your point, and I understand their target market, but until that target market can consistently afford million dollar homes, the model can’t possibly be profitable, at least in its present form. Plus, you don’t give your generation enough credit.

  7. Chris Lengquist

    I’m only going to comment on the GenY thing. My best friend’s daughter, a spoiled rich kid and now a college drop out, was telling me with much indignation that her part time job had hired her full time but that they were only paying her $29,500 with full benefits!!!!!

    Okay. She’s 20 years old. No college education. And yet she knew the right person to land a $29,500 job right off the bat and is bitching like crazy about it.

    Ah, do you know there are people out in the work force that have been there for DECADES that don’t make 10% over that. Don’t like it? Tough. Get your education or be happy.

    But she really, really, really, really thinks that she’s different and should be treated as such. I love her. But I want to hit her with a baseball bat. Would that be wrong? :)

  8. Jeff Brown

    Lani — I’m with Todd on this one, and for more reasons than he stated.

    My experience with GenY is entirely different. I’ve mostly met smart young men & women who’ve taken the bull by the horns and gone after life in high gear. From what I’ve observed they appear to know what they want in life at a younger age than I or my parents did.

    Most young people learn in real life their sense of entitlement doesn’t get them far. Soon enough expertise rears its ugly head. I’ve been encouraged the last couple years talking with GenY’s. Most of them have a better idea of the direction of their lives than their parents did. Better yet, they seem unworried about choosing the wrong career — they can switch jobs a lot easier than Mom or Dad could have.

    In San Diego they’re buying the cheaper 1 & 2 bedroom condos, a move their parents would have considered beneath them. No sense of entitlement there.

    Finally, the military is in large part populated by GenY which is for me the most encouraging factor yet.

    What you’ve seen isn’t unique as we all know what you’re talking about. That said, being GenY yourself you make my point daily. :)

    My take on GenY is they’re gonna surprise us big time. I know my firm is counting on it. :)

  9. Dale Chumbley

    With regard to Chris Lengquist’s comment above. She makes me think of an old Ramones song that is slightly older than her friends daughter. Beat on the brat, beat on the brat… Thanks for the chuckle! ;?)

  10. Chris Lengquist

    Closing comment: She’s a bright kid. She’ll figure it out. But in the mean time it reminds us all of why we’d love to have our younger bodies but only if we can take our older brains back with us.

  11. Mariana

    LANI! I love generational cr@p like this! Here is a plug for an article I wrote about my generation (X): http://activerain.com/blogsvie.....et-Life-of

    Anyway – Here is the thing about GENY’ers … Their parents are both Boomers and X’ers. My mother has a Gen Y son and I have a Gen Y son. Let me quote myself from over a year ago ..

    “What is really interesting is that these kids are being raised differently – Boomers raise kids differently than X’ers do. Boomers have more money- and so do their kids. ((My husband has a 15 year old sister – …raised TOTALLY different…)) – but the Boomer’s kids and the X’ers kids go to school together and are growing up in the same age, and are all very tech-savvy. So, there will be some great similarities, AND some great differences. (I’m not going to start speculating, here…)”

    I happen to LIKE Redfin, and I am NOT a Y. I do not nec. agree with their business model but I like them because they are different. And maybe that is the only reason why I like them. I like Redfin because it is business models like REDFIN that make other business models stand up and validate themselves … step up their game … or fade away. Kind of like a chemical reactive agent …

    I really do not know if my comment here even applies to what you wrote, Lani, but oh well. It is my 2 cents.

  12. Jay Thompson

    Sorry, I can’t read a damn word of this. I can’t get past that jacket Glenn is wearing.

  13. Bob in San Diego

    Redfin has no market share here, but that aside, I don’t think people give Gen Y enough credit. I have a young couple with several degrees between the two of them. Husband is the stereotypical cynic who hates the concept of Realtors because he thinks most are stupid (he and I are a lot alike). The Redfin concept appealed to him until this week.

    What he wanted wasn’t Redfin, but representation where he felt he was actually being served. We’ll open escrow Monday.

    The thing with Redfin is that they don’t actually believe what they say. Drop the commissions and Redfin is toast. 2/3 of not much leaves little for Redfin.

  14. Benn Rosales

    Bob, nothing in this is about credit or lack there of, nor a commission and whether service is given by a Realtor.

    This post is about the buyer psychology we’re dealing with all over the country, and I talk to lenders, Realtors, title companies, bankers, lawyers, and others who constantly speak of something different with this generation of consumer- and you know what, this author identifies it in herself and gives you an insight into her thinking. Lani is educated, is demanding, and is guilty of the traits she points out in the post.

    “Husband is the stereotypical cynic who hates the concept of Realtors because he thinks most are stupid” This quote is exactly what she’s talking about, and if you put aside a need to set yourself above your competition, you’ll understand that it is an entire generation of this same mentality- “I know everything.”

    If this buyer had chosen to have someone else “serve him” well, as you are now- would you think of him as so intelligent? I doubt it. You, Bob, just know how to sell yourself, service, and you answered his questions and probably schooled in what he didn’t know- not that he would admit that.

    This article can be a blueprint into how you succeed in this social generation- they’re getting their information from peers and not from adult professionals until they realize they don’t know enough- at that point, they’re full of bits of information and are in desperate need for it to be weaved together. If a redfin phone agent can serve this need, they will be just fine in the long run- this has yet to really be discovered.

  15. Bob in San Diego

    >nothing in this is about credit or lack there of, nor a commission and whether service is given by a Realtor.

    Sure it is. On all three counts.

    As Jeff points out, his experience is different. Mine is too. You say they get their info from peers and not adult professionals. That’s a sweeping generalization. My experience is that they simply don’t buy the status quo because it is the status quo, they don’t believe in a label of self-appointed professionalism, and they don’t expect anything more from Redfin than anyone else. They believe the industry, for the most part, over promises and under delivers – but delivers no less than Redfin. Redfin is cool because they tell you they don’t do much and they aren’t “greedy”.

    >you’ll understand that it is an entire generation of this same mentality- “I know everything.”
    Another sweeping and generality that isn’t likely to endear them to the “adult professionals”. It’s a generation that seeks and thrives on knowledge like no generation before it. They don’t agree with the “they don’t care what I know, until they know how much I care”. They want proof you have a clue. They don’t want to see agents add cost to the transaction without adding value.

    >If this buyer had chosen to have someone else “serve him” well, as you are now- would you think of him as so intelligent? I doubt it.

    If you knew me, you wouldn’t doubt it. I can handle the cheap shots too.

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