The Mercury News

BUY A HOUSE, GET $5K AMAZON CREDIT

Online delivery partners with Realogy to create TurnKey service

- By Conor Dougherty and Karen Weise

Over the past year, the decidedly analog business of buying and selling real estate has been upended by a flurry of new money and startups trying to usher in a world where homes are bought and sold online. Now, Amazon is creating a partnershi­p that goes in the opposite direction by using its gigantic retail platform to facilitate phone calls with human real estate agents.

On Tuesday, Amazon said that it was working with Realogy, the nation’s largest residentia­l real estate brokerage company and owner of Century 21, Coldwell Banker and other brands, to create TurnKey, a service that will help prospectiv­e homebuyers find real estate agents. To entice customers, Amazon will give buyers up to $5,000 in home services and smarthome gear when they close.

Amazon is now as much a search engine as it is a store, and the deal fits into the company’s effort to capitalize on its status as an online destinatio­n by making money on advertisin­g and other services. It’s also a way to encourage people to adopt products like Alexa speakers and Ring doorbells and to promote its list of handymen, furniture assemblers and other home services.

For Realogy, which will pay for those benefits, the partnershi­p is a way of using Amazon to find homebuyers and help its brokers separate the closers from the lookie-loos by rebating a portion of its commission, in the form of free Amazon stuff, to anyone who actually buys a house.

Here’s how it works: Buyers who are interested in the program go to Amazon.com/TurnKey and answer four questions about who they are and where they live. They then get a phone call from a Realogy representa­tive who tries to determine what sort of home they are looking for and

how serious they are about buying.

The best prospects are sent to agents. Depending on how much buyers ultimately spend on a home, those who close with one of Realogy’s agents get a coupon for $450 to $1,500 in Amazon Home Services like unpacking, cleaning and furniture assembly, along with $500 to $3,500 in smart-home products that Amazon or some affiliate will install. To get the maximum benefit, worth $5,000

in equipment and services, a buyer would have to purchase a home for $700,000 or more.

“Neither us nor Amazon envision this as a way to give cash back to people,” said Ryan Schneider, Realogy’s chief executive. “We took a different lens, thinking, ‘What could we do together that would just make it much easier to move into a house?’ People want the stress release of getting someone to clean the house or getting someone to put the furniture together.”

More than half of all product searches in the United States start directly on Amazon, according

to marketing analytics firm Jumpshot, and Amazon has increasing­ly been using customers’ searches to stimulate the sale of services that the company does not directly offer now. Most of that has been through its growing ad business, which uses shopping history to target customers on and off Amazon. Morgan Stanley estimated that Wall Street would value Amazon’s ad business at about $100 billion if it were a stand-alone business.

The vast majority of buyers still purchase homes through a real estate agent, but many begin their search online, where people browse

listings, look at pictures and fiddle with tax and mortgage calculator­s to get a sense of what they can afford. This has prompted a number of companies to start nudging buyers and sellers toward online transactio­ns as well. Companies like Zillow, Redfin and Opendoor have started “instant buying” programs that offer cash and a quick close to sellers, cutting real estate agents out of the process. Redfin, the Seattle-based real estate brokerage firm, said in May that it would let buyers bid on properties on its website “a buy button for real estate,” according to the company’s chief executive,

Glenn Kelman.

Realogy has an instant buying program, too, but still has a lot riding on the traditiona­l brokerage model. The company’s stock has plunged by more than half over the past year as it faces competitio­n from instant buying programs and startup brokerage firms like Compass that are lowering the commission splits that traditiona­l brokerage agents make their living on.

The partnershi­p could bolster Amazon’s aggressive push into smart homes, which it believes will become an increasing­ly important tool to interact with shoppers.

 ?? REALOGY VIA THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? Home buyers who close on a home with an agent they find through TurnKey will get up to $5,000in goods and services from Amazon as announced on Tuesday and shown in an advertisem­ent.
REALOGY VIA THE NEW YORK TIMES Home buyers who close on a home with an agent they find through TurnKey will get up to $5,000in goods and services from Amazon as announced on Tuesday and shown in an advertisem­ent.
 ?? COLDWELL BANKER REAL ESTATE LLC VIA THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? Amazon announced it was working with Realogy, a residentia­l real estate brokerage company and owner of Century 21, Coldwell Banker and other brands, to create TurnKey.
COLDWELL BANKER REAL ESTATE LLC VIA THE NEW YORK TIMES Amazon announced it was working with Realogy, a residentia­l real estate brokerage company and owner of Century 21, Coldwell Banker and other brands, to create TurnKey.

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