This article was shared here with permission from Mike DelPrete for Inman Intel, a data and research arm of Inman offering deep insights and market intelligence on the business of residential real estate and proptech. Subscribe today.
Why it matters: This leads to attention being focused on the highly exciting, yet least likely scenarios, which dilutes focus and clarity while creating noise and distraction.
- Getting informed and being entertained are two separate things; boring headlines don’t sell papers.
- Will AI replace agents? What will happen to interest rates? How will the commission lawsuits change the industry?
- The reality is that no one knows, and the most probable outcomes are slow, incremental deviations from the current state, not radical changes.
- The least likely events — the possible — generally exist in a reality light on facts and flush with speculation.
- Facts are important; they form a trajectory of likeliness — plotting them over time and triangulating data points can identify likely outcomes.
- The company asserted that because it had success attaching title and escrow services to its sales, it would be able to attach other adjacent services like home loans.
- The story made sense — to those outside of the industry — but in the end, it didn’t work and Opendoor shut down Home Loans. Plausible, yes, but not probable.
- Consider the percentage of homeowners that use a real estate agent to sell their home: even after the introduction of Zillow, Opendoor, and billions of dollars in venture capital pushing alternative models, it remains at a 40-year high.
- “Right now, everyone is turning this ruling into what they want it to be,” said Mike DelPrete, who teaches courses on real estate technology at the University of Colorado Boulder.
- “Some people are saying not much is going to change. Others want the story to be that it’s a seismic shift for the industry. The whole thing is being driven by fear and uncertainty.”
The bottom line: Don’t confuse news with entertainment — news is meant to inform, entertainment is meant to distract.
- Making smart decisions requires cutting through the noise and gathering evidence, pattern matching and distilling insights.
- But it’s easy to get distracted, which is the crux of the DelPrete Probability Paradox: the less likely something is to occur, the more attention it gets.
Mike DelPrete is a strategic adviser and global expert in real estate tech, including Zavvie, an iBuyer offer aggregator. Connect with him on LinkedIn.