Building a comprehensive website is one of the most critical tasks for any home builder. Most buyers begin searching for a new home online, and their decision to purchase occurs long before they step inside a sales center.
Buyers want most of their questions to be answered during a website visit, experts agree. Not everyone has the time or patience for a 2 p.m. showroom visit on a Wednesday afternoon.
But what are customers looking for on a builderâs website? Trust, transparency, and a wealth of information thatâs easily navigated, especially on mobile, where 80% of customers are conducting their research.
Greg Bray of Blue Tangerine, Meredith Oliver of Meredith Communications, and Livablâs Steven Greco and Karyn Bonder go beyond their International Buildersâ Show panel discussion at the end of February to share website must-haves for home builders.
Trust and the Emotional Connection
Trust comes from creating an emotional connection, says Bray, president and co-owner of digital marketing consultancy Blue Tangerine.
âBefore the customer even has a conversation with the builder, they are researching the builder online,â he says. âThe builder needs testimonials, galleries, maps, and so much more. There needs to be a personal connection. Builders need to demonstrate they arenât a faceless company.â
Bray says a critical factor in building trust goes into the simple quality and design of the website.
âIf itâs ugly, you lose trust. An ugly website has nothing to do with building a home, yet we judge that way,â he adds. âIâm not a psychologist, but we make decisions so quickly. You may not lose every customer with an ugly website, but they can move on to other sites.â
A Testimonial Goes a Long Way
Clients also build trust and an emotional connection from the inclusion of testimonials. Reading and viewing firsthand experiences from other buyers helps website visitors gain a clearer picture of what a builder has to offer and the quality of its customer service.
âFrom a testimony standpoint, people trust online reviews more than they used to,â Bray says. âVideo testimonials connect in a much better way because they are harder to fake.â
Testimonials can also come from happy clients showing off their new homes via social media. Builders should always encourage buyers to tag them in their posts for that extra boost.
âSocial does connect with thatâyouâre looking to provide social proof,â Bray says. âFacebook can be a place to collect the reviews when a community comes inâhave people showcasing their brand-new house. Existing customers are excited and happy, and you can get that conversation connected back to you. Thatâs powerful. Itâs not for a sale tomorrow, but youâre planting seeds.â
Testimonials add another layer of texture to the online search, notes Oliver, president of Meredith Communications.
âYou’ve answered the basic questions on your website,â she says. âThen the buyer is going to want to know about the builder. Thatâs where social proof testimonial reviews come in and give you the credibility you need. They bolster the reputation that gets you the leadâthe phone call, the email, the text message.â
Maps Point the Way
It doesnât matter to the buyer if the house is perfectâif itâs not in the right place for that person or family, they wonât consider it.
Greco, vice president of sales for Livabl, says things have come a long way from the old days, when a physical map would be the key focus of a showroom.
âYouâd walk into the sales center environment, and somewhere in the middle of the room, there would be a table with an island,â he says. âThere would be a site map, a static map, nothing electronic. Those builders with a little bit more money to spend might populate the lots with monopoly houses.â
Livabl provides builders with interactive maps that do more than just show where a house is located.
âThe demand is far beyond the information we saw in the sales centers,â Greco explains. âIt has moved to the website because buyers have become more tech-savvy than ever. The consumer now demands that the builder provide as much information as possible so buyers can make educated decisions and prequalify themselves.â
Interactive Floor Plans
Interactive floor plans are another way buyers connect emotionally during a website visit. What initially begins as daydreaming can become legitimate questions looking to be answered via an interactive floor plan. âCan this bedroom serve as an office?â âWill my truck fit in this garage?â
âWhen people start spending time on a builderâs website, they build a connection, and itâs harder for them to go on to the next house,â Bray says. âItâs a powerful tool that most builders still arenât fully taking advantage of that is readily available and affordable. There are other options that are more expensive, like augmented reality, but interactive floor plans also have a lot of power to create connection.â
Sites such as Livabl give builders an edge by providing customers with the interactive floor plans they seek and the information that can help them close with buyers.
âLivablâs virtual products are incredible because our interactive site maps, floor plans, and virtual tours are extremely detailed,â Greco says. âOur solutions are innovative because of the ability to drill down to that lot and then thumb through the different plans.â
Self Tours
Data shows that self tours encourage buyers to take the plunge, because itâs another way for them to gain information on a new home in a low-stress environment on their own time.
Tom Nelson co-founded UTour, a leader in unattended access tours. He explains how his research led to the value of self-guided exploration for new homes.
âHome builders get about 30% to 40% of their leads to schedule an appointment from the phone calls, form submissions from the website, and digital format leads,â Nelson says. âBut what happens to the other 60%? Thatâs what we were trying to figure out.â
âThey told us, âItâs not that I never want to talk to a salesperson. I don’t want to talk to them during the first visit if I liked the home.â These people were equating the new-home sales appointment to a timeshare appointment where they would get locked into an hour and sit through a hard sales pitch. And they just didnât want to do that. They just wanted to see if the home looks as good in person as online. They wanted convenience. They didnât want the hard sell. If they liked what they saw, they were ready to talk to a builder.â
It may seem odd for some builders to encourage self-touring while still employing salespeople in their centers. However, Nelson says thereâs room for both to flourish.
âWe know that staffing new-home salespeople is becoming more of a challenge because itâs getting harder to find people to work the weekends,â he adds. âThere are also issues when builders are dealing with close-out communities. Putting a salesperson in that model home costs a lot of money when theyâre down to three or four homes left to sell.â
Taking Care of the Back End
Itâs easy for a builder to get caught up in dynamic photos and glamorous drone footage for its website. But if its data isnât consistently maintained, it could be losing customers.
âOne of the biggest obstacles isnât very sexyâitâs data management,â Bray says. âThe product online must be completely accurate. The home canât be sold last week or two weeks out of date. It sounds simple, but it is not where most builders spend their effort. The same goes for bad and outdated information. Most current blogs are three years old, making the site look neglected.â
Bonder, vice president of business development builder sales and marketing for Livabl, says a lack of updated information can easily cost a builder a sale.
âI think about maybe 10 to 15 years ago in this industry, if a consumer didnât see pricing or didnât see availability, they would contact the builder directly,â she says. âBut weâre seeing that itâs trending away from that. Now, if consumers canât access the data they want to know, they will rule the builder out as an option.â
Ensuring your site can provide data wherever it is needed is important, something that can be achieved through the proper use and implementation of APIs (computer scripts that allow different programs to speak to each other and share data).
âThe more accurate and timely information on the builderâs website is important because that will translate onto listing sites, especially with an API type of system, as opposed to just a traditional data feed system,â she says. âThe closer they can work together, the faster things move forward, and then the more information you give to the consumer. If youâre doing that on your website, it will translate out to other listings sites. Cohesiveness is essential.â
Update Early, Update Often
Builders must update their sites daily because few things turn a buyer off quicker than a broken link or stale sales maps.
âItâs a struggle,â Oliver says. âIt is not a lack of motivation. Itâs still a lean staff and business model. Thereâs typically a marketing person that is spread way too thin. Frankly, many builders are still investing in and building sites with partners that lock them into a site difficult for the builder to update and manage on their website.â
She adds, âI feel that the builder needs to find a marketing partner that allows them to be the primary owner and driver of their website. It is not my website; it is your website. If you get busy, of course, we are here for you. And we will take care of it for you. But we encourage and direct builders to get in there and take ownership of this themselves.â
Bonder explains builders can help themselves by hiring staff specifically focused on website maintenance.
âI think builders should be hiring for those positions so that someone can dedicate the right amount of time to making sure that there are daily updates,â she says. âItâs that important. We just have a habit of not sharing data, keeping data close to our chest. Itâs not doing us any good as an industry anymore. The more accurate your data on the website is, the better it is for the consumers. Also, sharing that data out where consumers are going to be coming in front of your homes is going to get you more consumer eyeballs.â
Itâs also important to be able to respond to queries quickly, something internal staffing facilitates.
âThe other piece of that is making sure that you can respond very promptly to any requests. Make sure you staff those important positions or make your homes available outside of the typical 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. hours because people are shopping at all points of the day and night,â Bonder says.
âWe just live in that almost immediate gratification on the consumer side,â she adds. âWhat does that look like in home building? We canât deliver the home immediately, but we can deliver the information immediately. And I think thatâs todayâs expectation, and itâs not going anywhere. Itâs going to continue to move in that direction. I know some builders are focusing on being able to buy the home online. I donât know if thatâs as critical right now. I think we need to focus on content and responsiveness right now.â
Closing the Deal
The move to share so much information with buyers before even speaking with a salesperson seems shortsighted to some builders. They believe the personal touch and gatekeeping of the assets is still the way to gain sales.
âMany builders are still old school,â Greco says. âThey believe that the conversation about what homesites are available, which ones are sold, and the square footage of the lotâthey think thatâs a conversation that should happen between the buyer and the seller. In other words, they expect the buyer to come down to the sales center and engage with a salesperson to have that conversation. That is not how buyers consume today. Buyers want all the information, and the builder to be as transparent as possible. Builders must understand that once buyers have all the information, by the time they come into the sales center, theyâre 90% sold.â
How far are buyers from being able to put an online deposit on a home? Greco says he thinks itâs sooner than might be suspected.
âThe trend will continue to evolve in that direction,â he says. âAlthough 80% still visit the physical on-site model, 90% of the decision to buy there and a particular house has already been made online. I donât think weâre far from when a buyer might buy completely online. Thatâs because the visuals are becoming so sophisticated that the consumer is comfortable making the purchasing decision and will put a deposit down via credit card online.â