Sales In Million Plus: Luxury Housing Market Surges

Luxury-Market

Today’s Prices Compared to Peak [INFOGRAPHIC]

Prices-Since-The-Peak

Nation Home Sales Report

Cool little infographic from KCM

NAR Sales Report

The Cost of the Twelve Days of Christmas [Infographic]

12-Days-of-Christmas-Infographic

The 10 Best Cities in Washington

Which Washington cities have bragging rights as the best in the state? Find out with Movoto’s latest study.

The 10 Best Cities in Washington By Movoto Real Estate

MIT Study on Prices Ending with $9

price tagFound this post from Daniel Scocco on his great site: DailyBlogTips

Did you know that around 60% of all retail prices end with a 9 digit? No one is sure about why the digit 9 in specific, but most marketers and economists know that ending a price with it tends to increase sales.

For those who want empirical evidence, back in 2003 some MIT folks did a quite interesting study around the subject. The basically used a mail-order company that sells women’s clothing, and the priced the same pieces at three different levels: $34, $39 and $44. Care to guess the results?

The $39 price tag outsold the other, by a factor of 15% up to 30% in some cases. If you didn’t get the insight yet, let me re-phrase it: the same product sold more units with a price of $39 then with a price of $34!

The same results were found when they used $44, $49 and $54 price levels, as well as $54, $59 and $54. In other words, the price tag ending with a 9 virtually always outperformed the other price tags, were they higher or smaller.

Here’s the conclusion from the paper:

We have presented three ?eld experiments demonstrating that $9 price endings increase demand but that the effect is context dependent. The effect is stronger for new items that customers have seen less frequently in the past.

Pretty interesting huh? Here’s the link to the PDF if you want to read it in full.

The Benefits of Homeownership

Infographic Benefits Homeownership

Here Comes The Neighborhood: The Spring District

Spring District

How do you go about creating a vibrant, living place where there was none before?
Principles of urban planning say density is the answer—bringing people in to live and work in compact quarters. The more people walking around on a city block, the more viable the economy there, which supports a greater variety of retail and services. But in order to attract this critical mass of people, you have to make them feel like they belong. So not just any density will do.

 

Read all about The Spring District here. Watch the video below.

WRU0305 The Spring District – Lifestyle Video – FINAL from Hey, on Vimeo.

Change in Home Sales By Price Point [INFOGRAPHIC]

From our friends at KCM, data from the National Association of Realtors.

Sales-by-Price-Points