For Sale by Owner - Home Office
- Industry Trend or Event - Statistical Data Included
by Lisa Roberts
from findarticles.com
Has your burgeoning business recently sent you on a house
hunt? Probably not. According to a National Association of
Realtors (NAR) survey, of the 5.2 million homes purchased
in 1999, just 1 percent were bought with a home office foremost
in mind.
What NAR's survey doesn't reflect, however, are the subtle
ways technology and the Internet are affecting both what buyers
want and the way houses are bought and sold. According to
Paige Slyman of Atlanta-based Re/Max, conversations about
"where to put the computer" have become as commonplace
as "where to put the TV." And Blanche Evans, editor
of the online trade publication "Realty Times" adds
that PCs have become such a fixture in everyday life that
it's more like "where to put the kitchen sink."
Other surveys also reflect changing attitudes. For instance,
Better Homes and Gardens recently asked readers what home
buyers really want. Results in hand, the magazine teamed up
with a Memphis architectural firm and a North Carolina builder
to create what it calls the Blueprint 2000 show house. In
this new dream house, flex space--the new buzzword for that
extra room--is strategically placed to the left, off the front
hall entrance. This way, if you use the room for a home business,
clients won't have to walk through the house.
Realtors aren't the only ones following the home office boom.
A recent survey conducted by Kay Hudson, founder of the American
Builders Network Inc., or ABN (www.americanbuilders.com)--an
Internet portal that matches home builders with buyers--found
that 86.6 percent of builders say their clients routinely
request extra phone and cable jacks for their PCs. "Computers
are like members of the family--with lots of consideration
made for their comfort and convenience" explains Hudson.
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