Republished with permission from Mike DelPrete

If you believe everything you read in the media, you could be excused for thinking the U.K.-based online real estate agency Purplebricks is a company in crisis. The stock price is significantly down from the highs of last year, the U.S. and U.K. CEOs are out, and revenue guidance has been repeatedly downgraded.

Purplebricks faced a rocky international expansion, especially in the U.S. In a span of nine months, it quietly raised prices, completely pivoted its fee model, and then parted ways with its U.S. chief executive.

During the same period, it lowered future revenue expectations not once but twice, down from total group revenues of £185 million to £140 million.

But like all irrational systems, the stock market trades not only on reality, but the perception of reality. While Purplebricks’ stock has faced a turbulent three years, its underlying revenue has consistently grown by impressive margins.

The sharp rise in 2017 was driven by unrealistic optimism for international expansion, on the back of 100 percent growth in the U.K.

In 2018, it was clear that international markets were a tough nut to crack, while U.K growth slowed considerably.

Still strong in the U.K.

As I wrote in July 2018, Purplebricks’ U.K. business model works, it makes money, and — at scale — is profitable.

It’s a mistake to confuse Purplebricks’ stock price with its overall success. The only challenge facing the U.K. business is growth, which is clearly slowing down as the company saturates the market. All online agents are not doomed to failure because of some fundamental flaw.

Market share can only get so high. In November 2018, I was quoted in the Financial Times saying, “I rolled my eyes when analysts were talking about 20 [percent], 25 percent market share [for digital leaders].” And it’s true.

Depending on the source, Purplebricks’ U.K. market share is anywhere from 3.2 percent to 4.5 percent.

What’s the problem in the US?

The U.S challenge is simple: Purplebricks’ massive marketing spend is not generating enough customers.

The company recently pivoted its business model in the U.S., from an upfront fixed fee (paid regardless of the home selling), to a success fee paid only when a home sells — both at a discount. This move brings Purplebricks squarely in line with the traditional industry it was attempting to disrupt. The proposition is now also identical to Redfin.

In December of 2018, I estimated Purplebricks generated between 1,200 and 1,400 new listings over the preceding six-month period. During that same time, Redfin reported around 22,000 closed transactions.

Also during that period, Purplebricks spent over $20 million in marketing, compared to Redfin’s $16 million. The result is a customer acquisition cost of $15,000 for Purplebricks, compared to $730 for Redfin.

Strategic implications

Purplebricks is still dangerous: It has deep pockets, a willingness to spend and the self-awareness to pivot when things aren’t working. I wouldn’t count it out of the U.S. quite yet.

The biggest implication, however, could be the massive amount of money being spent on marketing by disruptive players (over $100 million between Purplebricks and Redfin alone in 2019). And what’s the message of that marketing? Traditional agents are expensive; we offer the same service at a discount; use us instead.

Expand the scope to iBuyers like Opendoor and Zillow and the tens-of-millions they are spending on marketing. What’s the message? Traditional sales are complicated and confusing — use us instead.

Disruptive companies are spending hundreds-of-millions of dollars on TV commercials, radio ads and online advertising that hammers home a clear message to consumers: a credible alternative to traditional real estate.

Now, more than ever before, consumers are being bombarded with advertising offering them a choice. The industry might not change overnight, but consumers will be asking more and more questions.

Mike DelPrete is a strategic adviser and global expert in real estate tech. Connect with him on LinkedIn.

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