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Part 1: Paperless real estate transaction coming soon
By Glenn Roberts Jr.
Inman News |
Tuesday, November 02, 2004 |
Read this and sign here. Turn the page. Read this and sign here.
Turn the page. Read this and sign here. It's a familiar mantra in real
estate sales.
There are dozens of pages of documents associated with real estate
transactions, and an elaborate web of communications and exchanges of
information between the various players. The end product for consumers
can be a long wait for closing and a weighty stack of documents that
they don't thoroughly read or understand.
Technology is
changing this process, bringing the digital or "paperless" real estate
transaction back in vogue. Big companies, trade groups and
entrepreneurs are investing in technology platforms, back-end systems
and software to automate the real estate transaction, and digging
deeper for change to revolutionize the closing process.
A growing number of companies have built products that
digitize the paperwork and offer more seamless document management
and communications related to real estate transactions. Companies also
are providing consumers with the opportunity to view and review real
estate documents online throughout the transaction. But a truly
paperless real estate transaction, one in which there is never a need
to print out a thick clump of files, is still on the horizon.
After an initial surge in interest and budgets for the development
of transaction management systems during the dot-com boom, several
major efforts failed or were abandoned. A handful of the ventures
survived the fallout. The potential rewards for such "paperless"
systems are great: increase automation and efficiency while
electronically integrating various office functions; streamline
communication and expedite orders for transaction-related services; and
keep consumers posted on the progress of their real estate transaction
at every step.
Clareity Consulting and Communications, a company that provides
services to the real estate information and MLS industries, estimated
in a report last year that about $150 million was invested early-on in
transaction management systems.
"Many of the companies have closed, some sold their assets for
pennies on the dollar, several of the technologies were killed off or
shelved by the acquirer, and a few survived under new ownership," the
report states. Some reasons for the widespread failure: Consumer demand
was overestimated, the early systems lacked robust features, many
platforms were not open to all vendors, and a "viable, sustainable
business model was never proven," the report states.
The surviving technologies have developed into more robust systems,
and a new wave of innovation seeks to evolve these systems and the
industry they serve.
Online Documents, a part of Stewart Information Services Corp. and
Stewart Title and a provider of mortgage documents, is working with
Fannie Mae and other key players in the mortgage industry to develop a
next-generation electronic document standard called eMortgageDocs, a
type of "smart" document that features automatic validation of data in
mortgage documents.
"Boiling it down to its simplest form, it can be read by a computer
as well as a person, and that enables automation of the process," said
Terry Ward, vice president of corporate development for Online
Documents. While professionals currently must print out or view
documents electronically to verify mortgage data and validate the
documents, eMortgageDocs can be scanned by computers to automatically
verify important information, such as mortgage rates and property
addresses.
Also under development is a method for electronically signing
mortgage documents using an electronic pad that registers the signature
via a stylus. Similar systems are already in use among some
package-delivery companies and retail shops.
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Saving trees
There are numerous real estate industry technologies designed to
curb the use of paper in real estate transactions and expedite
communications and document exchange. Some examples:
Product: SureClose
From: Stewart Realty Solutions
What: A transaction management platform for the real estate, closing and mortgage industries
Adoption: System handles about 25,000 documents per day and
has an archive with about 5 million documents. About 670 offices are
using the SureClose platform
Launch: Three years ago
Web site: http://www.sureclose.com/
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Product: g3Direct
From: Guru Networks
What: A transaction management system primarily used by real estate brokers
Adoption: Company has many small brokerage office customers and is now targeting middle to large size companies
Launch: August 2002
Web site: http://www.gurunet.net/
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Product: eMortgageDocs
From: Online Documents
What: An electronic document format that can be read and validated by computers, and can carry an electronic signature
Adoption: In testing/development
Web site: http://www.opendocuments.com/
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Product: First American Transaction Manager
From: First American Residential Group
What: A transaction management platform designed for real estate brokers
Adoption: About 50,000 registered users
Launch: 1999, acquired by First American in 2001
Web site: http://www.firstam.com/ |
While a truly paperless process may be several years away, Ward said
"great strides are being made." Eventually, consumers may be able to
apply digital signatures to loan and other documents without the need
for a physical signature on paper, he said. There is also a need to
develop an electronic "vault" to safeguard important e-documents.
Already, the industry has developed standards for the use of electronic
documents, Ward added, and the company's technology is designed to be
compliant with these standards.
The average residential real estate transaction has about 85-100
pages of documents, Ward said. Electronic documents can empower
consumers, he said. "It gives the borrower the opportunity to go home
the night before closing, open up their (Web) browser and review the
documents," he said. These technologies also offer the opportunity to
speed up the closing process, and to rapidly lock in a mortgage
interest rate."
Smart documents technology is "just in the very earliest stages," he
said, but it has potential to touch a number of industries. "We have
provided the vehicle or the instrument of change. It really postures
the industry to now be able to create the infrastructure that's going
to make this work."
Meanwhile, title insurance giant First American offers one of the
most mature transaction management platforms on the market, which was
launched in 1999 and acquired by First American Residential Group in
2001. Kelly Pantis, vice president of marketing for First American
Residential Group, said flexibility is key for transaction management
technologies. First American offers transaction management and
electronic document technologies for the title, escrow, mortgage and
real estate brokerage and MLS sectors, and "each segment feels like it
was built from them and around them," Pantis said. "It's all very
configurable."
Pantis said that modern transaction management systems have
integrated more and more technologies, so that the very nature of
transaction management platforms may become obsolete once all of the
various electronic systems become seamless. "The more systems we can
connect with then the less anybody actually uses the system," she said.
Chip McAvoy, First American Residential Group |
Chip McAvoy, senior technology officer for First American
Residential Group, said there are about 50,000 registered users for
First American's transaction management systems, which are available as
a Web-based application. The platforms that are facilitating these
transactions are becoming more and more robust and feature-rich,"
McAvoy said.
Pantis said that among the users of the electronic systems are
consumers. The system "makes the consumer feel far more empowered and a
little less stressful. It's a huge customer service win," she said. The
systems also allow real estate brokerages to keep in touch with
consumers even after closing. "It's a great way to keep that 'customer
for life' idea."
McAvoy acknowledged that the adoption curve of transaction
management systems has been slower than the industry anticipated,
though he said many advances have been made and the technology is still
evolving.
A top paperless transaction management platform for the real estate,
closing and mortgage industries is SureClose, which offers online
document management and a CD-ROM with the documents upon closing.
SureClose, launched about three years ago, now accepts about 25,000
documents per day, and has an archive with about 5 million documents,
said Mark Cira, vice president for product development at Stewart
Realty Solutions, a subsidiary of Stewart Title Co. That number grows
by about 500,000 documents a month, he added, and about 670 offices are
using the SureClose platform.
"Adoption is greatest in the title industry simply because they're
more process-oriented," Cira said. "Our customers are very far down the
path of migrating toward paperless workflow."
SureClose uses bar-coding technology for document submission and
automated filing, and users of the system can transmit multiple
documents as a single electronic file. Cira said that Stewart Realty
Solutions has a large market share in paperless transaction systems.
"Where we are today is that consumers can electronically sign
everything except for documents that require notarization," Cira said.
Consumers still have to physically visit the title office at the
time of closing, but instead of signing "30 documents in 100 locations
they are signing once and then clicking many times," he said. "It just
speeds the process quite a bit."
The process "benefits (consumers) in the same way Expedia or
Travelocity benefits them. In as little as two years it will be unheard
of not to provide them with a real-time view of transactions. There is
less stress involved because they're more informed throughout the
process," Cira said. Now that SureClose is a mature system, the focus
has shifted to integrating with other systems, he said.
Ike Broaddus, Guru Networks |
Ike Broaddus, chairman and co-founder of Guru Networks, a real
estate technology company, said that modern transaction management
systems tend to encompass more functions than earlier systems. In
addition to document management, Guru's transaction management systems
can also handle virtual office Web sites, lead management, document
management, commission calculation, and report generation functions.
"What people thought of as transaction management five years ago is
today a tiny part of a major transaction management system. The
language we use in our company: We call it the 'business engine,'
"Broaddus said.
The transaction management industry is still relatively small, he
said, for a lot of reasons. "Nobody has traction in the transaction
management space yet. If you added us altogether, we are in less than
10 percent of the (total) market," he said.
So far there are not a lot of success stories among real estate
companies that have attempted to craft their own systems for digitizing
the transaction process, he said. "I don't know of any mega-company
that has successfully built their own in-house system. Many have spent
millions trying. Most companies don't have the patience. To build a
highly customized software program it takes dozens and dozens of
iterations and feedback.
"I think the real estate industry has had a very hard time learning
that as compared with other industries. (The industry is) light-years
behind because we've always been able to get by on our charm, and we've
been lucky -- the market's been good," he said.
The technology is already there to create a fully electronic,
paperless real estate transaction, Broaddus said, but it will take a
major consortium of industry players, such as the National Association
of Realtors or the Mortgage Bankers Association, before this technology
will be set in motion. "We are still in the infancy of data standards."
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Send tips or a Letter to the Editor to glenn@inman.com or call (510) 658-9252, ext. 137.
Copyright 2004 Inman News
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