Professional Builder
Recently translated into the book Why We Buy: The Science of Shopping, Underhill’s behavior data are a treasure trove of do’s and don’ts. Don’t put your best product near the front door. Most people walk right past it. Do supply plenty of chairs. Buyers are often accompanied by children and spouses who are less impatient while seated. Do put your best products to the right of the entrance. Most shoppers, for some reason, turn right upon entry.
But Underhill’s cultlike following extends beyond retailers and consumer products to developers such as The Rouse Co. and several large builders. He is a frequent speaker at major home building events, and his grasp of the central issues facing home building customers is well-known. It partly stands to reason. Underhill was a land planner before launching the forerunner to his consulting firm, Envirosell, in 1979.
He was among the first to spot that a growing number of households now require two master suites to accommodate nontraditional families. These include moms and kids living with parents, and recent immigrants who culturally prefer extended families under one roof. He is also an ardent supporter of the trend to market lifestyle over the features and benefits of specific homes.
“People coming into a metro area are much more focused on the way they will live rather than looking for a specific property,” Underhill says. “They may come in asking for a New Urbanist community, something that has mixed uses and is walkable.”
Underhill says that builders generally seek his advice in four areas:
“If you go to most selling zones, you can sit down and write out between five and 10 scenarios that cover 70% of the customers walking through the door,” Underhill notes.
“If I am selling a home in Iowa City and in Pacific Palisades, the Net is going to play very different roles,” he explains. “While in both cases buyers will use the Internet to pre-shop, that pre-shopping will be different in a large city and a small university town.”
![]() |
| “Builders who do not pay attention to the needs of new and different family considerations operate at their own peril.” |
Underhill was also one of the first to talk about using the Net in an “integrated marketing experience.”
“You have print, models and the Net, all of which will hopefully work together,” he explains. “Someone may look at the real estate section, and that drives them to the Net. Others may go to your demo, and rather than driving back, use the Net for their second or third visit or to schedule an appointment.”
He also sees a big role for the Net in meeting the needs of a growing relocation market. A large developer with both rental and for-sale properties could join or start a national real estate network and structure a Net-based package that allows frequent movers to rent a luxury apartment for six months with a lease cancel-able on 30 or 45 days’ notice.
Deep consideration of the needs of relocaters and other growing niche groups will be key for builders in the years ahead, Underhill summarizes. Targeted design refinements will often be the correct response.
“The design of most home selling environments is for a perfect nuclear family,” he says. “Builders who do not pay attention to the needs of a host of new and different family considerations operate at their own peril.”
© 2009, Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All Rights Reserved.