HomeStars Blog

Friday, December 28, 2007
 

A Merrier Christmas Through the Magic of Service

The point of HomeStars is to come up with ways for homeowners to shorten their time finding good vendors, and to find better, more appropriate vendors. Did you know there is a neoclassical economics term for this? We're "lowering search costs." Because the cost of a good or service isn't just its price, it's the time and money spent researching and finding the appropriate good or service.

According to The Economist's website, that's why "inventions such as the Internet" have been so rapidly embraced by both buyers and sellers.

Fine, all well and good. We're on the same page about this useful Internet thing. :)

The current approach is working - there are thousands of reviews by thousands of consumers of home improvement services currently on the site.

As a user of the site myself, though, I know we can still do a lot better. For example, there are tons of niche queries and sub-categories that are still elusive to searchers. (To use current digital economy-speak, we still need to do an even better job of figuring out how to address the "long tail" of less-frequent, but huge-in-the-aggregate, home improvement conundrums, queries, and needs.)

One way to achieve this scale, amazingly, is to realize that technology doesn't answer all of our problems. Automation just facilitates the exchange of information; it doesn't create it. So we need to come up with even more ways to help people exchange that info. Sometimes that isn't hard, because there are plenty of sellers of services who would be more than eager to tout their availability, given an appropriate platform.

Let's face it: consumers, particularly affluent ones, are doing less and less for themselves these days. I'm not sure when the first artificial Christmas tree was sold, but that time-saving ethos is a slippery slope that affects us all, and I don't care how good the brakes are on your toboggan.

Let's say you want to hire someone to put up your Christmas lights. I know... that still sounds preposterous to some folks, but high standards and high ceilings may mean standing on high ladders in the ice and snow. In other words, it's a bit like window washing... but slightly more dangerous and done in the freezing cold. Not everyone's cup of tea. My buddy's dad, Doug, was notorious for shoveling snow off their roof in his housecoat (at best). There are, for better or for worse, fewer and fewer Dougs around.

Last week I noticed that my neighbors across the street had hired installers (neither named Doug, and neither in a bathrobe) to put up their tasteful Christmas light decoration, across both houses of a shiny new duplex. But if you couldn't ask a neighbor, or wanted to compare vendors, where would you go to find a handyman who'd be willing to string fancy lights in an incredibly busy season? What if you had a really tacky display that you just don't have the energy for anymore? Where to find a contractor who is "tacky-positive"? Right now, you can't find it easily online, even if you're a good sleuth.

To date, HomeStars is also not all that great at helping you find, say, a place that carries fancier Christmas decorations and lights than the usual fare. Do a search for "christmas lights" and you do get a whole whack of companies that sell them (that's because we have a subcategory for it, so it's easier to find). But depending on where you live, there are still very few, or no, reviews of those outlets. It's still early days yet.

OK, and the final example is the concept of the traditional Christmas tree that you want in your living room without spending the time lugging it home (or what if you have no car, live in a condo loft with 14-foot ceilings, and still want a big beautiful fir?), strapping it to the roof, or getting needles all over the back of the wagon. Obviously, like furniture, you can get Xmas trees delivered. Heck, you can probably pay the guy extra to include, and wrestle with, the confounded tree stand. But there's no really quick way to search for this info, and consumers have no great place to ask one another for recommendations. Whoever delivers trees in your area may have built a decent word-of-mouth reputation, but better online reputation takes that up a notch.

There are lots of ways to get info like this together, but it takes time, and a flexible approach (Q&A areas, forums, etc.) to allow the community to build the resource, bit by bit. So that's what's on our plate for 2008!

Whatever festival you celebrate, have a good one. And best wishes for a warm and prosperous New Year... and hey, do it in style!

[The photo above compares what outdoor lights look like when "the guy who does it" is me... with the "pro" job across the street (the full splendor is a bit higher up, on the neighbor gables.)]

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Posted by Andrew Goodman
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Thursday, September 06, 2007
 

When There Is a Difference of Opinion

Welcome to the new HomeStars! That's right, we launched our new-look site at HomeStars.com. One of the most exciting things about it is the soft launch of our Boston site. We'll be adding a bunch of Boston reviews in the next month, and we hope Bostonians like it! In another 35 days, we'll launch a second release with a bunch of minor bugs worked out.

I was just checking out some reviews on a company I had a positive experience with - Downtown Flooring in Toronto. A recent review was lukewarm at best, citing a number of problems and issues. Of course, the job sounded a bit more complex than the one we had done, as it included some staining. In other cases, I had to wonder whether my assessment of a fair price was the same as that reviewer's. And I realize that often many of us have no good standard to compare or assess whether a job was up to "par," whatever par is in a given specialty. For example, the company did not offer "quarter-round to match the floors". Arguably, though, they are not designers. I really don't know if it's very common that a flooring company would match the quarter-round to your floors. We painted our quarter-round.

To deal with this type of uncertainty, it looks like three things will help:

  • Checklists of what to look for to assess the quality of any job, created by experts (and you). Stay tuned for this feature!
  • Company responses have been an important part of HomeStars since inception. That way, we get to hear everyone's side of the story. Sometimes, it leads to further followup from the vendor.
  • To deepen the discussion, we will of course be launching a forum section so homeowners can debate, confer, and learn more about specific issues. (Coming soon, but not before our second site release in early October.) Our Boston area community will be led by our new team member, Melanie Zoltan. Welcome aboard Melanie!

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Posted by Andrew Goodman
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Friday, November 03, 2006
 

HomeStars Blog is Rolling

Hi all, I'm Andrew Goodman, one of the early team members of HomeStars, a website founded by Nancy Peterson to help homeowners sift through the good, the bad, and the ugly of home improvement contractors and retailers. There are already thousands of reviews on the site, and more are being added every day. We've had great media mentions (thanks!) and have met hundreds of homeowners at recent local home shows.

But we're only getting warmed up.

As this small team has grown together, we've learned a lot about the exploding interest in consumer reviews and "peering and sharing" online as people empower themselves to make smarter purchases - and sometimes get to know one another in the process. (What d'yall think? Should HomeStars have a Meetup type event in Toronto for frequent users of the site, in fall 2007?)

For the time being, we'll just be jotting down little notes about the progress of the company here on the blog. Longer term the site will be rolling out North America wide and will encompass more collaborative user features, user Q&A, and so forth. So we hope our pithy little comments here will be drowned out by a loud chatter of "homeowner empowerment".

A running joke here at HomeStars seems to be my title, as I've been helping Nancy with strategy in a range of areas. It was Web Strategist, the Search Engine Guy, Chief Traffic Officer for awhile as I decided we'd get nowhere if nobody came to the site, and now, I would like to call myself Chief Content Producer or VP, Content. Of course, I don't produce the content, users do, in collaboration with local city-based content "producers" who will be meeting, greeting, sharing, and encouraging homeowners. (Can I say we're going to be like Yelp! for grownups?)

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Posted by Nancy Peterson
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