Zillow boss has big plans for the company, focusing on home-flipping

July 2, 2019
Share this Post: 

The future of Zillow could be found in Zillow Offers as a house-flipping platform

Every night for five months before the launch of Zillow’s website in February 2006, employees gathered their Dell desktops on Ping-Pong tables, connected them to harness their combined processing power, and strung together extension cords to get them all running. To avoid overloading the circuits, they unplugged the office refrigerator and banned Christmas lights. Then, while most of them slept, this jury-rigged supercomputer analyzed a decade of property records and American housing market data in order to spit out price estimates for 43 million homes.

Rich Barton had created Zillow in December 2004 because he believed technology would revolutionize real estate. Nearly a year into the venture, his efforts to sell homes via digital auction were going nowhere and the four co-founders he had drawn from his last company, Expedia, were nearing the point when they’d need to return to more stable employment.

As the founders tell it, Zillow’s future changed dramatically during a weekend email exchange among colleagues. One participant noted that Google Maps’ satellite view, launched just months earlier, gave a unique, bird’s-eye view of every neighborhood in America. Another wondered if they could put a price on every rooftop they saw. And so the Ping-Pong table project and the Zestimate were born.

The day it went live, Zillow crashed. The founders gathered in the Technology Chief’s office, where the six-foot-tall Barton recalls curling up in a ball on the couch and begging someone to “make the pain stop.” It did. According to Zillow, last year an average of 157 million people visited its sites (including Trulia, StreetEasy and HotPads) each month to view listings and Zestimates on more than 100 million properties. In May, the Web traffic tracker Comscore ranked Zillow Group 24th in total visitors, right below eBay and above LinkedIn. All those visitors allowed Zillow to book $1.3 billion in revenue in 2018, mostly from ads bought by real estate agents.

Today, Zillow has a $9.5 billion market cap and Barton’s stake (the largest held by any individual) is worth $700 million. But not since 2006 has Zillow’s future been less certain. In February, Barton took back the CEO’s job—nine years after having ceded it to Co-Founder Spencer Rascoff, who continues to serve on the board.

Read more here

Join us November 12-15 for the Property Portal Watch Conference Madrid 2019.

899 Limited Tickets

July 2, 2019

Subscribe to our mailing list to get the famous, free Friday newsletter!

News and analysis to help build better online marketplace businesses, in your inbox, every Friday

Related News

Hiring Roundup 26 April
People Roundup: Lamudi Philippines, Private Property

This week's hiring roundup is shorter, but our two stories both come straight from the C-suite.   Lamudi Philippines hires...

Read More
Funding Roundup 26 April
Funding Roundup: Zefir, Jubenial

This week's funding roundup includes another iBuyer that is no longer an iBuyer, and an interesting marketplace for the older...

Read More
Product Roundup 26 April
Product Roundup: Zillow, Dubizzle, Lifull, Homming, Homesearch

The portal wars accelerated in earnest in this week's product roundup, while we've spotted two more "money-focused" updates from Dubizzle...

Read More
Nar Settlement To End Buyer Agent Commissions
Judge Approves $418M NAR Settlement—Buyer Commissions to be Eliminated?

In a major change to the industry, home sellers in the United States will no longer be required to offer...

Read More

Editor's Pick