Where Real Estate Gets Its Dirt

National MLS?

Cameron Paine calls bullshit…

Don’t believe the hype: There is no ‘national MLS’

“If we accept that the role of the MLS is to facilitate a collaborative marketplace of timely, accurate, comprehensive and transparent listing data, how can an MLS legitimately claim to be “national” if it lacks both accuracy (i.e., significant gaps in listing coverage) and comprehensiveness, (i.e., no national listing coverage)? 

Maintaining a high level of data quality and interconnectivity plays a critical role in both data compliance and the contextual placement of listings within the marketplace. The ability of the MLS to understand local market trends and generate accurate market insights, CMAs and statistical data is what makes it far more valuable than a simple ad on a marketing platform. “

Louder, so the people in the back can hear!

CMLS has a new leader, Jessica Edgerton

Council of Multiple Listing Services Names Jessica Edgerton as Chief Executive Officer

In her work with LeadingRE, Edgerton supported a global network of more than 500 brokerages across 70 countries, many of which operate in markets without an MLS system. That perspective gives her a firsthand understanding of the value MLSs create through complete, accurate, and trusted real estate information.

“Through my work with brokerages around the world, I have seen what real estate markets look like when professionals and consumers do not have access to the complete, trusted information an MLS provides,” said Edgerton. “It gives me an even deeper appreciation for the MLS as essential market infrastructure and for the leaders who make that system work every day.”

Interesting choice, and I think ultimately a good one. Her time at NAR and her legal background are certainly a plus. Having worked in the LeadingRE could also help CMLS break through in getting its message across to brokers.

CMLS deserves a leader who will stick up for the hundreds of people who work at MLS organizations across the country. Best wishes to Jessica — the thing I’m most impressed with is that she’s taking on this role in such a crazy environment. We could use a lot more of that chutzpah! God speed!

What Is the MLS, Anyway? 

The Industry Relations Podcast is now available on your favorite podcast player!

Overview

Rob and Greg recap their time at the Signal conference before diving into one of the biggest debates facing organized real estate: what exactly is the MLS supposed to be? The conversation centers on “Pool,” ThousandWatt’s thought experiment for a national home exchange that would compensate listing contributors and charge data users. Rob argues the concept reveals a growing belief that the MLS is primarily a data repository, while Greg sees it as a modernized form of cooperation. From there, the discussion expands into the purpose of MLSs, the difference between cooperation and marketing, portal participation, private listing debates, government intervention, and whether the industry is losing sight of its core mission.

Key Takeaways

  • Rob discusses his new consulting engagement with Compass and why he believes independent opinions remain critical.
  • Highlights from the Signal conference, including the branding lessons behind Liquid Death and ThousandWatt’s “Pool” concept.
  • Rob reveals Pool closely mirrors the Nexus MLS model he previously attempted to build.
  • A debate over whether MLSs are fundamentally data repositories or broker cooperatives.
  • Greg and Rob clash over the relationship between cooperation, compensation, marketing, and listing distribution.
  • Discussion of off-market listings, seller choice, “velvet rope” marketing, and government involvement in real estate policy.
  • Why both hosts believe the industry needs a clearer answer to the question: “What is the MLS?”

Links

1000Watt’s Pool Website

Greg’s ‘Limited Exposure’ Article 

Rob’s Analysis of Connecticut Law 

Compass on Private Listings

Connect with Rob and Greg

Rob’s Website 

Greg’s Website 

Watch us on YouTube

Our Sponsors:

Cotality 

Notorious VIP

The Giant Steps Job Board 

Production and Editing Services by Sunbound Studios

The Last Court of Honor of Troop 319

A couple of weeks ago the message came through. Despite continued efforts, Troop 319 was shutting down and merging with Troop 568. There were various reasons. Four of the feeder packs had disbanded, even Pack 210 where Toby started. Fewer kids, aging demographics, COVID, etc.

Toby wanted to know if we should go to their last meeting. It was a “court of honor,” where Scouts would be recognized, medals handed out and Eagles announced. Since Toby had aged out, neither of us had been to a troop meeting in a couple of years. “Of course,” I said, glad to have a free day between airport visits.

We walked into the cafeteria of the middle school where the troop meetings were held. A few Eagle Scouts from when the troop was formed came. The honor guard was called, the Pledge of Allegiance was recited, hugs were given and received, touching speeches were given, and fathers tried to dry their eyes without anyone noticing. I’d forgotten how much I missed the “civic” nature of these meetings. The laughter, the endless applause, and the inside jokes carried on since 1986, when the troop was formed.

When Toby went on the Philmont trip, a 12-day hike that really is the pinnacle of the Scouting experience, he came back different. More confident, and a bit more sure of himself. He still wears his Philmont belt buckle with pride. At the event he took a photo with a bunch of his friends and the volunteer parents who chaperoned the trip. Good memories.

The Scoutmaster, Todd Jardine, was Toby’s Den leader too, back when he started in kindergarten. A nice bookend.

I was never a Boy Scout myself growing up, but I learned to appreciate the mottos and traditions through the eyes of my son.

One classic slogan is “Do a Good Turn Daily.”

In honor of Troop 319, I’m asking anyone reading this post to try to help someone out today. Big or small, it doesn’t matter.

Troops may fold. Good turns don’t.

#realscoutswearbackpacks

ICE [Sponsor]

The world envies our MLS system. Let’s remember why.

In April, Lucie Fortier wrote a blog that, at the time, felt like a measured observation. Now it reads like a prescient warning.

Her argument was simple. The MLS is the engine room of American real estate. Portals, AI tools, and PropTech platforms run on MLS data. Agents, brokers, loan officers, appraisers and more operate within an ecosystem the MLS makes possible. Without comprehensive cooperation, none of it works.

Anyone following industry news this spring knows that argument was just put through the wringer.

Why the system is worth protecting

The American MLS system is rare. In most countries, real estate data is fragmented, unreliable or unavailable to the average consumer. What exists here is the result of decades of cooperation among professionals who understand that a shared system serves everyone better than a fragmented one.

That’s not a small thing. It’s the foundation that everything else is built on. And it doesn’t maintain itself.

What this moment is about

New tools and platforms are only as good as the data powering them. That data lives in the MLS — and the organizations investing in it are the ones that will matter on the other side of whatever comes next.

Lucie’s full piece is worth your time. Read it here.

Limited exposure, limited how?

Compass chief economist: The off-MLS marketing debate is ignoring 1.4M listings

I’ve known Mike Simonsen for a while, and catch his market update videos often. Here’s his argument in this Inman News piece: nearly 1.4 million homes were withdrawn from the MLS in 2025, which proves sellers already want limited exposure. So Compass didn’t invent off-market marketing. It built a structured version of what agents were quietly doing all along. He even gives it a stat, “days off market,” or DOFF. Love a good acronym and this one is great!

But, here’s the line I keep chewing on:

“What nobody is talking about is the 1.4 million listings that demonstrate how often sellers seek periods of limited exposure during the selling process.”

The word doing all the work is “exposure.” And it’s pulling double duty.

There’s exposure as time, how long a home is visible. And exposure as audience, how many buyers can see it. Withdrawals are a time move. Sellers pull the listing to reset days on market, repaint the kitchen, wait out the holidays, then relaunch. Mike’s own piece calls those windows “total invisibility.” That’s not limited exposure. That’s zero, on a timer.

Compass private listings are an audience move. The home stays for sale. Only a slice of buyers gets to see it.

So he’s collecting time-axis evidence and spending it on an audience-axis product. A withdrawal defers exposure. The seller still lands in front of everyone when it relists. A private listing forecloses it. Plenty of those buyers never see the place at all.

And if 1.4 million sellers really are begging for a pause, the clean fix isn’t a private network. It’s an MLS “coming soon” or hold status that stops the DOM clock while the listing stays wide open to every buyer. That’s a feature your MLS can ship. Funny how the data points there instead.

Sellers may want a pause button, not a velvet rope.

Going dutch with “nora”

MetroList and Lundy Launch “nora,” Ushering in a New Era of Personal AI Assistants

MetroList, the biggest MLS in Northern California, teamed up with Justin Lundy’s crew to launch an AI assistant named “nora“. She’ll read your email, run your calendar, answer MLS rules questions, dig through property data, and help with forms and transactions. The usual personal-assistant wish list, now with an MLS behind it.

Here’s the part that caught my eye:

“nora operates on a wallet-based system powered by Stripe. MetroList-specific features are provided at no charge to MetroList subscribers, while other services such as email reading, calendar management and other advanced task execution functions are micro-transactions to get tasks done.”

So the MLS picks up its tab. Everything else, you’re going dutch.

I think this is the front edge of something. LLMs cost real money to run, and every task nora does burns tokens. The flat per-seat SaaS price is about to get company. Call it usage-based pricing, the AI remix. Load a wallet, spend as you go, top it up when it runs dry. Same energy as the arcade, except the tokens buy task completions. Get used to it, because nora won’t be the last vendor to price this way.

Then there’s the other thing. I haven’t seen a company build real estate business tools and then stroll straight into everyday consumer territory like this. Reading your email and running your calendar is Siri’s job. Alexa’s turf. A vertical real estate tool just signed up to compete with the assistant already living in your phone. Bold.

Credit where it’s due. MetroList has been quietly stacking up Lundy products for a while, and they tend to ship before the rest of the industry finishes its committee meeting. I like that somebody’s running the experiment instead of writing a white paper about it.

Nora looks sharp. Now we find out how agents will respond.

Katrina Romatowski: Rethinking Homeownership for the Next Generation with reSpace

The Listing Bits Podcast is now available on your favorite podcast player!

Overview

Greg Robertson sits down with Katrina Romatowski, founder and CEO of reSpace, to discuss a new approach to housing affordability through co-homeownership. Drawing on nearly three decades in real estate, development, and housing advocacy, Katrina explains how reSpace redesigns homes into private suites with shared common spaces and enables buyers to purchase fractional ownership interests. The conversation explores affordability, homeownership as a wealth-building tool, aging-in-place design, MLS challenges, and the growing need for alternative housing models. 

Key Takeaways

  • Katrina grew up throughout the Pacific Northwest, worked in construction from a young age, and built a career spanning real estate sales, development, and brokerage. 
  • Her real estate company was founded as a social purpose corporation, leading to the creation of a nonprofit focused on housing and mentorship for people exiting incarceration and recovery programs. 
  • The idea for reSpace emerged after selling a small infill home for nearly $1 million and questioning who could realistically afford it. 
  • Inspiration came from fractional ownership models such as Picasso, but Katrina wanted to apply the concept to primary housing rather than luxury vacation homes. 
  • reSpace creates homes with private suites that include ensuite bathrooms, closets, workspace areas, and personal amenities, paired with shared kitchens and living spaces. 
  • Buyers purchase an ownership interest in the property, allowing them to live in high-cost neighborhoods at a price point closer to renting an apartment. 
  • The model is designed to help first-time buyers, retirees, siblings, friends, and other groups gain access to ownership while maintaining independence. 
  • Katrina argues that homeownership remains one of the most important pathways to building middle-class wealth and that affordability challenges are increasingly shutting people out of that opportunity. 
  • A major hurdle for reSpace has been gaining MLS support for fractional ownership listings, despite existing standards that support partial-interest ownership categories. 
  • Current projects include The Grove in Seattle’s Ballard neighborhood and a historic mansion redevelopment in Leschi, with plans to expand through technology and partnerships. 

Links

reSpace

Snapshot by reSpace

Katrina Romatowski on LinkedIn

Links

Sponsors

Aligned Showings — MLS-owned showing software built to simplify scheduling, improve communication, and keep MLS data where it belongs.

Giant Steps Job Board – Built for organized real estate and PropTech, not generic tech bros and recruiters who don’t know what an MLS is.

Production and editing services by:

Sunbound Studios

What Happens When Zillow Stops Playing Nice?

The Industry Relations Podcast is now available on your favorite podcast player!

Overview

Greg revisits his “Poking the Bear” article and argues that the industry may be underestimating what happens if Zillow is pushed into becoming a direct competitor. Using a Nike-versus-Hyatt branding analogy, Greg and Rob debate whether a Zillow brokerage, franchise, or even MLS would be a nightmare scenario or simply the next stage of competition.

The conversation expands into a broader discussion about MLS infrastructure, IDX, cooperation, listing distribution, and whether the industry is protecting outdated systems at the expense of innovation. Rob argues that the industry’s real asset is cooperation, not marketing, while Greg contends that blowing up existing systems creates more risk than reward. The result is one of the podcast’s most philosophical debates about competition, infrastructure, and the future of real estate.

Key Takeaways

  • Greg explains the premise of his “Poking the Bear” article and why he believes the industry should be careful about forcing Zillow into a more direct competitive role.
  • The hosts discuss whether a national Zillow brokerage or franchise would be a serious threat to existing brokerages and brands.
  • Rob argues that direct competition is preferable to the current situation because brokerages know how to compete against other brokerages, franchises, and MLSs.
  • Greg questions whether Compass’s evolution into a larger conglomerate could create opportunities for boutique and independent brokerage models.
  • The discussion shifts to MLS infrastructure, with Rob arguing that cooperation—not marketing—is the true value proposition of the MLS system.
  • Rob and Greg debate whether IDX remains relevant in its current form and whether it should become an opt-in rather than opt-out system.
  • The hosts explore the difference between cooperation data and marketing data, and whether those functions should be separated moving forward.
  • Greg argues that unrestricted competition could create unintended consequences, while Rob maintains that open competition ultimately benefits consumers.
  • The episode closes with a larger conversation about preserving what makes the U.S. real estate market unique while adapting to new competitive realities.

Links

Greg’s Article

Connect with Rob and Greg

Rob’s Website 

Greg’s Website 

Watch us on YouTube

Our Sponsors:

Cotality 

Notorious VIP

The Giant Steps Job Board 

Production and Editing Services by Sunbound Studios

June 7th

This mock up was not approved by Zillow and meant for entertainment purposes only.

Sponsored By ICE