Is Innovative Interactivity the Wave of the Future For Luxury Real Estate Marketing?

Is Innovative Interactivity the Wave of the Future For Luxury Real Estate Marketing?


Recently, a 3D floor plan company was called to your attention that takes virtual tours to a new level. As former commercial real estate brokers we appreciate the necessity to help clients visualize how their a workplace will set down. Space planners offer renderings with elevations to accompany floor plans which help the visualization process, marginally. For major tenants they build 3D models which work superior. However, these are expensive to produce. So, 3D web graphics may be exactly the ticket. But, will this work when marketing luxury real estate property?

Perhaps, in case a buyer of a luxury condo needs to compare floor plans this may be helpful. Or, possibly an additional home buyer from the outside of the market place could save a visit when you're able to better visualize the views from certain rooms. Or, maybe it would useful to understand the potential of remodeling, and the attributes of removing certain walls to rework the flow of rooms. 

The old important thing questions that luxury real estate professionals must ask about the new wave of innovative interactivity still apply: 

Will this new technology assist me have more listings and then sell more homes?

Will buying fraxel treatments give me a real competitive advantage?

Is this the subsequent fad, or perhaps 3D here to stay?

To help answer these questions,  examine The Watch Avenue that is supposedly a response for the glut of luxury watch brands along with their ubiquitous imitators that sell for pennies for the dollars. It is supposed to have been a 3D interactive shopping experience set in Paris. 

In addition to entering and stopping in boutiques including Hublot, Corum, Vacheron Constantin, Chanel, below are a few with the other features of The Watch Avenue:

 An attractive woman looks like your shopping guide who foretells you and follows you when you explore the timepiece boutiques and  "stroll" down First and Second Avenue.

You can stop to the theatre and watch a movie of a watch

You can go to the bookstore and focus books about watches

You can go for the kiosk and see recent magazines about watches.

homes for sale thornton can visit a museum hosted by TAG Heuer

You can visit an overall information center

There is even a watch making school to understand the art of making fine timepieces

In your estimation is that this the future of shopping? Is this not able to luxury real estate property marketing?

Ironically, there's a billboard on The Watch Avenue that states, "Fake watches are for fake people-buy real". Isn't this whole site virtual reality?

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