So we've:
- Created a crawler that reads through estate agents websites to find homes for sale
- Parses that through a series of LLMs and other models to understand each home in depth (e.g. floor type, location, total sqft)
- Parses every photo through an embeddings vector space so that people can search for whatever they want.
Check it out: https://jitty.com
Currently only for home sales (not rentals), and only in the UK.
Some examples:
- "Beautiful church conversions up to £1m" https://jitty.com/for-sale/price-up-to-1000000-gbp/detached-...
- "Floor to ceiling libraries with a ladder" https://jitty.com/for-sale/look-for-floor_to_ceiling_librari...
- "Home in london, under £1m, with big beautiful windows" https://jitty.com/for-sale/london/price-up-to-1000000-gbp/de...
- "Bathtubs with an epic view" https://jitty.com/for-sale/look-for-bathtubs_with_an_epic_vi...
Be careful with the real estate industry
They then use their own “special” algorithms to give their price estimate based on “relevant” factors by what you are describing.
Your real issue is that the agents putting these homes on the market have a financial stake in it selling, and own copyright to all the pictures and descriptions of their listings. So you have more liability if you are scraping their info.
Another issue is who is the target audience for this? Most serious homebuyers are going to use an agent or a trusted partner for a transaction, and are not excited about compounding layers of hurdles to purchase a home
I am a residential real estate appraiser in the US and real estate technologist, which is why I bring up these points.
We’re not looking to display anything an estate agent doesn’t want us to - agents tell us they’re very happy for us to serve as an advertising channel. And we’d immediately action any sort of take down request.
Tho if it works as free advertisement on either side, that’s a win-win.
Does that mean it excludes most of the results from "Floor to ceiling libraries without a ladder"?
You know, if I'm buying a house, I think I can supply my own ladder separately...
Less pedantically, what I'm trying to say is: are you really sure these are the kinds of searches that home buyers are really looking for? "Home in london, under £1m, with big beautiful windows" - I suspect that most London buyers are going to care an awful lot about where in London the house is, a city-wide search isn't going to be useful to most. Maybe your functionality (as presented) won't inspire actual buyers.
Speaking of which, that might be a way to improve it - combine with location & mapping data to figure out nearby transport, services, schools, etc...
That said, from speaking to a lot of London buyers, people are often more flexible on location than you’d expect. The real criteria tend to look more like: “3-bed house under £700k, 30 min commute from [office], near a park, low crime, good schools” rather than “3-bed in Hackney.” Basically along the lines of the location / mapping data you're suggesting.
We’ve already built travel-time search and plan to layer in more of that other 'services' style data in the next few months.
Beautiful site, well done! I love the idea. I'm based in the US.
That said, we do crawl responsibly i.e. we use reasonable request delays, respect rate limits etc. We want agents to like us, ultimately, and blowing up their servers doesn't help with that. If an agent prefers opt-out, we always honour it.
I think what you're saying is there's that there’s deeper pain further down the value chain? If so, agreed. We think there’s an opportunity to solve some of that, and that building a better product / search experience at the top of the funnel makes it easier to fix problems later in the journey.
If I were you, I quickly package your website for an acquisition by Zoopla and Rightmove.
Future is bright but they dont want you to succeed and may restort to costly litigation, just to stifle you a bit while they get their similar "act" together.
Quick sale and use that proceeds to move on you becoming the next hot acquisition target.
I know it's hard to figure out time depending on your transportation but at least that would not give me search results from the other side of the country.
I want AI that can scrape shop websites for attributes that people commonly search for, such as size and color, etc., but also shipping methods, shipping costs, etc. I think this would be trivial for an LLM. For me the scope should be bigger than just used clothes. I prefer new clothes (but I wear them until the end). And the system should be web-wide, not just selected shops.
And then I want a basic filtering system that allows me to quickly find what I need by checking some boxes.
It sounds so simple ...
also there are no houses for Cheshire on your site. replication steps: type cheshire in the search bar and click the suggestion (Cheshire, UK) = 0 results.
What LLM’s are you using ?
And how is this working “Parses every photo through an embeddings vector space so that people can search for whatever they want”
Thank you
Then there’s a bit of ranking and scoring magic to build a results set.
Welsh is extreme.
Also what are your plans for monetizing, if any?
First time I've built with Hotwire, I'm not a front end eng by trade, but loved the devex.