Inman

Your cheat sheet to the Zillow-Trulia deal

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We awaken today to a world where Trulia is owned by the newly named Zillow Group. Brokers and agents need to make quick sense of what the closing Zillow’s acquisition of Trulia means for the immediate and ongoing future. To help you toward that end, here is a cheat sheet covering deal structure, what it means for the two brands, and sharing insights about how you should react to the news. Disclosure: I was a Trulia employee for more than eight years; these views are based on my own experience and assumptions. (I was never in any capacity involved in the deal talks, nor do I have any knowledge about Zillow’s or Trulia’s future plans.)

Deal structure

The Zillow-Trulia deal is an acquisition via a “stock-for-stock” deal. At deal, Trulia stock (TRLA) converted to Zillow (Z) stock, and the Zillow Group was created. Trulia stock is converted at a predetermined price of 44 percent of Z’s price on the day of close — yesterday.

In the scenario proposed by Z in the offer to acquire TRLA, the brands will maintain their individual brand identities. TRLA stock owners will own north of 30 percent of Z, and Trulia’s co-founder and former CEO, Pete Flint, will join the board of the holding company along with one other Trulia board member.

What this means for Trulia and Zillow

Insights for the future

Where should you focus?

Focus on your role in the real estate ecosystem — helping consumers achieve their real estate dreams and goals. Train yourself to be responsive to consumer demands and be a real market expert who helps consumers make sense of the data coming at them from all directions.

Let the large portals continue their battle for metrics like page views, search engine optimization rankings and average revenue per user. You need to double your focus on what actually matters to your business: showings, offers and closed transactions. Your only concern is whether the portals are working for you as an input into your marketing machine. Your clients couldn’t care less about how the portals are affecting the real estate industry.

All your consumer cares about is achieving a homeownership goal. Consumers need to understand their local market conditions, mortgage rates and their home’s value. Focus on delivering and exceeding consumer expectations, and your business will continue to prosper.

And if a consumer asks you what the Zillow-Trulia deal means, you can tell them: “Business as usual, but people on Wall Street made a lot of money. Now let’s find you a house!”

Pierre Calzadilla is the director of strategic partnerships at RealScout.

Email Pierre Calzadilla.