Packy McCormick's latest "Not Boring" essay is up and it's about Opendoor. It's a good follow up to last week's announcement.
Maybe that’s why housing is one of the last major categories that technology has left alone. Sure, companies have tried. Tons of them. The startup graveyard is filled with companies led by entrepreneurs who realized that the way we buy and sell homes sucks, but couldn’t ultimately figure out how to change it. They weren’t thinking big or long-term enough. The companies that have made the biggest impact, like Zillow and Redfin, make it easier to search for houses, but then kick buyers over to agents to go through the offline process, the same way it’s always been done.
This is topic/problem that is near and dear to me because I spent a year of my life working on a startup that initially set out to solve this exact problem. But like countless others, we couldn't figure out how exactly to change things. So we pivoted.
Has Opendoor finally cracked the code? I don't know. But they're on to something. It is, however, worth noting that the company was founded in 2013. And so what is happening today is already 7 years in the making -- and probably longer if you consider the founder's past startups.
Tough problems clearly require time. Money doesn't hurt either.