Back to NetMore Guide

Property Analyzers

Configure your public property analyzer pages

Use the Property Analyzers page to tune CRE and Residential page copy, address requirements, optional sections, default assumptions, and preview links.

Product Setup5 min read

What moved to the Property Analyzers page

Property analyzer copy and default assumptions now live on the Property Analyzers page instead of being mixed into Account setup. Use the CRE/Residential selector to configure each public property analyzer independently.

Account stays focused on your public profile and contact card. Assets stays focused on QR destinations and downloadable creative. Property Analyzers is where you tune what sellers see when they open the property analyzer itself.

The Property Analyzers page controls the seller-facing page copy, optional sections, address requirement, and starting assumptions for each property analyzer.

Public page content

The hero headline is split into an opening, highlighted phrase, and ending so you can keep the main hook readable while emphasizing the strongest number or promise. You can also update the body copy, property analyzer button text, hero image file, and optional seller-facing sections.

The current default hook is designed around the idea of helping sellers see how they could walk away with 30-50% more without raising the price. Keep custom edits clear, specific, and easy to understand.

  • Require address controls whether a verified property address is needed before the breakdown is created.
  • Show Traditional vs Creative overlay controls the hero image comparison cards.
  • Preview block controls the live result preview under the inputs. When address capture is required, the preview remains visible but key values stay masked until the verified address is saved.
  • Show horizontal agent card controls the Presented by contact card under the live estimate.
  • Show Breakdown Includes controls the icon row that explains what the full breakdown contains.

Preview before saving

The preview frame on the Property Analyzers page reflects unsaved draft changes to copy, toggles, CTA text, address requirement, and default assumptions. This lets you check the public page before committing the changes.

The View live property analyzer action still opens the saved public page. Use the preview for drafts, then save when the page is ready for sellers.

Default assumptions

Defaults set the starting point for new property analyzer sessions. They should reflect the kinds of conversations you expect to have, while still letting sellers and agents adjust the numbers.

Residential defaults cover estimated home value, mortgage payoff, buyer down payment, interest rate, term, amortization, commission, and closing costs. CRE defaults cover sale price, annual NOI, cap rate, payoff, down payment, costs, concessions, creative financing interest, loan term, and amortization.

  • CRE sale price supports values up to $100M.
  • CRE annual NOI supports values up to $10M.
  • Large CRE money sliders use a segmented scale so common lower values remain easier to adjust while still allowing high-value deals.

What sellers see from these settings

The public property analyzer can show a live results section before the full breakdown. That section now explains the projected difference, monthly creative financing income, total interest earned, and term.

The full breakdown keeps the address available in the header when present, and editable scenarios can expand that address control from the breakdown header. Address ZIP data is derived from the verified Google address metadata instead of being shown as a separate public helper line.

Use clear seller-facing language

Shorter, concrete wording usually works better than technical phrasing. The strongest property analyzer pages explain the tradeoff: cash now compared with projected income, interest, and total received over time.

Educational use only

NetMore provides property analyzer scenarios and educational resources. It does not provide legal, tax, financial, lending, securities, or real estate advice. Deal terms should be reviewed with qualified professionals before they are used in a transaction.

Related guides