Every home you've zeroed lives here, side by side, in a six-column flow from Inbox to Shortlist. The advisor sorts them as it learns; you drag any card to set it straight. Each card carries a verdict, who placed it, and one question the advisor is asking you right now.
Think of it as a hiring pipeline, but for houses. A home enters at Inbox the instant it's zeroed, the advisor writes its read, and you move it rightward as it earns your interest — or pass it. Two hands fill this board: your advisor (it zeroes homes for you) and you (homes you star on Zillow). Every card says which.
The quiet magic is the pinned ask at the bottom of a card — the advisor asking you one good question (a yes/no, a this-or-that, a pick-a-few). Your answers teach it, and the board re-sorts on its next pass.
Real column order, real card anatomy, real headlines — lifted from the live /board.
Honest price in the heart of town — single-level, owned water. Your no-stairs ask, met.
An honest price, finally — walkable, near the river.
A genuine cabin, an optimistic price.
Owned water, honest price — the one to beat.
An honest price in the heart of town. Single-level brick ranch on three flat lots — your no-stairs ask, met — with owned irrigation water that actually conveys. The catch: it's on septic, and the roof is showing its age.
Are six columns the right number, or too many? Is the advisor's one-question-per-card the right amount of nudging, or too chatty? Should "Passed" be hidden by default? Fork this page and try a different column set or a different ask.