Scottsdale’s luxury real estate market is undergoing a clear change in what drives buyer decisions. Location and lifestyle now outweigh traditional measures like square footage or price pe...
The MLS Is at a Crossroads. Most Agents Haven't Noticed Yet


Mark Gordon chairs the Insight Advisory Committee for the Colorado Association of Realtors and is careful about what he says publicly from that role. Some of what the committee is working through has not yet been released. What he is willing to share is his read as a candidate for CAR President and practitioner who tracks where the industry is heading, not just where it is today.
His assessment is direct: the MLS is going through a period of genuine uncertainty, and not enough people in organized real estate are taking it seriously enough.
Two Pressures, One Institution
The NAR settlement changed the relationship between the MLS and how buyer broker compensation is communicated and negotiated. That single shift has downstream effects that are still unfolding. MLSs across the country are now confronting a question they have not had to seriously ask in a long time: what exactly is the value they provide to subscribers, and is that value clear enough to keep people paying for it?
At the same time, significant consolidation is happening at the brokerage level. As larger networks absorb more market share and build their own proprietary data infrastructure, the MLS’s traditional role as the neutral clearinghouse for listing and market data is being tested. The question of who controls the data has become one of the more consequential structural issues in residential real estate. Data is the currency, and the fight over who gets to distribute it matters enormously.
The days-on-market debate is a useful example of how these tensions play out in practice. On the surface it looks like a technical question about how listings are categorized and how long a property’s market history gets reported. Underneath, it is a question about transparency: what buyers are told, what sellers can obscure, and who benefits from each version of the answer. That is not a technical issue. It is a political one, playing out in MLS boardrooms right now.
The Window for Proactive Engagement Is Narrowing
Gordon has been watching these dynamics from multiple vantage points simultaneously: as a practitioner in Vail working in a market where data integrity directly affects buyer confidence, as a committee chair within the Colorado Association of Realtors, and as a candidate for President-Elect of that organization. Each role gives him a different angle on the same underlying question, which is whether organized real estate is moving fast enough to shape the new rules before the new rules get shaped for it.
The agents best positioned for what comes next, in Gordon’s view, will be those who understood these structural shifts early. Not because they predicted the outcome correctly, but because they were paying attention when most of their peers were not. That kind of early attention is what he is trying to build into his own practice and into the work he does within the association.
The window for proactive engagement on these issues is narrowing. Gordon frames this not as alarmism, but as the pace at which these things tend to move once they start moving.
Mark Gordon is a broker with Christiania Realty in Vail, Colorado. Learn more at vailcoluxuryhomes.com or connect on LinkedIn.
Disclaimer: This article is based on information provided by the expert source cited above. It is intended for general informational purposes only and does not constitute legal, financial, or real estate advice. Readers should conduct their own research and consult qualified professionals before making any real estate or financial decisions.
Disclosure: Individuals or companies mentioned may have a commercial relationship with KeyCrew.
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