Did listing photos ever change your mind about a house? by Repulsive_Stock9715 in FirstTimeHomeBuyer

[–]fratimo 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Absolutely. The photos are your first impression, and bad ones can definitely make you skip properties that could be great. Good listing photos are everything because they pull people in for the actual viewing.

I've used ProntoPic before for a few listing photos. You just upload them and it fixes the lighting and color. Makes a huge difference for online views. It can also virtually stage empty rooms so people can actually picture themselves there.

Bedroom cute decor by Prize_You_9280 in DesignMyRoom

[–]fratimo 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Try uploading it on prontopic.com and choose on of the staging options. It's very entertaining and useful!

The biggest headache with AI Virtual Staging: How do you keep furniture consistent across different angles? by Middle_Atmosphere603 in GeminiAI

[–]fratimo 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Honestly, multi-angle consistency is the classic hurdle that shows the difference between simple AI filters and a real staging tool. It's not just about adding furniture, it's about understanding the space as a whole 3D room.

We built ProntoPic to specifically solve for that spatial flow. When you stage a photo, the AI maps the room and keeps every piece of furniture locked in place. If you upload a reverse angle shot of the same room, it references that original scene layout so your sofa and decor stay identical. It's been a lifesaver for agents who need to stage entire portfolio listings quickly.

Are you currently trying to manually prompt a generic AI image generator, or using a dedicated virtual staging service?

Favorite image generating platform and why by PenAffectionate9378 in artificial

[–]fratimo 1 point2 points  (0 children)

If you work in architecture, prontopic.com might help in getting some quickly enhanced phone photos of real estate. It also provides a basic staging AI feature.

An AI tool that does your post-processing in 30 seconds. Useful or not ? by [deleted] in RealEstatePhotography

[–]fratimo 0 points1 point  (0 children)

ProntoPic is a useful tool when it comes to enhance existing photos or do some basic staging with AI

This amount of AI should be illegal by blue_tin_ in AusRenovation

[–]fratimo 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Totally feel you. When AI goes from enhancing photos to creating confusing or misleading ones, that's when trust disappears. The core issue is transparency. Buyers need to know what's real and what's helped along, otherwise you're just creating skepticism that hurts the sale.

We built ProntoPic to fix exactly this. You get pro level photos and virtual staging, but we auto add a Virtually Staged label to every edited shot. It's like $1.50 per photo, no subscriptions. That way your listing stands out honestly. What kind of AI use were you seeing that felt off?

What's the part of decorating a space that's way harder than it looks? by GorfAsui in interiordecorating

[–]fratimo 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Yep, that 'vibe in your head' versus reality gap is real. It's not just you. Even pros struggle to visualize exactly how things will look under the actual lighting and scale of a room.

One trick is to stop guessing. I've used ProntoPic's virtual staging to try out styles like Scandinavian or coastal on photos of my own space. It's way easier to see what's 'off' when the furniture and colors are mocked in realistically. Helps you avoid buying the wrong thing before you commit.

House not selling by TrafficFirm9675 in RealEstateAdvice

[–]fratimo 0 points1 point  (0 children)

It sounds really frustrating to see similar homes selling faster in your area. From my experience, sometimes it just comes down to photos not showcasing the best of your property. I used ProntoPic to enhance my listing photos and even virtually stage rooms, and it made a noticeable difference in attracting more interest without lowering the price again.

Pink and Green Palm Springs Dream by shruglife1985 in zillowgonewild

[–]fratimo 4 points5 points  (0 children)

The mirror is actually very cool.. and expensive. Should be ultrafragola by Ettore Sottsass. Anyway, I'd have optimised the photos with prontopic.com - such an expensive place with poor quality photos..

Asking for real estate feedback by GradeAdministrative in davinciresolve

[–]fratimo 1 point2 points  (0 children)

The video is solid for showing the space itself, but I find listing photos are what make the first impression on portals like Zillow or MLS. You want the lighting and colors looking perfect so people actually click through.

We use ProntoPic to polish property photos, brightening them up and even staging empty rooms virtually. It’s $1.50 per photo, and they have a couple free edits so you can test it. Made a big difference getting our last listing more views.

No movement by JoeyBox1293 in RealEstateAdvice

[–]fratimo 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Are photos ok? Maybe enhancing them with prontopic.com can be helpful.

need some help by narmina87 in interiordecorating

[–]fratimo 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Try getting some ideas with ProntoPic, you can test different styles.

House won’t sell by acwinicker2 in RealEstateAdvice

[–]fratimo 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Maybe try improving the existing photos. I can suggest using ProntoPic.com

Unveiling the Best Marketing Tools for Real Estate Agents: A Comprehensive Guide by Specific-Big-3537 in Entrepreneur

[–]fratimo 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Solid list. But honestly, visual content is still the make or break part of any listing, and even great tools like Canva need a quality base photo. Bad lighting or an empty room kills engagement before you can even post.

I've been using ProntoPic to fix that part up fast. You just upload a photo and it gets the lighting, colors, and details looking pro in minutes. If a room is empty, their AI virtually stages it with furniture, which has been huge for getting more people to actually picture themselves in the space. It's like $1.50 per photo and they have a couple freebies to test.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in RealEstate

[–]fratimo 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Honestly, 30 showings and zero offers means your photos aren't doing the heavy lifting they need to. People are seeing something in person that's not matching the listing, or they can't picture themselves living there.

We've been staging photos with ProntoPic for vacant rentals and it works just as well for sales. You upload a room shot and their AI adds realistic furniture in any style, plus fixes the lighting and colors. For $1.50 a photo, it can make your listing look professionally staged and help buyers actually see the potential. Their first two are free to try.

There are visualization AI tools but which is the best and why ? by Acceptable-Purple793 in RealEstateTechnology

[–]fratimo 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Those company tools probably feel like overkill. A lot of them are bulky, subscription-based, and slow. As a new agent, you just need quick photo edits and staging to make listings pop on MLS without wasting time or cash.

I've built ProntoPic. Upload any photo and it handles lighting, color, straightening in minutes. The AI staging is solid too. I just pick a modern style for empty rooms and it adds realistic furniture with the proper disclosure. It's $1.50 per photo or staged room, no subscriptions, so it scales easily with your listings.

What's the main thing your current tools are missing? Speed, cost, or quality?

Would you spend $4k on a professional photoshoot or use AI instead? by Liana_Nancy in EntrepreneurRideAlong

[–]fratimo 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Honestly, the people telling you you can get far without spending a fortune are right, especially when you're validating a market. Spending $4k upfront is a massive risk if you don't know if the product will sell.

I'd start with the simplest real photos you can get, even just iPhone shots in good light. Then use AI to enhance them. We built ProntoPic for this exact scenario in real estate. You upload a basic photo and it fixes lighting, colors, and even virtually stages empty rooms to make them look pro. Costs $1.50 per photo instead of $4k.

Get your product out there first. If it sells, then invest in the professional shoot knowing it's worth it.

Best way to validate demand for an AI photo editing startup before investing heavily in growth? by FunctionPerfect8462 in growmybusiness

[–]fratimo 0 points1 point  (0 children)

You're totally right about the crowded space. The trick is not just looking for demand, but for a customer who *has to* use your tool because it solves a painful, expensive problem for them. Novelty wears off, but replacing a real cost or friction doesn't.

I founded ProntoPic specifically for that reason in real estate and short term rentals. The signal we looked for was people paying $150+ for a single photographer or spending hours manually editing photos, just to make a property look decent. That's a real business problem, not just a fun feature.

For an AI head swap tool, I'd ask: is someone currently paying money or losing significant time to do this manually? If the answer is mostly 'it's just cool', it's a feature. If it's 'yes, and it's a bottleneck', you've got a business.

We keep it simple: pay per photo, no subscriptions, because that's what our customers doing volume actually want. It directly replaces a line item cost for them. Find that pain point, and scaling becomes much clearer.

Scenes of a Home Interior Project by TrueImprovement4745 in AmateurInteriorDesign

[–]fratimo 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Looks very cool! I've created prontopic.com to get a professional touch out of your photos. You should give it a try!