Wednesday, June 8, 2011

WWW.MY-CUSTOM-DOMAIN-NAME-HERE.COM

Everybody has a website (or should).  And a lot of the time we hire outside companies to build those website's for us.  Which is great, I mean let's get real I'm a realtor, not a web designer.  And some are lucky enough to have a brokerage that will provide a free website.  That's all well and good.  But people, let's talk about these domain names.

Now, typically if you're hiring a company to do a website for you, and I'm not talking about a "super custom website 5000" but like an Agent Image/Top producer site, or Keller Williams (Remax, CB, etc) profile/company provided site, then they will most likely be providing you with the hosting.  So your website ends up being something along the lines of "yourfirstandlastname.companyname.com".  For instance, my website used to be sylviawesolowski.wwmediaagent.com.  (That's a whole lot of domain name) For some who have simple names like a Jane Doe, having ".wwmediaagent" or ".yourwkagent" or ".remax" wouldn't seem to be too big of a deal.  But the average consumer isn't always going remember the "extras", they could mispell it, or not even type it in at all and end up somewhere else. In short if it's too complicated, usually people will give up and/or move on.

SO GET YOU'RE OWN DOMAIN NAME!


Buying your own domain name is really inexpensive and super easy.  But I am going to go through a step by step tutorial while I get my own!


STEP 1: Pick a company that provides Domain names I recommend GoDaddy.com.  You can go elsewhere, If you just google companies that sell domain names there are several out there.  The reason I chose GoDaddy is because they are the most credible.  There are other companies that have "cheaper rates" but be careful and read through everything thoroughly because it may start out at $3.99 a year but then it jumps up to like $24 a year.  Also they may not be able to offer you a ".com".  We'll get into the reasoning behind having a ".com" domain name in a bit.


STEP 2: Once you get to www.godaddy.com, you will see a box where you can type in your desired domain name.
  



   ---> A lot of times it's nice to do something simple, for instance firstandlastname.com.  If you have a catch phrase in mind like "realtor john smith" you can try that as well!  Bottom line you want to make sure it's simple enough that a client can get to it easily!

UH-OH! The domains name you want is not avaiable!
  
If you see this prompt >  at the top of the page it means that the domain name is not avaiable in ".com" form. I would recommend having a few possible domain names in mind just in case this happens to you.  They will also offer you come alternative endings (ie: .net, .org, .info)  Most of the time they cost less anually as well.  But heres the thing, there is a reason why these cost less, because they are not as popular.And think about this,  typing ".com" is an auto pilot response.  The majority of people will start typing in a domain name and just instinctually end it with .com.  

I do it myself when I'm going to craigslist.  I almost always go to craigslist.COM but in reality the website is .ORG.


So, have a few options avaiable for yourself so that you can get a ".com" domain name. Personally, I think it's worth the extra $3 a year it takes to have the ".com" other than the ".net" just for the accessibility of you're site. 
You can also try using dashes to sperate words in your domain name if there is a catch phrase you really want to use or if you have a common name and maybe someone already owns yourname.com

STEP 3:


  Click on the "Add" button, to palce the domain name in your inventory.

Then click the "Continue to Registration" option.

















*** You will be prompted with a window offering you more domain name endings, just click "no thanks" to get to the next screen!***


STEP 4:
    Fill out all your information on the following page >




And That's It!

Few things to remember:
  • Make sure when your shopping around to read everything, you don't want to get locked into any kind of long commitment where you end up paying way more over time
  • Have mutiple options for possible domain names
  • If its available, GET THE ".COM"
  • Try using dashes to sperate words so you can get the ".COM"
After you get you're new domain name check back in a few days and I'll have a step by step tutorial on how to link you new domain name to your website!

Friday, June 3, 2011

*Ring Ring* "Hello?"

We live in a world now where people want instant answers. With all the advances made in technology people have gotten used to get answers right away.  If you want to know "why
a hamburger is call a 'ham'burger" you just have to get out your smart phone, open up your google search app and look it up.  So who in the world would want to leave a voicemail?


 
Check This out
A study conducted by Sprint found that
91 percent of people under the age of 30 respond to text messages within an hour and are four times more likely to respond to texts than to voice messages within minutes. Adults 30 and older are twice as likely to respond within minutes to a text message than to a voice message.
(
http://www.qualityansweringservice.com/press-releases/leave-message-after-tone)

Now as realtors we are constantly checking our voicemails, but think about it: If that many people don't even check their voicemail's why would they in turn leave them.  And how many times have you had a missed call on your phone, and no voicemail.    Everything happens fast in today's society a
nd consumers have developed a sense of entitlement to instant answers. So even if they didnt leave a voicemail and you give that unknown number (potential client) a follow up call, who's to say they havn't already called another agent?  In short, a missed call = a missed opportunity.

Personal Experience
I, like the rest of society, need to know things now.  A few weeks ago I rescued, well found, this little dog.  She was filthy and I wanted to get her groomed. Granted it was like 5:30 at this time, I'd just gotten out of work but I was certain there a groomer that was still open.  After all, I just wanted to get some price quotes.  So I jumped onto google and googled dog groomers in Beverly Hills, looked through the local business results to find nearest one and started calling numbers.  I called the first one, that claimed to be a "24 hour service" (too good to be true) and I got their voicemail.  It said to leave a message and my call would be returned between "X and X" hours.  Not good enough.  So I called the next groomer, so on and so on.  Until I finally got one on the line and got the information I needed.  Turn's out I needed a shot record and she recommended me to a vet their company worked with.  The previous three or four other companies lost my business. Granted, their answering services assured me that they would return my call promptly if I left a message, a couple of them were still open and just "away from the phone" but I wanted to speak with someone.

Here's the bottom line: If you're putting your phone number on there I assume you want me to call it.  And if im going to call it, I assume you're going to pick up and give me the answers I want.  If you don't, I will just keep calling other people until someone picks up and tells me what I need to hear. 

Voicemails are kind of old school.  And the tradition of leaving your name and number after the tone is becoming obsolete.  In this business, we have a lot of competition out there, and we spend all kinds of money getting our name and contact information out there in front of people.  But let's not forget the people we're marketing to. In this ever changing market, it's hard to find loyal buyers.  Everything is almost too readily avaiable to the general public.  Consumer's are getting spoiled and with sites like realtor.com, zillow and trulia they feel they don't really need us to help them find a home anymore.  So why edge yourself out of the running even more by not answering your phone. If a client came onto trulia looking for an agent to call in Los Angeles alone they have
4,413 agents to choose from.  Let's say someone picked up their phone to call you at let's say noon, and they got a voicemail saying that "messages would be returned between 10 and 11 o'clock and again between 4 and 5 o'clock".  Maybe they will leave you a message, but what's to stop that person from calling one of the other 4,412 agents until they find one that can help them in their "time of need"?

SO ANSWER YOUR PHONE! (whenever possible.)  Also, if you work a second a job maybe consider getting a service that will translate your voicemails into texts or emails.  Because a lot of the time it's easier to send someone a quick text back or just check your email and take a "bathroom" break to return the call.  I know I don't like the idea of waiting around.  Do you?

Wednesday, June 1, 2011

Google Ad's VS Organic Placement


There is always much debate on whether it is more efficient to run an ad campaign through google or work on your organic placement.  I am sure we've all heard and some of us have even said things along the lines of:  
      
"Who clicks on the sponsered links anyways?" 

    "I always ignore the ones that I know people are paying for".  
So I am here to offer up some pros and cons on the subject.  But before we even get into the debate over organic vs ads,   I believe the more pertinent question to be asked is: Why Google?

Everyone knows google,  it's a household name and over the years it's become a verb (i.e. just "google" me).  Sure, there are other search engines out there. Everything from big names, that seem to be on the rise (*cough cough* Bing), to very small engines such as dogpile.com. Even big names that have been around for a while like yahoo and msn play in the background of google as secondary, third and fourth player.

Food for Thought:
(Credit: ComScore)

(Credit: ComScore)
The biggest controversy in google advertising being whether or not you post yourself on the first page organically; via metatags, blogging and SEO (Search Engine Optimization) or you run an ad campaign. A lot of times people may think that running an ad campaign is less effective. The arguement being that not many people click on the sponsered links. While this may seem logical and true let's look at a few things...

Did you know that 83% of all people doing a search never leave the first page?
This means that obviously the first page of google is where you want to be. Now google is constantly changing and updating their algorythms and the means in which they determine relevance. So let's talk about SEO, or organic placement. Because of the ever changing nature of google you have to be in the know and practically a web specialist to figure out how to get yourself on that first page. Not to mention the amount of time it takes for your site to actually appear and move up through the google ranks. It could take up to six months after having your site worked on and optimized for it to actually appear on the first page. Countless hours and dollars willl go by before you even start to see yourself on the second page or fourth, fifth, sixth, seventh, tenth....you get the point.

Let us not forget all of our competition that is also fighting, spending dollars and countless hours blogging and downloading wordpress plugins onto their own sites to get themselves up there as well. And in the real estate game, you're not only competeing with other agents to get onto google, but huge companies, like trulia, realtor.com, homes.com, zillow, etc. These companies have the resources it takes to get and keep themselves up there. And the computer geniuses it takes to keep their site updated.  But you or I don't exactly have the means to make that happen on our own.  You could hire an outside company to do it for you. You could spend thousands of dollars, on top of what you already spent building your site, having your website worked on to get the right metatags and updates made to have your site appear organically. And even then, there is no gauruntee that you will stay on that first page. All it would take is for google to make a change in their algorythms and then your site would become obsolete and irrelevent to that search.
So what else is there? Running your own ad campaign is a good alternative. Some may argue, though, that being in the sponsered links is not the best place to be. But as far as exposure goes...isn't it? When you do a search on google, the sponsered results are usually the most relevant to your search, and often they are the most credible.   

Try this:
Go onto to google and do a search for "business cards for realtors".  Take a look at the options, which of the companies offer the best deals? Seem the most legitimate?  More often than not, it's the companies found within the sponsered links.

Of course this is a matter of opinion but these ads also provide a positive phsycological effect. As a consumer, you trust those companies to be legitimate, and popular. Typically when you do a real estate related search on google what you find in the sponsered results are major corps. For example: Coldwell Banker Corprate, Remax, Agent Machine. Not only are they right in front of your face (and let's face it, the average consumer today is kind of lazy) but it says something.  It says that, these companies not only can afford to but have the wherewithal to put themselves there in the paid ad's section. Now, imagine you as an individual, running along side these big companies.

Now putting yoursef in the "pay per click" section can get costly. Some times, depending on how competetive a certain "search phrase" is you could pay up to $12 dollars per click! And even then there is no gauruntee that you will remain on the first page 24/7. And it doesn't really do you any good to pop on and off the page because there is no telling when "peak" search hours are. That and you never know when that one buyer or seller, who is ready to talk to an agent, is looking at that page. And you don't want to not be on there. But who really wants spend hundreds of dollars on clicks when realistically not every click will result in even an email.  Sometimes people just click your link and don't even really look over your site. But there is no way to control that. There are however, ways to help with cost while still getting the right exposure.

For one, try running a campaign on a phrase that's not so popular.  The less competition you have in the bidding war, the better chance you have at paying less per click. Even though you may want to get up on the number one search phrase available it's not going to be very conducive to your business when you consider the cost you'll end up paying per click to stay up on the first page.  But like organic placement, if you are doing it yourself, first page palcement is kind of like a babysitting job and if you want the best results it's going to take time and of course money.

Consider This
Hire a company that specializes in running "adwords campaigns".  Most of the time they can get you better rates because they they funnel so much business through google that they pay less per click which means they can charge you less, which means, YOU SAVE MONEY! And definitely do make sure they are an accredited company, even if they are out of state.  Sometimes it feels good to work with an individual, someone who's local, but you are not going to get the same benefits you would working with a larger company.  It's kind of like buying in bulk.  Restaurants will always get a better deal on buying food in bulk than you or I would, even if we shopped at costco.  Same concept.


Check Them Out  

Look around online for some companies that specialize in google ad placement.  A few accredited companies I know of are Worldwide Media Group and Netbiz.  I would recommend the first because they specialize soley in the real estate industry.  They are specialists in not only google advertising, but in real estate agent advertising.  Check out their websitewww.wwmediaonline.com and get an idea for yourself on their process.  If you are just getting started they also offer free real estate websites to their clients.  So it's a good place to get a two for one kind of a deal. Just be sure that if you are going to go through a company, they have the above shown "certified partner" stamp from google.  That's a good indication of a company who really knows what they're doing.

Happy placement hunting!  

Wednesday, May 25, 2011

"Murphy's Laws for Real Estate"

If you've ever leased property, then you can relate, and for all those renters out there, You know this has happened once or twice. :)



1. Your best tenant will get a job transfer during the worst rental market of the decade.

2. When a tenant attempts to fix the leaky faucet himself, expect to not only replace the faucet but the entire plumbing system too.

3. When a tenant's furnace breaks down in winter, or the air conditioning in summer, it's always the most expensive part that will need to be replaced.

4. When the tenant from across town needs something to be repaired quickly, the hardware store will close five minutes before you get there.

5. A tenant's uncanny ability to see dirt and damage will be much greater when they move in than when they move out.

6. The working components of a rental home (heating,cooling,electrical, plumbing, dishwasher, garbage disposal, doorbell and refrigerator) will break down 90% faster on the rental than the working components of your own home.

7.When a tenant calls and says "Hi, how's it going?" you know that something is drastically wrong.

8. When a tenant claims to "love gardening" it means that they are fond of gardens found in books, movies and maybe the Sahara desert but not your particular rental property.

9. Proper disposal of two quarts of bacon grease for a tenant is always down the kitchen sink.


Found this on http://www.sellinghomes1-2-3.com/fun_stuff/quotes.html