Cut the Middle Man Out

When it comes to marketing listings, many practitioners pay an IDX provider to set up an MLS feed on their website. Others have decided there are better ways to get their listings in front of clients.

It may seem like a forgone conclusion that you should have your listings displayed front and center on your website, but some real estate practitioners are finding less value in it these days. While many choose to pay a third-party IDX provider to set up a searchable MLS feed on their sites, others say the cost isn’t worth it, instead turning to other platforms that they say offer more exposure and a better return on their investment.

MLS migration is a common solution for getting listings to display on a personal website, most often involving an IDX company storing MLS data on its servers and migrating that data onto an agent or broker’s website. The agent or broker pays a monthly fee for this feed, which is automatically updated regularly.

IDX feeds are… (Poll Closed)
 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

But one major drawback to using some IDX platforms is that they don’t give the agent website any of the search engine optimization value of the MLS data, says Carolyn Bickerton, a former practitioner who now works for real estate web development company Realtyna Inc.

“The framed IDX provider is a middle man,” Bickerton explains. “It gives you the data to display listings on your site. The framed IDX provider has all of the real raw pages from the MLS on its server, which means it keeps all of the IP addresses, so it gets most of the SEO value. Agents are actually paying framed IDX providers to rob them of SEO value.”

A different issue, though, is what drove Ivy Beitner, broker at Century 21 North Homes in Snohomish, Wash., to drop her IDX provider. Most of her clients don’t rely on agent or broker websites for property search—they go to real estate portals such as realtor.com®. So what’s the point in paying for a feed on her website?

“People start looking at houses way before they’re even prequalified, and they just get comfortable with whatever interface they find most helpful,” Beitner says. “No agent site can compete with the large real estate sites, simply because we don’t have the kind of funds it takes to be at the top of Google search results. That makes IDX not worth the extra $30 or so a month. I would rather spend that money on something I think would be more effective: a self-promotional app, for example, that my clients can simultaneously use to search for homes.”

That’s exactly how Tyler Pearsall, a salesperson with Coldwell Banker in Jupiter, Fla., advertises his listings. Though he does use an IDX provider to surface listings on his website, he says he gets more leads and better exposure through the Coldwell Banker mobile app, which allows him to text links to MLS listings directly to clients. The app uses a phone’s GPS to map listings so clients can see which properties are nearby. Clients can click on the listings and instantly call or text the agent for more information.

“It provides a more on-the-go means of MLS access,” Pearsall says. “I don’t think traditional websites for listings will go away, but they will surely be the lesser-used platform. Since smartphones and tablets take precedence over desktops and laptops these days, MLS access has to be streamlined and easy to use.”

Framed IDX vs. Organic MLS Migration

For those who still want an MLS feed on their site, there’s an option other than framed IDX integration: It’s called organic MLS migration. Companies providing organic MLS migration, such as Realtyna, connect the MLS feed directly to agent sites instead of hosting the data on an IDX server and migrating it from there. Essentially, it eliminates the middle man and reroutes the IP addresses of MLS property pages to agents’ sites so they get all of the SEO value, Bickerton says.

“When we do an MLS migration, we put the real pages on the agent’s server,” Bickerton explains of Realtyna’s process. “We get the feed from the board, and we put it directly on the agents’ websites. All those IP addresses lead back to your website, so you get all the SEO value and the leads.”

Agents also pay only a one-time fee—$1,139 to $1,349, depending on the website platform—for the setup; there are no monthly fees.

Amir Feinsilber, broker-owner and CEO of The Force Realty in Seattle, a company that used Realtyna to set up an organic MLS feed on its site, says he’s seeing far more SEO value than he did when the company used an IDX vendor. “The amount of traffic to our site has increased exponentially,” Feinsilber says. “Lead generation now happens through osmosis, in that we are heavily indexed [on search engines] naturally and receive phone and Web leads as a result without having to spend a tremendous amount of marketing dollars on pay-per-click and other brute-force methods of generating traffic to our site.”

Still, there can be advantages to using an IDX platform for MLS migration. Feinsilber says that when his company used IDX integration, the costs of developing an MLS feed were much less than going the organic route, and the time it took to set it up on the company website was minimal. “Typically, these solutions were either instant or took a few hours to integrate while [my brokerage] inherited a suite of well-polished tools,” he says.

Whatever route you choose, it pays to take a thoughtful approach about whether listing feeds make sense for your overall business plan and budget. After all, your goal is to help consumers find not only the listings that most appeal to them but also the trusted agent they want to guide them through the transaction.

Agent Redefined | Online Marketing Plan

PRESENTATION OUTLINE

1. THE ONLINE MARKETING PLAN

GEORGE “EL GUAPO” CUEVAS
This is it, let me know what you think!!!

2. George’s Presentation

3. I’M NOT YOUR TYPICAL REAL ESTATE TRAINER

ARE YOU TRACKING?
Photo by The U.S. Army

4. WHY GO ONLINE

Photo by lecates

5. Online Marketing

Photo by dolanh

6. IT’S WHERE THE BUYER’S

AND SELLER’S ARE AT!
I don’t care what the website it or what technology I need to have. Wherever the buyers and sellers are online is where I want to be. Don’t hate social media, don’t hate Zillow and Trulia. If buyers and sellers want more pictures, give it to them. If they want video, give it to them. Everything that enhances the viewing of a property online or offline is what being a marketer of real estate is all about.

7. A HOME’s FIRST SHOWING

IS TAKING PLACE ONLINE
It’s true, home’s first showing is taking place online first. This is a trend which is unlikely to change. If this is in fact true then what this mean for the Real Estate Agent? It means showing a properly online the correct way with professional visuals like Photos and Video. Plus, the presentation of the property, the information, and the layout online should be professional. Compare it to home staging or de-cluttering a property.
Photo by darrowwest

8. Buyers & Sellers

DONT YOU WANT TO BE WHERE ALL OF YOUR FUTURE CLIENTS ARE AT
Buyers & Sellers are also expecting real estate agents to be online. They expect their properties to be marketed online. They expect agents to have a complete online marketing plan for marketing the home.
Photo by el patojo

9. 5 Listings in 5 Days

THIS IS NOT WHAT ONLINE MARKETING IS ABOUT…
There is no Magic Bullets here.

10. A BETTER ONLINE MARKETER

THIS IS WHAT THE TRAINING IS ALL ABOUT…
Online Marketing for Real Estate Agents requires that agents become better marketers. In order to do this an agent needs to either acquire new marketing skills, or to hire out those skills. Bottom line agents must become a better marketer in order to do online marketing.
Photo by rooneg

11. BUILDING A MARKETING ARM

IT’S EITHER YOU, YOUR BROKER, OR CONTRACTOR
Online Marketing is not rocket science but it does require some time. There are no quick fixes to do it properly. Each agent, team, and real estate office must decide how it’s going to execute these additional marketing techniques.
Photo by compujeramey

12. Tech & Realtors

IF YOU CAN ENTER A LISTING INTO THE MLS THEN YOU CAN MARKET ONLINE
Agents just need the skills and training to use technology and the internet to market themselves and their listings online.
Photo by kfisto

13. TECH & ONLINE

ARE IN A CONSTANT STATE OF CHANGE
Change is the key word for online marketing. You must be willing to change and adapt to the changing world of online marketing.
Photo by Mrtyndall

14. BUYER & SELLERS ARE CHANGING

THEY WANT ACCESS TO INFO/DATA DIRECTLY…
You need to read this report if you want to understand the how buyers are currently using the internet and technology to search for homes and real estate information. This report can be found on the NAR website, or you can go to my website at http://www.agentredefined.com and in my blog you’ll find an article about it with a link to it.

15. Untitled Slide

16. Untitled Slide

Here it is: The Online Marketing Plan for Real Estate Agents. Start at the Basic Level and work your way down to Braveheart Level.

17. Real Estate Search Websites

These are the main real estate websites within the Top Ten most viewed in the country every month.
Photo by Zolk

18. The President on Zillow

WHEN THE PRESIDENT HAS A MESSAGE ON HOUSING HE WENT TO ZILLOW
When the President Obama wanted to give a talk about home ownership in August 2013 he needed a venue to broadcast his message in a big way. He didn’t choose the NAR for this, he choose Zillow. This gives you some insight to just how big Zillow is to the real estate industry.

19. Social Media for Agents

I regard these at the standard 4 Social Media Platforms every agent should be engaged on.

20. Engagement

THE KEY TO BROADCASTING YOUR MESSAGE ONLINE
Just what the slide says.

21. MANUAL DIRECT SYNDICATION

REAL ESTATE WEBSITE MATRIX
This is it. You need to know how to use these sites to market your clients properties online.

22. PRO Pictures & Video

MANDATORY FOR MARKETING A HOME ONLINE
Professional Pictures and Video are critical for marketing a property online. Without great visuals what’s the point of marketing a property online? Remember the First showing is taking place online!!!!
Photo by AMANITO

23. #1 REAL ESTATE SEARCH SITE

35 TO 40 MILLION HITS PER MONTH
Zillow is the #1 most viewed site in the country with just over 35 million hits per month. This is why Zillow is part of the Online Marketing Plan, and why President Obama went used Zillow for a platform on housing issues in August 2013.

24. #2 REAL ESTATE SEARCH SITE

25 MILLION HITS PER MONTH#2
Trulia is the 2nd most viewed real estate website in the country. Again it’s a crucial part to your Online Marketing Plan.

25. #3 REAL ESTATE SEARCH SITE

12 TO 16 MILLION HITS PER MONTH
Even though Realtor.com has dropped from the #1 spot to the #3 spot. It’s still an important website to market your listings on. IMPORTANT NOTE ABOUT THIS SITE: If you don’t have a featured listings package with Realtor.com you will not be able to do the following: a. You have no link back to you. Your contact info, your picture, nothing connects you to the listing without a featured listings package. Your listing will be on Realtor.com, but not connected to you. Realtor.com will sell the leads that come in from your listing online without the featured listings package. b. You cannot customize a listing without a featured listings package. This means you cannot add a Video, Headline, or Special Note on the listing.

26. WORDPRESS REAL ESTATE SITE

VIRTUAL TOUR AND LINK BACK
Here’s an example of my WordPress Website. I create a property page here which hosts the Virtual Tour of the home, plus contact information, property information, and I also place other property listings on the page that are of similar price and features.

27. FINISHING TOUCHES

PROVING CLIENTS WITH A TRUE ONLINE MARKETING PLAN
I love this part. This is a customer service finish that no other real estate agent does. We provide the actual direct links to every website we have listed the property on. This is also a sort of “check and balance” of your marketing plan for property. Here your ensuring you have done your job 100% when marketing the property online.

28. RESULTS AND PRICE CHANGES

MEASURE ACTIVITY OF ONLINE MARKETING
Another important piece….. You can pull up data on Zillow and Trulia for FREE which will tell you how many searches were performed the zip code in which your listing is located. Plus, you can view how many times the actual listing was viewed weekly since the listing came online. If you combine this information with your MLS Data which can tell you how many times your listing was delivered and viewed in an MLS back tracking search, then you can provide some powerful data to your client. This can become helpful when requesting a price change on a property.
Photo by nffcnnr

29. OPEN HOUSES

PHENOMENAL TOOLS FOR PROMOTING
The general public still likes open houses and both Zillow and Trulia are an important part of marketing open houses to potential buyers. Plus, if you have a featured listings package on Realtor.com then you can market an Open House on there as well.
Photo by kennyferguson

30. Social Media for Agents

31. ON FACEBOOK

HOW TO GET MORE LEADS
Side Note: This is the best real estate movie of all time, Glen Gary Glen Ross.

32. FACEBOOK MARKETING IS DEAD

IT REALLY DEPENDS ON THE STRATEGY
Photo by Nathan Rein

33. FAN PAGES

CAN ONLY WORK WITH A CONTENT STRATEGY
Photo by afagen

34. Engagement

THE KEY TO BROADCASTING YOUR MESSAGE ONLINE

35. CONSTANT COMMUNICATION

SOCIAL MEDIA’S POWER IS IN THE MESSAGE
We are more connected than ever but is your message getting through?

36. ENGAGEMENT

ONCE YOU UNDERSTAND “ENGAGEMENT” YOU CAN UNDERSTAND SOCIAL MEDIA

37. IT’S YOUR ONLINE DATABASE

WHY USE FACEBOOK?
I recommend agents treat Facebook as their online database.
Photo by niallkennedy

38. YOUR FRIENDS ON FACEBOOK

MANAGE THEM AS PART OF YOUR DATABASE
Your Connections on the Facebook are part of your database online.
Photo by Fey Ilyas

39. THE ALGORITHM

HOW FACEBOOK MANAGES YOUR ENGAGEMENT
Once you understand how the Facebook works, you can then understand how to make it work for you.
Photo by niallkennedy

40. 1500 POSTS

YOU CAN’T SEE THEM ALL
The average Facebook user is exposed to as many as 1,500 posts a day.
Photo by Ottoman42

41. FACEBOOK DECIDES FOR YOU

AVERAGE NUMBER OF POSTS, STORIES, ADVERTISEMENTS
But, the Facebook Formula will not show you ALL of the 1500 posts. On Average you’ll see approx 300 of the posts that Facebook thinks you want to see. It does this based on your interaction on Facebook.
Photo by suhajdab

42. Facebook Strategy 2013

1. SELL WITHOUT SELLING
The Technique…..
Photo by Mukumbura

43. Facebook Strategy 2013

2. ENGAGE WITH YOUR CONNECTIONS
Photo by John-Morgan

44. Facebook Strategy 2013

3. THE 60% / 40% RULE
My Simple Facebook Rule: a. 60% of your postings are NON Real Estate related. b. 40% of your postings are Real Estate related. REAL ESTATE RELATED POSTS These posts must be creative and engaging!!!! Easier said than done but look at the examples ahead. Remember to use the rule of “SELL WITHOUT SELLING”.
Photo by noahg.

45. strategic postings

46. Don’t Overload Your Friends

KEEP YOUR REAL ESTATE POSTINGS LIMITED
Facebook is not the Classifieds.

47. SHARE PHOTOS & VIDEO

LEARN TO FIND THOSE PERFECT PICTURES

48. PROFILE PICTURES AND COVER

FACEBOOK PUSHES THESE MORE ON THE NEWS FEEDS

49. CRAFT THE MESSAGE

BE CREATIVE AND HAVE FUN
Photo by nedrichards

50. ODD HOUSES

WHAT

51. Happy People

SELL WITHOUT SELLING

52. HAPPY PEOPLE

CLOSINGS MAKE GOOD PICTURES

53. Sharing Video

CREATIVE MESSAGES (SELL WITHOUT SELLING)

54. HAVE FUN

FUNNY POSTS CREATE ENGAGEMENT

55. GHOSTS

FUN STORIES IN REAL ESTATE

56. OPEN HOUSE MARKETING

SHOW WHAT YOU DO / BE CREATIVE

57. HAPPY FACES

SUCCESSFUL CLOSING (SELL WITHOUT SELLING)

58. great views

CLEVER MESSAGE (SELL WITHOUT SELLING)

59. ghosts

WEIRD THINGS IN HOUSES

60. Real Estate Agent

HOW TO USE YOUTUBE FOR REAL ESTATE
YouTube is your friend and it’s Free….

61. COVER AND PROFILE

ALTERNATE BETWEEN REAL ESTATE AND NON REAL ESTATE PHOTOS
Take the time to resize your images to fit properly online.

62. ENGAGMENT

VIDEO IS JUST ANOTHER METHOD OF COMMUNICATION
Engagement is key to utilizing YouTube effectively. YouTube wants it.
Photo by cackhanded

63. TV & INTERNET

MOST NEW TV’S ARE READY FOR INTERNET
Photo by jasonEscapist

64. Why use Video

IT DEMONSTRATES YOUR AUTHORITY
Photo by 55Laney69

65. WHY USE VIDEO

IT DEMONSTRATES YOUR MARKETING CAPABILITY
Photo by 55Laney69

66. why use video

YOUR A LOCAL EXPERT

67. 4 TYPES OF VIDEOS

Here are the 4 types of videos Real Estate Agents should be making.

68. Realtor Examples

JESSICA RIFFLE EDWARDS / COLDWELL BANKER
Find this agents YouTube Channel and watch all of her videos. 1. Go to YouTube and search for “Jessica Riffle Edwards”. 2. Watch the videos. 3. All of her videos have a strong, simple, and short message.

69. SHARE MOMENTS

LEARN WHEN THEY ARE HAPPENING

70. BRANDING

PROVIDES GREAT PLACEMENT FOR YOUR NAME
LinkedIn is still important to your Online Marketing Plan.
Photo by nan palmero

71. Paperless Agent

SHOWING OFF TECH AND GOING PAPERLESS
This is probably the best training product out there for training agents how to use the iPad for Real Estate. It’s not my system, it’s developed by a real estate brokerage in Austin, TX. It’s a great product, I purchased it in early 2013 and very satisfied with it. Goto: www.paperlessagent.com
Photo by [cipher]

72. CArtavi

GOING PAPERLESS WITH CARTAVI AND DOCUSIGN
Your solution for putting your real estate contracts and addendum’s online in the cloud….
Photo by Mark Seton

73. HOMES.COM

4TH LARGEST REAL ESTATE SEARCH WEBSITE

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7 Steps to Creating A Real Estate Business Plan

If you’ve never been much of a goal-setter, now’s the time to get started. Creating a real estate business plan and setting effective goals provides a roadmap for your daily activities, keeps you motivated and enables you to accomplish much more in your real estate business than by simply taking each day as they come.

To create a workable real estate business plan and set effective goals, you must follow a simple 7-step formula;

Step 1: Your Goals Must Be Written Down

Committing your goals to paper helps you to focus on exactly what you want to achieve. Research has shown that written goals are also more likely to be achieved than goals that are simply stated but never written down.

The Listing Academy

Step 2: Your Goals Must Be Stated In The Present Tense

You want to state your goals as though they have already occurred. For example, state that “I have earned $100,000 in 2015″, not “I will earn $100,000 in 2015″. When your goals are stated in the present tense it creates a sense of urgency to make the goal a reality.

Step 3: Your Goals Must Be Specific And Measurable

Creating goals is not a time to be fuzzy or wishy-washy. There can be no lack of clarity in your goals. You wouldn’t say, “I have listed a lot of houses this year.” Instead, you would use actual numbers so that you, and others, can hold you accountable for your goals. A goal that is specific and measurable would be stated as, “I have listed 30 homes in 2015″.

Step 4: Your Goals Must Be Time-Bound

To be effective, your goals should have a deadline for achievement. Otherwise you convince yourself that “I still have time” and put off doing the necessary tasks to reach your goal. Instead of stating your goal, for example, as “I have listed 20 homes”, try stating it as “I have listed 20 homes by June 30, 2015.”

The Listing Academy

Step 5: Your Goals Must Be Challenging, Yet Attainable

To find out what you’re truly capable of, your goals need to scare you just a bit. They need to cause you to stretch the way you think about your personal life, your business and more. To avoid total frustration, your goals also need to be attainable. There’s a balance between challenging yourself to reach new heights of achievement and setting yourself up for disappointment. Only you can determine what that balance is for your life – and your business.

Step 6: You Must Share Your Goals

One of the main reasons people fail to set goals is fear that others will laugh at them for wanting to achieve something in their life that others couldn’t imagine for themselves. Nobody wants to hear their goals condemned as far-fetched or ridiculous. But you simply have to find that one person, or two, who is supportive and will hold you accountable. Establish with this trusted friend or family member how you would like to be held accountable in a positive way that encourages your efforts. Nothing is as destructive to reaching your goals as having the person you shared them with, and to whom you look for support, to use negativity when you are struggling.

Step 7: Create A System For Attaining Your Goals

As the old saying goes, “You can eat a whale, you just have to do it bite by bite.” While I’m not sure I want to eat a whale, that is good advice for reaching your goals. Tommy Newberry, one of America’s top personal coaches, shared this idea with me many years ago. I have followed it relentlessly and have found it an excellent way to attain your goals! By the way, I set my plan up using an Excel spreadsheet so it was easy to use.

First, start with a 10-year plan. Grab a piece of paper and write down everything you’d like to accomplish, do or have in the next 10 years. Don’t hold back – think outside of the box! What do you want for your family? What accomplishments would you like to achieve in your business? Where would you like to travel? What would you like to own? What charities would you like to support with your time or money? Find photos of your dream car, your dream home – whatever it is you are striving to attain and make those images part of your plan. Having a visual reminder of your goal will help keep you focused.

 

The image below is a sample of your 10-year plan:

real-estate-business-plan

 

Once you have completed your 10-year plan, identify several items from the list that you think you can realistically achieve in the next three years. Three years is plenty of time to make some things happen but it’s also a short enough time period that you can see the “carrot at the end of the stick”. Write down which items you will achieve in each of the next three years; for example, identify several items for 2015, several more for 2016, and yet several more for 2017. Some goals may be attainable within the year and others may take time, such as saving for your kids college education or for your retirement. For those goals that span several years, break them down into annual accomplishments, such as saving $5,000 per year. And again, use pictures of your goals to remind you of the rewards.

 

The image below is a sample of your 3-year plan:

 

three-year-real-estate-business-plan

 

From your 3-year plan, select several items that you would like to accomplish in the coming year as part of your real estate business plan. Again, some of these could be completed over the next 12 months while others are “getting-started goals” such as savings, growing your business, etc.

The image below is a sample of how your annual plan might look:

 

one-year-real-estate-business-plan

 

Once you have identified your goals for the next 12 months, break those goals down into quarterly goals. For example, if you were looking to grow your business in the coming year, you may consider establishing a series of goals that build on one another such as identifying a niche market to pursue in the first quarter. Then, in the second quarter, you may have a goal of launching a lead generation and awareness campaign within that niche market. Your goal for the third quarter is that you have taken 5 listings in the new niche market. Then, in the final quarter of the year, you have taken an additional 8 listings. Following this process enables you to break your bigger, long-term goals into smaller, more attainable goals that keep you on the right path.

The image below illustrates a typical quarterly goal plan;

 

quarterly-real-estate-business-plan

 

For each quarter, establish goals for each month that, once completed, will enable you to have achieved your quarterly goals. To use the example above about identifying a new niche market, the goals you might establish for January could include evaluating neighborhoods with high average annual turnover rates of home ownership, assessing the competition, developing your positioning strategy, creating your marketing plan, etc. By accomplishing each of those tasks by the end of the month, you would be well on your way to reaching your quarterly goals and then, ultimately, your annual goals and beyond.

The image below is a sample monthly goal plan;

 

monthly-real-estate-business-plan

 

Next, break each month into weekly goals – these are the “baby steps” you must accomplish that help you achieve your larger goals. To continue the example above, your weekly goal could be to search for neighborhoods that you would like to consider for further analysis, to conduct sales activity searches using your local MLS to begin your neighborhood evaluation and to identify the agents with a consistent track record of sales within each neighborhood.

The image below illustrates how a weekly goal plan is established;

 

weekly-real-estate-business-plan

 

Your last step is to break each week down into a daily to-do list. These are the daily tasks that you must complete to reach your weekly goals. The image below shows how your goals are broken down into daily to-do items that must be completed.

 

Screen Shot 2014-11-09 at 2.48.24 PM

 

If you are committed to this process, I can assure you it will work for you. In the many years since I began using this approach I have only missed one goal that I had set for myself. So take the time to create a well thought out real estate business plan and be sure include some personal goals you’d like to achieve as well.

5 Things Your Brand Must Have Besides A Logo

Lots of people, many designers included, think a “brand” is just a nice looking logo. Wrong. So, so wrong, designers. A brand is about a lot more than simply a logo, or a stationery set, a cool t-shirt, etc. As a branding creative director, I’ve accumulated a bit of knowledge about what, exactly, goes into a successful brandthat users truly connect with.

Today, I’m going to take you through the 5 essential things I believe a brand needs other than a nice looking logo, which is also important, but it’s also sort of a given, right?

1. A Mission

The brand you’re designing has to have a reason for existing. If it doesn’t, run far, far away from that project. A mission doesn’t have to be anything especially complicated. It can be as simple as a dream or an ideal that the founder had to reach out to more people through their business, or perhaps they want to continue a family business started by a parent or grandparent.

But, if the business owners have no motivation or guiding principles that inspire them to work hard on their business, how are they going to expect you, the designer, to do the same?

Some entrepreneurs have lost the “spark” they once had, that motivation that made them start the business in the first place, and they are looking for outside help to try and get it back.

That’s all fine and good, but you usually don’t want to be in a situation where you’re the only one who’s passionate about the business. What tends to happen is actually the opposite of what the client hopes: their “meh” attitude will actually infect you too, and you’ll soon be dreading going in to work every morning.

2. A Target Market

You don’t just create a branding strategy because you want some cool looking stationery. Your client’s brand needs to have a target audience, people who get the main message and will respond positively to it. This legwork will likely already be done by the client, but not always. Sometimes, it will be your job to be market researcher as well as designer.

How do you go about researching a target market? First, you have to know something about the industry. If you don’t, now is a great time to familiarize yourself and do some rooting around. Talk to potential users of the product or service and get a feel for the kind of people they are. What are their likes and dislikes, their expectations when using a website, software, product, etc.

3. Something Of Value

Brands provide value. Usually, this value is of an emotional nature – making people feel happy, safe, secure, entertained, etc. The actual product itself may not be worth much, financially speaking, but there is a lot to be said aboutpeople’s perception of a brand. If a user believes that something has value, then it does. This is both a good thing for designers – and a bad thing.

On the one hand, it means that you only need to come up with that one, great design that really connects with a large number of people and your reputation is basically set. On the other hand, it means that you need to be discerning about the exact kind of value you choose to provide your users.

4. Trust

More accurately: users have to Know, Like, and Trust your brand’s message if they are going to continue to value it and support your client’s business. These are the basic fundamentals of branding that every designer needs to be aware of. It’s not just your client’s responsibility; if you’re going to build a niche and have only the best clients on your roster, you have to become a mini-brand expert yourself.

First, people need to know the brand exists. That’s where marketing and spreading the word comes in. Next, if people don’t like a particular brand, they aren’t going to use it. This may be a matter of simple perception.

The bread on the bottom shelf may taste the same as the top shelf bread, but people are going to assign a lower value to it regardless. Or, it could be that they genuinely don’t like the product or service. There’s nothing you can do about that – no brand can please everyone, nor should they try.

Finally, if people don’t trust the brand, then all the fancy logos in the world aren’t going to fix the problem. This is more a problem with your client, andhow well they convey trust, not only to their audience, but to everyone who works for them – including you. If you don’t trust them, there’s no way users will.

5. Genuine Communication

A brand needs to speak its target market’s language. If it comes across as phony or artificial, people will pick up on it immediately, and the brand will be a source of ridicule. This is related to trust – people have to agree with your messageand trust that you know what’s best for them.

Nowhere is this more apparent than the social news site Reddit. The Reddit community is famously selective – not just anything can make it onto its coveted front page. Many marketers have tried to crack the code, failing miserably because they don’t understand how Reddit works and what Redditors value in a brand. Because Redditors have the power to “downvote” posts, it creates a purely democratic experience that proves the sincerity of any marketing attempt and keeps brands honest.

What Do You Think?

What else do brands need to have (other than a logo)? How important do you think it is for designers to have a solid understanding of brand creation?

23 Steps To Build Your Personal Brand

We live in one of the most exciting times in the world’s history where you can build a personal brand faster and broader than anyone has even imagined. Most people are underestimating the reach and power of the internet that has really only been available for barely 15 years. Facebook marketing  is less than 2 years old and YouTube and Twitter have only been in existence for a few years.

The previous generation built their personal brands on television, radio, magazines and newspapers. You now have the opportunity to build a personal brand utilizing the power and leverage of social media and blogs that can accelerate the process.

The potential of the web is still evolving and will continue to surprise us as it continues to grow and challenge established thinking and disrupt business models.

So what are 23 steps to build your personal brand in a digital world?

1. Identify Your Passion

2. Think of 20 or more blog topics that you can write about or video on your passion so you can have plenty of content to publish when you are ready to launch your blog

3. Ask yourself the questions “Can I talk about it better than anyone else?” and “Am I so passionate about it that I can get up at 4.30am, 5 days a week to do it?”

4. Name your personal brand eg “The online gaming guru” or the  “The place to get your scrapbooking tips”

5. Buy your user name (as a domain name) preferably a .com and or .tv at Hostmonster.com

6. Choose Your Medium eg video, audio or the written word as some people can write, others are better on video and some can communicate their passion through speech

7. Buy a hosting account and a WordPress theme that suits your medium

8. Hire a web designer so that you can present the most professional brand you can afford to the online world as  it is the global front door for your digital online brand

9. Make it easy for people to share your content  and include a retweet and Facebook share buttons as a minimum as well as making it easy for fans to subscribe via RSS and email

10. Create a Facebook fan page

11. Sign Up for Ping.fm ( multichannel social media promotion and publishing software) or Tube Mogul (online video distribution platform) then select all the platforms you want to distribute your content (Twitter and facebook are absolutely essential) choose others depending on your interests

12. Publish and post your content to your blog

13. Write, video or record your posts regularly preferably once a day 5 days a week.

14. Create community by leaving comments on other peoples blogs and replying to comments on your blog

15. Use Twitter search to find as many people as possible talking about your topic and communicate with them

16. Follow people on Twitter who are following leaders in your niche (they have already identified themselves as being interested in your subject area)

17. Use Google Blog search to find more blogs that are relevant to your subject

18. Join as many active Facebook fan pages and groups relating to your blog topic as possible

19. Repeat steps 12 to 18 over and over and over and over

20. Monitor your brand with Google alerts or Tweetdeck so that you can thank people that publish your content and protect your brand from misconceptions

21. Find and use tools to make it more efficient to publish and promote your blog content such as socialoomph.com

22. When you have feel that you have gained enough traction and attention and you have fans that are spreading your message then start reaching out to advertisers and begin monetizing

23. Place a big button on your site  that invites and makes it easy for people to do business with you

These are the key steps to start creating the brand “You” that will create opportunities and open doors that were previously closed.

This blog post was inspired by Gary Vaynerchuk’s book “Crush It” I would recommend that you go and buy it!!

Powerful Value Propositions: How to Optimize this Critical Marketing Element – and Lift Your Results

Do you think your value proposition is powerful? Would your prospects agree?

Most of the time, when we ask companies about their value proposition, we hear a description of their business model. But that’s not what most customers care about.

Customers not only want to know “What’s in it for me?” but “Why buy from you?”

This is an area that even seasoned marketers have trouble with, because there is so much confusion about what makes a value proposition effective – including how to find one in the first place.

Because value propositions are so important to conversion, making a few small but crucial changes can have a big impact across all of your marketing efforts.

Value Proposition Problems That Hold Marketers Back:

Value propositions can be intimidating because they strive to combine small size — often 10 words or less — with a lot of substance. After all, those 10 words are supposed to convey the unique qualities of your company and/or products and services.

No wonder marketers tend to shy away from one of the strongest and lowest cost optimization strategies: re-crafting their value proposition.

Our research shows that most marketers have trouble with the following areas:

  • Company has not identified a value proposition
  • Company does not clearly express its value proposition
  • Company is not testing or measuring its value proposition

These three problems can feed on each other, creating a negative cycle that hurts ROI. In fact, the majority of the 487 marketers we polled during the web clinic said they struggled with all three issues (see poll results).

What is your biggest challenge?

Key point: To counter these issues, your optimization strategy must include a continuous process of identifying, testing, and expressing value propositions effectively.

 


Value Propositions: A Major Key to Conversion

What exactly is your value proposition? The primary reason a prospect should buy from you.

When we review the MarketingExperiments Conversion Sequence, it’s easy to see why getting your value proposition right should be a top priority.

MarketingExperiments Conversion Formula
The MarketingExperiments Conversion Sequence

Where C = Conversion, the other sequence elements refer to:

  • m – the match between the offer and visitor Motivation.
  • v – the clarity of the Value Proposition.
  • iIncentives used to counter Friction.
  • f – the level of Friction in the sales process.
  • aAnxiety caused by the process.

While Motivation has the highest coefficient in this formula, it also represents an external factor in the marketing cycle that is beyond your control. That makes the clarity of your Value Proposition the most important internal factor.

However, many marketers try to improve results by changing page elements like font colors and sizes, button shapes, images, incentives, and so on, when the first step should really be focusing on strengthening their value propositions.

Let’s look at a real example.

Example #1: Down & Feather Company

Original Homepage (Detail)

David Smith submitted his site’s homepage for our live optimization web clinic on PPC campaigns in May. He also attended our Landing Page Optimization Workshop in June and worked with our team on ideas for improving the site.

Can you find the value proposition in the original homepage below? Most clinic participants could not.

Down and Feather Company homepage

This is the original value proposition that David submitted for the clinic:

“We don’t harm the birds to acquire the down and we allow our customers the ability to have their pillow firmness adjusted for one year from the date of purchase for FREE. No one else in the industry provides such service. Pillows are very personal and difficult enough to select at a big box retailer much less over the Internet sight unseen. Quite simply the finest down bedding in the world.”

This example underscores the importance of identifying your true value proposition before trying to communicate it. The original homepage did not communicate the stated ideas adequately, much less emphasize them.

The truly unique features of David’s value proposition were buried in a long, complex sentence that probably was skipped over by most visitors. And the customized pillow policy (the true value proposition) was not expressed on the original homepage at all.

However, although the redesigned homepage is still a work in progress, it now puts the primary value proposition in the spotlight.

Redesigned Homepage (Detail)

Redesigned homepage

Key differences in how the value proposition is now expressed include:

  • The company’s real value proposition – its “Perfect Pillow Policy” – is now clearly articulated and showcased in a prominent banner on every page.
  • “Always Free Shipping” is emphasized (red, placed higher on page), while the credit card and BBB logos are gone from masthead.
  • Customer Care section in left navbar reiterates value points.

Comparison: Before and After

Original and redesigned homepage

While the redesigned page could benefit from further optimization, David confirms that adding and emphasizing the revised value proposition has been a significant factor in improving the site’s conversion rate.

Before we reveal those results, let’s review the essential characteristics of strong value propositions.

 


Characteristics of Strong Value Propositions

  • You must differentiate your offer from your competitors’ offers.
  • You may match a competitor on every dimension of value except one.
  • You need to excel in at least one element of value.
  • In this way you become the best choice for your optimum customer.
  • There is a difference between the value proposition for your company and your product. You must address both.

Crafting a value proposition requires substantial reflection on what is unique about your company and your products and services.

Challenge: If you had just 10 words to describe why people should buy from your company instead of another’s, what would you communicate?

 


Step One: Identifying an Effective Value Proposition

To rate the quality and uniqueness of value propositions, MarketingExperiments uses this 1-5 scale:

  1. Limited value to a small market. Extensive competition and/or few barriers to entry.
  2. Substantial value to a medium-sized market. Limited competition and/or significant barriers to entry.
  3. A product or service with strong product differentiation, but little competitive protection.
  4. A unique product or service that is highly valuable to a large market, and strong competitive protection and/or extensive barriers to entry. This may take the form of a registered patent or limited access to product components.
  5. A unique product or service that is highly valuable to a large market, and exclusive or near-exclusive control of essential product components. This may also include a registered patent.

If your value proposition does not rank as a 3 or better on the 1-5 scale, you should take a critical look at your core business to re-craft a value proposition that accurately reflects your capabilities.

Our team also developed a simple system for ranking value propositions to approximate the potential appeal of an offer:

Evaluating Value Propositions

Evaluation Chart

Desire Exclusivity
0 – Anywhere Else 0 – No interest
1 – Somewhere Else 1 – Possible interest
2 – Nowhere Else 2 – High interest
  1. Rank the ideal customer’s desire level for the offer.
  2. Rank the exclusivity of the offer.
  3. Multiply the two integers.
  4. If the total is less than 2, re-craft your offer.

Evaluating Value Propositions–Example (Before and After)

Evaluation Example

Evaluation Example

 


Step Two: Expressing Your Value Proposition

Having a powerful value proposition is not enough; it must be communicated effectively to achieve optimal results.

First, you need to refine your value proposition until you can articulate it in a single, instantly credible sentence.

When that is accomplished, you can optimize your pages to express and support the value proposition using congruence.

What is congruence? It refers to having every element of your page either state or support the value proposition

Let’s look at two other examples from workshop attendees to illustrate the concept of congruence:

Example #2: University of New England Original Landing Page (Detail)

Matt Celano also attended our Landing Page Optimization Workshop in June and worked with our team on ideas for revising this landing page.

Original homepage

Before showing the revised page, we asked clinic participants to identify the value proposition. Here are some of the more common responses:

  • “On-line degree?”
  • “Too much text on the page to find it.”
  • “Master’s programs”
  • “Concentration relevant to your classroom.”

Optimized Version (Detail)

Redesigned homepage

Key differences in how the value proposition is now expressed include:

  • Stronger intro copy. Descriptive subheads do a better job of expressing the value proposition.
  • Cleaner masthead image conveys end result of the degree, rather than features of the campus (not relevant for online coursework)
  • Prominent credibility indicators (US News rank and badge) support the value proposition.

Example #3: Co-BrandNews.com Original Landing Page (Detail)

Eric Stevenson submitted this page for our February web clinic. He later applied several of the recommendations from our optimization team.

Original homepage

Before showing the revised page, we asked clinic participants to identify the value proposition. Here are some of the more common responses:

  • “News your way.”
  • “Add Co-Brand and increase web traffic”
  • “Sign-up to add Co-Brand News to your website for free.”
  • “Give your website the personal attention it needs.”

Optimized Version (Detail)

Original homepage

Key differences in how the value proposition is now expressed include:

  • Cleaner copy throughout the page, starting with the standout headline
  • Subheads, bullet points, calls to action–all work together to support the value proposition
  • Testimonial addresses flexibility, customization–a key value point
  • Free offer emphasized

David, Matt and Eric all used congruence to revise their copy and design elements, and present a more direct message focused on the uniqueness and credibility of their value proposition.

As clinic attendees pointed out, some value propositions were already in there, but not fully expressed. Sometimes re-crafting a value proposition is simply a matter of reorganizing the information already expressed.

 


Step Three: Testing Your Value Proposition

However hard you work on expressing your value proposition, to know its true effectiveness you must test to see how it resonates with your ideal prospect.

Two methods to consider are micro-testing and radical redesign testing.

Micro-testing Your Value Proposition
To discover language that best expresses your value proposition, you can micro-test using PPC ads. In a sense, micro-testing is a preliminary test to determine whether your new value proposition is clearly identified and expressed.
With micro-testing, you can explore whether your re-crafted value proposition merits a radical redesign of your pages or if you must re-engage with the processes of identification and expression.

Create 3-5 variations of PPC ads using your summary value proposition and measure the clickthrough rate of each ad. The ad with the highest clickthrough rate identifies the value proposition that’s most appealing to potential customers.

Example: Value proposition micro-test for an ISO Business:

Microtest

“Radical Redesign” Testing of Value Propositions

If your landing pages or sites have limited traffic, testing the application of your value proposition with congruence using single-factorial methods (A/B tests) can be time-consuming and cumbersome.

One way to counter this is by using radical redesign tests to achieve initial results quickly, and point out specific areas for additional tests.

The three landing page examples above from our workshops and clinics have all used a radical redesign (multivariable) testing strategy.

Due to the nature of these tests, it is impossible to isolate and attribute all gains or losses specifically to the value proposition alone. However, optimizing pages with a focus on congruence and effectively expressing a more powerful value proposition is a major factor, as indicated by the conversion sequence.

With that caveat in mind, let’s look at the results of the three pages that were optimized and tested using the radical redesign approach.

Results: Before and After

Original and redesigned homepage

The optimized version of this page increased conversion rate by 145%. (David Smith, Down & Feather Company)

Original and redesigned homepage

The optimized version of this page increased conversions by 300% and conversion rate by 81%. (Matt Celano, Compass Knowledge Group)

Original and redesigned homepage

The optimized version of this page increased conversions by 200% and conversion rate by 69%. (Eric Stevenson, Co-Brand News)

How These Tests Work Together

While micro-testing with PPC ads can help you find the language that best expresses your value proposition, radical redesign testing can help you optimize pages for congruence and achieve initial results quickly, while pointing to specific areas for additional testing.

In other words, these two tests can help you focus on using your value proposition to give customers the right support at the right time.


Summary

Powerful Value Propositions

  • Your value proposition is the primary reason a prospect should buy from you.
  • Optimizing value propositions is a continual process that involves identifying, expressing, and testing/measuring.
  • To express your value proposition effectively, pay attention to congruence.
  • Micro-testing with PPC ads can help you find the language that best expresses your value proposition.
  • Radical redesign tests can achieve initial results quickly, and identify areas for additional testing.

Developing A Powerful Brand Purpose

A sizzling brand purpose sets out how a company intends to change the world for the better. Its role is to unite customers and culture alike in the pursuit of that intention. It’s a statement of belief, of hope, of pursuit. It’s born of a wish to see the world put to rights.

First and foremost, a purpose should never be developed in isolation. This affects your entire organization. It should involve the senior leadership team to start with, and then be socialized for discussion. The discussion itself shouldn’t revolve around the words (because that quickly becomes semantic nit-picking). It should focus on the passion, on the biggest belief you share and on the implications of holding that belief for everything you do.

Start with the greatest good
Don’t tell your people and customers about what you want to see change in the business. State what you fundamentally believe must change in the world. Coke wants to see more happiness. Disney wants to see more magic. Virgin wants to see more rebellion. Google wants to see more things found. What does your brand most want to see happen? What do you passionately want to see stop? Whatever you decide: that’s the goal. And it should be one you are prepared to shout from the rooftops.

Make the strongest link
What is your brand going to do to make that change happen? The answer to that question must define your unique involvement. It must help explain why you are most qualified to be trusted in this pursuit and how everyone you care about (including of course your customers) benefits from you trying to get there. It must shed light on your agenda – and in so doing, it must reveal your humanity.

Ask for actions at every level
Your purpose should be the goal that everyone who works at your workplace and buys from your brand is most committed to see happen. That’s the big picture. But your purpose must also be able to be framed in such a way as to inspire people at a highly transaction level. Steve Jobs didn’t instruct people to “Think different”. Instead, he encouraged them to continually question what they were doing by asking: “What are you doing today to think different?” Such a benchmark question pushes people to evaluate their actions against the impact they will have. Such questions bring the purpose right down to what anyone is doing in any given moment. If you can’t frame a benchmark question from your purpose, it isn’t personal enough and therefore it risks being less relevant.

Examples that may inspire you:
Virgin: Screw business as usual and let’s see what’s possible.

Google: To organize the world’s information and make it universally accessible and useful.

Twitter: The fastest, simplest way to stay close to everything you care about.

Starbucks: To inspire and nurture the human spirit – one person, one cup and one neighborhood at a time.

The “Tell me again” test
Some years back, I was fortunate to meet author and speaker Ian Percy at a conference. He generously gave me a copy of his wonderful and succinct book “The Power of Purpose”. It makes the business case for purpose powerfully and deliberately, and includes this simple idea that I use religiously because it separates in the clearest terms the business case for what you’re doing from the purpose you should promulgate.

Here’s how it works:
When you retire and your grown children or their children come to you and ask you to explain why you spent so much time at work, what story will they most want to hear? Will their interest match your purpose?

The wrong reason to have gone to work, because your grandchildren wouldn’t ask and wouldn’t be interested: “Tell me again how you achieved a year on year double digit return on capital.”

A wonderful reason to have gone to work, because people would always want to know: “Tell me again how you helped cure a disease that was killing a million children a year.”

Both statements aim for the same result if you’re a pharmaceutical company – the business can achieve highly attractive returns on capital by curing a significant disease – but the purpose, the reason you’re asking people to come to work, couldn’t be more different.
In the first instance, you’re asking people to show up to achieve a financial effect. In the second case, you’re asking them to help stop a child-killer.

Run the “Tell me again” test against your current mission. Now ask yourself this: Who’d want to hear about that again?”

A purpose that is not worth sharing is not worth having.

50 Do-It-Yourself Marketing Ideas for Your Real Estate Business

Most of us are looking for ways to save. And although time is money, a little time spent working on your marketing can stretch your budget even further. I’m not suggesting you attempt to create all your marketing yourself, but you can pick and choose a few ideas to supplement with some of your higher quality pieces. When it comes to listing flyers to showcase a home, go for high resolution, custom branding and consistency. However, there are many other affordable ways you can market your real estate business using social media tools, word-of-mouth, and even marketing templates. Check out these 50 do-it-yourself marketing ideas for your real estate business.

Offline/Print Marketing
  1. Update your business cards with your social profiles
  2. Sponsor a local event or fundraiser
  3. Create swag- t-shirts, pens, etc. & give them away to clients and friends
  4. Attend and/or host local meetups & tweetups
  5. Get a vanity plate for your car
  6. Focus on word of mouth wherever you go (grocery store, hair salon, etc.) & carry those business cards
  7. Create or sponsor a local business or resource guide
  8. Mail hand written client appreciation & thank you cards
  9. Create a neighborhood newsletter/ “weekender” (mail or walk it)
  10. Direct mailers with comps & social profile callouts (offer a coupon/deal)
Email Marketing
  1. Create a drip email campaign, focusing on your niche (offer tips & advice)
  2. Send a weekly or monthly email newsletter
  3. Send flash animated birthday, holiday, special occasion cards (check outZingDing)
  4. Work with local businesses to co-brand an email offer (send to both your contact lists)
  5. Invite sphere to a local event or Free online Webinar for homeowners (based on your niche expertise)
  6. What’s happening this weekend? Special weekender tips for your local area (include a coupon for local business attraction)
  7. Rate updates and info (work with a local lender)
  8. Seasonal homeowner reminders & safety tips (storm drains, garden tips, etc.)
  9. Invitation to your social profiles or exclusive Facebook Group (based on local interest)
  10. Survey or poll your clients and share results with further relevant info
Blog/Website
  1. Create an ebook, require name & email address for free download
  2. Video/podcast blog series on a specific topic/niche
  3. Offer client Q & A via a contact form, highlight in sidebar
  4. Offer a free IDX search tool
  5. Add Facebook Connect to your blog
  6. Host a contest with prizes from local businesses
  7. Comment back timely and create dialogue within posts
  8. Post articles about others on your blog (local businesses, interesting people, neighborhoods, etc.)
  9. Create a local special interest landing page (i.e. wineries, schools, non-profit, etc.)
  10. Feature your listings, use a single property Website solution like MyMarketWarethat syndicates your listings to several reputable listing aggregators
Facebook
  1. Create a profile and import your contacts
  2. Send daily birthday wishes
  3. Comment or Like 3-5 posts from the Newsfeed daily
  4. Update your status with fun and value once a day
  5. Create a Facebook Page for your business
  6. Post helpful and relevant resources from your FB Page
  7. Leave comments on local business pages or groups (NO SPAM, or self interest linkbacks)
  8. Comment on others’ status updates
  9. Create a past client photo album with testimonials (tag clients that are on Facebook & post on your business page)Marketing Advertising Blog ? VuManhThang.Com
  10. Create Animoto slideshows or a photo album for listings (post on your business page)
Twitter
  1. Create a Twitter profile, use Twitterlocal.net to connect with locals
  2. Use the “Find People” feature to find people you already know on Twitter
  3. Tweet homeowner tips (easy repairs, projects, upgrades)
  4. Tweet funny, interesting, inspiring, engaging experiences and info
  5. Tweet local market info, updates
  6. List yourself on Twitter directories: NearbyTweets, WeFollow, etc.
  7. Break news as it happens
  8. Tweet local event information
  9. Tweet your blog posts
  10. Tweet your professional expertise & activities (niche advice, relevant tips, open houses, new listings, broker’s tour, thoughts & experiences)