HomeGain – I’m there in August
March 26, 2009
I promised myself that I was going to get out and do some teaching this year. I have wanted to help REALTORS successfully build their online marketing programs and I am going to do it.
I am not sure what the name of the conference is that Louis Cammarrosano invited me to, he just indicated that it was going to be a conference for Home Gain customers, so on my calendar it just sits there:
HomeGain
Here’s the fun part. I will be going to the Real Estate Webmasters conference in beautiful Nanaimo, BC. Then I plan to hit the ferry to Seattle and fly down to San Francisco for “Home Gain”. (Louis, what’s the official title of this thing?)
With the Bloodhound Blog Unchained event in Phoenix and the training I do here in Louisville, this is shaping up to be a pretty good year.
Anyway, Louis. Thanks for the invite, my friend. Invitation accepted! Happy to have some fun, teach correct basic search engine marketing principles and get to know a LOT of REALTORS and make some new friends along the way.
I am also looking forward to seeing California again. It is where I grew up, and I have not been back in a long time. Will be good to drop in for 48 hours or so!
Google Publishers Advisory Council – My take.
March 24, 2009
So. It came to light this past week that Google has been inviting the BIG adsense publishers and other big media folks to an advisory committee. And others did as well. And here. And here. And Ad Age even called us little guys “parasites” here. There…that’s a pretty good reporting of the issue.
Much of the “little guy” publishing world (bloggers) is up in arms about Google meeting with BIG TIME adsense publishers and the fact that those big time publishers are crying in their beer and asking for a little (cough–a lot) preferential treatment over the little guys (us) in the Search Engine Results. The little guys are crying “foul”.
HERE’S my take:
First off, I have ZERO problem with the big guys talking with Google. I think Google SHOULD talk with them. Matt Cutts and the rest of the webmaster liasion crew at Google have provided much insight and communicated better than any of the other search engines with Webmasters big and small. Talk is good. Communication benefits EVERYONE.
Now for my take on preferential treatment for big media. (here’s where it gets fun, kids…grin). This is more of a challenge to big media than anything…who died and appointed you God? On what basis should you be afforded preferential treatment?
Search engines crave RELEVANCE. That is what they MUST have to survive. What gives them this RELEVENCE?
Journalism Degrees?
It isn’t a J-school diploma hanging on the wall. I can show you PLENTY of crappy, slanted, inaccurate stories written by big, mainstream media guys with a J-school diploma. Ummm…remember Dan Rather? It was bloggers who blew the whistle on him over years ago. Are you saying a Journalism degree makes you relevant because you are objective? or even Fair and Balanced? Please…
National vs Local?
So are you saying that a New York Times writer who posts about how bad the real estate market is currently should have precedence over a local REALTOR who posts about their current market conditions? Which of these examples is more relevant to a Louisville area searcher on Google, hmmm?
Timeliness?
One of the things that the blogger world kicks the Mainstream media’s rear end on day in and day out is the timeliness of their media. Timeliness IS a component of relevance! One of the reasons that newspapers are going down is that there IS NO NEWS CYCLE anymore.
One of the main traffic builders for Google and the other search engines is to quickly find the BEST articles on a given hot news subject and get them to the top. That’s what I did for this post! You do not have a corner on that market big media. And you are typically slower to react than most bloggers. Welcome to the concept of an Army of Davids. Get over it.
The Bottom Line
Might does not make right. Right makes right. You publishers are asking for an unfair advantage in a world where you are used to being able to be in control by buying ink by the barrel.
I think it’s great that Google is talking with you. I think it is great that the conversations are taking place. BUT…At the end of the day, you folks need to compete in the same arena of ideas, facts, opinions, and points of view that we all do. And you do NOT deserve “extra special” treatment because you are ummm….well..you. Ad age? Parasites? Please. Fact checkers. Opinion shapers? Yes. Parasites. Please.
ONE LAST POINT.
If you Google “Google Publisher Advisory Council”, you will be directed to many of the same links that I linked to above. WHY? Because the mainstream media simply isn’t writing about this. You want your credibility, but IMO you want it selectively. Again…who died and appointed you god?
I challenge you to make the case that you are, in fact, more relevant. I cannot see that you are.
The Recession and Online Marketing – for the Real Estate Industry
March 17, 2009
Let me say right off that this is just one guy’s view of a pretty big elephant. I don’t claim to have all of the answers, but Glenn’s post over at the Bloodhound Blog, sparked me into writing my thoughts (as he often does.).
Glenn asks about the future of the landscape in the real estate space. More brokers or less? Big VC players using BIG ideas and BIG capital or smaller sized players that have proven profitability, yet may be slower to grow due to lack of capital.
In the current environment, VC’s have shut down the flow of capital (essentially) into the pipe. This leaves the big idea crowd in a tough spot. Yes, as Glenn claims, it is true that relatively few have hit Tech Crunch’s dead pool to date. If this flow of capital doesn’t change for say another 18 months, though, MANY will, IMO. Glenn would know this better than I…given their current burn rate, how long can many of these firms last without profitability? Have they managed cash by cutting staff and reducing expenses? To a point they have done well. But the key to ANY VC these days is gonna be PROFITABILITY. The P word. Plain and simple.
Will some survive? YES. Must they drive towards profitability? YES. What we are seeing is that an organization like Zillow or Trulia for example, throws out a cool looking interface for the public. They are the FIRST. Bleeding edge. They cut down the trees and create a road. Then, savvy REALTORS (a VERY small subset of REALTORS in general mind you), drive down that road and collect much of the goodness. Currently there is no way to monetize the logging business on the net. Timber has no value. The ROAD IS the value and thanks to open source CMS’s like WordPress, Joomla, vBulletin, and MANY others, toll on that road is forever and increasingly cheap.
The takeaway: In a recessionary environment, BIG ideas cost BIG money and are often easily imitated or tweaked by enterprising folks that have the tools to re-create the goodness at 1/100th the cost. Why should a VC invest the capital when they presume that the BIG idea is not defensible. If it is defensible, it is profitable.
Second point. Earned media. One thing that aided Big Idea folks in the past is the concept of big media buys were the only way of building defensible and profitable traffic. The only ones doing that successfully these days in the real estate space that I am aware of are HomeGain and REMAX.com. HomeGain uses PPC and other media buys to drive traffic to their sites. Their organic search component is a relatively VERY small component of their mix. RE/MAX uses large media buys to promote REMAX.com very successfully. They have generated over 6 MM leads to date with the millions they spend. It is defensible because RE/MAX brokerages do not see them as competition. They receive the leads at ZERO referral fee. They (associates) have already paid into the effort with their advertising funds. This is a cooperative effort that produces results.
The little guys have a different tactic: Earned media. This was not available to us 10 years ago. Or really even five yearss ago in the form it exists today. I can build an effective social networking platform (blogging, forum, etc…you name it) for literally pennies these days. I can then promote it online for pennies. Funny part is: It is everybit as effective as the big media buy. (just a different marketing channel, mind you).You can then PROMOTE it via big media (or not). Look at how much earned pub Twitter is getting from the press these days.
I think the VC’s maybe realizing that you don’t need five MBA’s, tons of capital, massive investment capital, policies, procedures and an exit strategy to execute a BIG idea.
A few savvy folks who trust each other and know an industry, some spare time and a few bucks from each may now be far more effective in simply producing profit and ROI on a smaller scale. Neccessity is the mother of invention. It also forms the friction and heat that forges strong organizations. Too much capital as often is the mother of failure as too little.
One thing about starting with nothing. You are reluctant to add costs when it is your own money. That is a good business habit in any environment, but crucial these days.
Once the concept (and profitability) is proven in the fires of lean times, then there is adequate capital opportunity and facilities from the SBA or other sources if there is need.
Now for brokerages:
I think this was one of Glenn’s best questions. He asked if there’d be a general increase or decrease in the number of brokers, in spending on web infrastructure, advertising and etc. I indicated in my comment that it did not matter. Here’s why:
a) All real estate is transacted locally. It is geotargeted. A national site simply cannot do what a local site can PROVIDED the local site is willing to INVEST THE TIME and PROMOTE the SITE. (most are not. I grant that.) They HAVE the TIME. In a slower real estate environment they CAN do it. Labor is cheap for a REALTOR promoting their own brand when they are not busy, where a national site must hire it done.
b) I think there will be battle hardened large brokerages that have local branding dominance. They will be populated by teams who dominate niches, but do not wish to be their own brokerage. I think there will be established individual agents with large books of business in those offices who offer great service to their spheres of influence and protect those relationships. They will slowly diminish in size as these folks reach retirement and / or transition their clients to new agents. I also think there will be a large number of Jay Thomspson / Greg Swann type brokerages…small independant and feisty as hell. They are by nature internet savvy and have the local connections that a national level entity cannot easily replicate.
Most everyone else is going to suffer an ugly and painful demise. (There, I said it.)
I do think that Glenn’s model of being IN the real estate business as a broker rather than a third party along with similar strategies by folks like Galen Ward @ estately, are FAR preferable to the strategies of third party guys like Zillow and Trulia. Why? Because they actually are in the business. There is often too much time WASTED in trying to differentiate rather than simply connect with consumers. In this, I think Estately has the upper hand. Promote. Market. Traffic. Connect. and then Refer or Convert (get the cash).
There is a blogger in my office who has cashed tens of thousands of dollars off of a simple WordPress blog with the right effort, correct principles and a solid plan from the get go. $150 plus about 40 hours of solid work = tens of thousands in the last five months alone. That’s right. The blog was started 6 months or so ago. We refer to him in our blogging group as “Direct Deposit” (hehe- True Story.). He is a living, breathing and blogging example of what Glenn was referring to in the drive to profitability being a shorter path with less steps. Why do “Off the wall, down the stairs, off the backboard, nothin’ but net!” when you can do “He shoots. He scores.”
These kinds of savvy folks (in my opinion) are the ones who will come out ahead and will shape the future of real estate after the recession.
Ok, finally. Thanks Glenn for the great questions to stimulate my mind. PLEASE critique my thoughts and add your own opinions to it. I would value that. ( That goes likewise for everyone else as well.
)
Chicago Northwest Suburbs Real Estate ;-) AR steps in it again.
March 13, 2009
The Public Relations fun and games over at Active Rain took another fun twist yesterday. And I MAY be too late to miss the fun because I was asleep at the switch.
Here’s the post I am talking about:
Northwest Chicago Suburbs Real Estate
Folks at AR, listen up. Listen close and listen well. When you brag about how well your blogging ranks for some non-competitive little term…you KNOW that’s gonna invite people to point out that when it comes to SEO you have the short end of the stick.
You can say a lot of things at AR, but saying you are the tops in having posts rank in Google…and that seems to be happening regularly and getting featured…is fraudulent in my opinion. Let’s watch the search engine results over there and see who REALLY knows what they are doing, hmmm?
Launching a weekly search for online marketing excellence
March 3, 2009
OK, I am finally doing it.
For years, clients of mine ask for examples of what I think are great online marketing efforts. I will give them one here or there. Now, I am opening up the great stuff I find each week to readers of EricOnSearch!
Here’s how it works. Eric On Excellence – the weekly challenge. You will see the details of it there. I am looking for great online marketing ideas from ANY industry and of ANY type.
Think you have what it takes? Want some authority and online exposure EricOnSearch style? Send your latest effort to me and let’s see what you got!