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11 posts categorized "Real Estate Email Marketing"

August 04, 2008

Does EMail Even Matter Anymore?

Somewhat contrastive to last weeks post on Baby Boomers... A report by Jupiter Research found that the rising popularity of social networking sites and other forms of communication including text messaging and cell phone use are beginning to impact the effectiveness of e-mail marketing, particularly the numbers of consumers that say promotional messages inspired purchases.

The report (The Social and Portable Inbox: Optimizing E-mail Marketing in the New Era of Communication Tools) indicated that emerging forms of communication are leading to diminished use of e-mail.

22% of e-mail users said they use social networking sites instead of e-mail, with scores more indicating they have used instant messaging (IM), text messaging, and cell phones instead of e-mail.

In 2007, 51 % of e-mail users said e-mail inspired at least one online purchase, and 47 percent said the same for off-line purchases. However, in 2008, the share of e-mail users fell to 44 % for online purchases and 41 % for off-line purchases.

This smacks against the study on Boomers that found that 75% who have received promotional emails about products and services have clicked through to the site being promoted, and more  than 55% have purchased a product or service promoted in an email.

April 23, 2008

Email Never Getting There?

Lyris ISP Deliverability Report (PDF), nearly 1 of every 5 permission-based email messages sent to U.S.-based ISPs gets automatically junk mail folder. That means slightly more than 76 percent of invited email successfully makes it to the inbox. 

November 14, 2007

Mortgage Broker Leads

Mortgage Brokers are having a rough go of it currently in many parts of the U.S. Just like the Realtors. Mostly because of tightening of lending requirements.

I recently witnessed a couple methods that Mortgage Pros are using to ramp up their chances of landing an application.

Continue reading "Mortgage Broker Leads" »

November 06, 2007

Something Happened After I Hit Send

I sent out an email Monday night and peeved a large group of my email list. However, to another portion of the list my email did absolutely nothing (based on responses), as it also persuaded another large portion. What in blazes did I do?

Emailsend

I sent out an email that was a recommendation to get a free $100 card from my favorite Mexican Food Restaurant. The copy was very hokie and written in an awe shucks style. It sent the clicker to a website that put the visitor thru a series of hoops in order to get a discount card.

Continues...

Continue reading "Something Happened After I Hit Send" »

Modalities and Mail

This morning I picked up my most recent copy of DMNews (Oct 29,2007, page 14, page 10 in their online version).

The article I gravitated towards was about a real estate company called Real Living. The title of the article: Real Living turns to mail for growth. I really believe in the idea of doing what everybody is not doing philosophy of life. I recently watched Dan Kennedy say much of the same thing. Kennedy is a star maker in the Direct Response world. Have you ever heard of Craig Proctor? Thank Dan Kennedy.

Continue reading "Modalities and Mail" »

January 17, 2007

Real Estate "Drips Not Dripping"

A new study to be released shortly by the Email Experience Council finds that links are missing in 28% of all emails , and many email sland into inboxes without proper rendering images.

"Our research shows that less than 50% of marketers are creating emails that render appropriately," states the report.

The study was conducted by reviewing 1,000 e-mails--both business-to-consumer and business-to-business--sent during the last quarter.

  • 28% of the e-mails arrived without links
  • 21% of the e-mails appeared completely blank when images had been turned off

Takeaway Lesson: This is obviously a result of overactive spam filters.  So a good idea is to test a few emails on dummy accounts to make sure you are getting thru. Much  of this is at the ISP level. SO you can contact ISPs to get whitelisted or If you are using a commercial mailer their ip may be the problem. So you might want to make them aware of the importance of whitelisting.

May 24, 2006

Hands Down:The Best Real Estate Marketing

What is everyone else doing? Do the Opposite!

We as people, and henceforth realtors and agents tend to be sheep. I think I have even coined us as sheople in an earlier post.

What do I mean? Well we often will follow the "wisdom of crowds" without thought of consequence. Instead of finding and then doing what the very best online marketers do. Often times we make judgements based on what the majority is doing. Unfortunately, the majority does 6 home buying or listing sides a year. The full article

May 21, 2006

If it Ain't Making Leads, Then its Just an Expensive Brochure

Blogging, Websites, lead capture vs open MLs.

I can't tell you how many times a day I hear an agent or an "expert" espouse the virtues of the empowered consumer and that it really is a benefit to leave the MLS open VS forcing them to opt-in.

The biggest excuse is that the consumer will just move-on to another website.

Hmm. Lots of responses come to mind for that one:

"Whose fault is that?"
The MLS has systematically been given away by NAR itself and boards since the beginning of the net.
"So what"
Serious people do not mind giving away some personal information for the data they want. Blogs are growing at a blistering pace where anyone with a thought can publish. Do you want to see the future? Just go to MySpace. What a mess of disjointed and frenetic text. Remember the line, "57 Channels and nothing on?" Yah. The net is Cable TV on Steroids.

The future of the internet is paid content. People, will not mind paying for content from sources they trust, because they want the information they can trust. When you have a medium where anyone with Frontpage and some time can start a business, it makes it more time consumptive to get what you want. Thus, people do not mind giving their information.

I have driven millions of consumers to my own and my client websites. They all get a phenomenal lead conversion rate.

Real Estate Control Freaks

At the end of the day, a forced opt-in is about control.

Control over your business, your website and your future. The money is in your list of prospects that come from your blog, your website and IDX VOW websites.

Control is from you communicating your message to an opt in list. It comes from knowing the point of your real estate blog, or your realty website. In my opinion that is to gather names. Lots and lots of names. So that can talk with those names on your terms.

January 05, 2006

Predictions for Online Real Estate 2006

Get the insider track on 2006
....online real estate marketing predictions

Happy New Year! everyone. I just posted my predictions for the new year. Check it out.

July 18, 2005

From real estate lead to closed sale

A recently completed report on home sellers and home buyers(Hebert Research for HouseValues Inc.), shows that home sellers take on average 9.3 months from the time they begin researching until they sell.

It takes home buyers 16.7 months, on average, to research and buy their next home. 

The study aslo found that:

  • First-time home buyers invest an average of 20.5 months in the entire home-buying process, the study also found.
  • Before even thinking about selling, consumers can take up to four years subconsciously collecting experiences related to their home, including current and future desired requirements, features and amenities. These experiences compound to bring the home sale to the forefront of consciousness, triggering an active research phase.
  • Once the research phase has been initiated, it takes sellers an average of 9.3 months to sell – 5.5 months in a pre-research phase, 1.4 months for the active research phase, and 2.4 months for the active selling phase.
  • The majority of sellers – 52.1 percent – take one day to select an agent.
  • Buyers, like sellers, often take up to four years collecting experiences related to their current home, and potential future needs.
  • It takes buyers nearly a year and a half – 16.4 months on average – to buy from the time they begin thinking about a purchase.
  • Once the research phase for buyers has been initiated, it takes an average of 16.7 months to buy – 7.1 months in the pre-research phase, 5.5 months in the active research phase, and 4.1 months in the active buying phase.
  • Forty-four percent of buyers take more than six months thinking about desirable homes and neighborhoods before actually searching for listings. The average buyer then spends more than four months searching for homes.
  • First-time buyers take an average of 20.5 months on the entire home-buying process.
  • 61.8 percent of buyers select their real estate agent within just one to three days.

    The survey also explored the reasons why consumers choose their real estate agent:

  • Consumers use agents for three main reasons: paperwork/legal work; negotiations; and access to listings.

  • Buyers and sellers tend to choose an agent based on experience, honesty and past relationships.

These numbers vary greatly from other studies say such as in California which found that :

  • Internet buyers spent an average of 5.8 weeks considering buying a home before contacting a Realtor®, nearly three times more than traditional buyers, who spent 2.1 weeks in this stage of the homebuying process.
  • Internet buyers spend 4.7 weeks investigating homes, and neighborhoods, before contacting an agent, while traditional buyers spent 1.6 weeks.
  • Internet buyers took only two weeks before selecting a home ,while traditional buyers took seven weeks.
  • Because the Internet allows buyers to preview homes, a typical Internet buyer only viewed 6.2 homes with their agent, while traditional buyers visited 14.5 homes.
  • Nine out of ten Internet buyers found their agents through an online real estate listing site; 60% found their agent through Internet search engines such as Yahoo! or Google. (note I am not sure that google is a real estate searchengine) 12% used agents they had worked with previously. (I would take this to mean that the online exposure buys you loyalty)
  • Traditional buyers found their agents through for-sale signs (47 percent). Half (47 percent) found their agents through agent advertising. One quarter (26 percent) of agents were referred by friends and family, and 19 percent had a previous transaction with their agent.
  • Internet buyers typically interviewed only one agent (71 percent) -- the first one who responded to them. Traditional buyers interviewed a median of three agents, and 37 percent interviewed four or more agents.
  • A whopping 47 percent of Internet buyers said they selected their agent because of responsiveness, while only 42 percent of traditional buyers chose their agent for that reason. So half will pick you just for showing up.
  • 22 percent of Internet buyers and 21 percent of traditional buyers choosing agents they felt would be the most aggressive on their behalf.
  • Internet buyers are more likely to be first-time buyers, they are younger, wealthier, better educated and more likely married.
  • All first-time buyers typically spent four weeks considering buying a home and four weeks investigating homes for sale before contacting a Realtor. They then spent three weeks previewing eight homes with their Realtor.
  • All repeat buyers spent three weeks considering buying a home, and only two weeks investigating homes for sale on their own. They spent five weeks previewing ten homes with their Realtor.

"The Internet is enabling consumers to research and gather information well in advance of actually buying or selling," said Ian Morris, HouseValues CEO. "This research shows that real estate agents are critical to the transaction, but are chosen late in the decision-making process, and very quickly. The takeaway for real estate professionals is to be first, fast and frequent in their communication with consumers, and that often means delivering value and information many months in advance of an expected transaction."

Ian Morris says 74 percent of consumers now begin their home research online, yet only 10 percent of real estate marketing budgets have followed them there

Comments:

Being able to generate leads is not enough. Generating email campaigns that last overtime that shares your personality and stacks value on top of value will win over prospects and keep you top of mind when it comes time to choose. And according to the data they choose quick. Your job is to get out in front of the decision process early. You do this by capturing their name and courting and segmenting them until they are ready to move your relationship to the next level.