Ubertor Real Estate Blog

The best guide to Real Estate Marketing for Realtors websites worldwide 

Archive for the ‘Craigslist.com’ Category

Tips for Realtor Email Signatures

Tuesday, October 10th, 2006

I see so many emails that have poor or non-existent email signatures. Your email signature is a very important marketing tool and there are so many agents who do not use it correctly, or even at all. Now, there is no right or wrong, but here is what I think…

Here is a bad example:

Stephen P. Jagger
Founding Partner
Combustion Labs Media Inc.
www.ubertor.com
email: steve@ubertor.com

Direct Line: 604-537-4548
Fax: 604-608-3418

Here is a better example:

Stephen P. Jagger
Founding Partner
Combustion Labs Media Inc.
http://www.ubertor.com
email: steve@ubertor.com

Direct Line: 604-537-4548
Fax: 604-608-3418

Our Real Estate Blog: http://ubertor.com/blog/
Customer Service Website: http://support.ubertor.com
Live Chat: http://www.livehelp.ubertor.com/

Notice that at the very least the links are linked. There is nothing worse than thinking you want to go to the email senders website and then having to cut and paste the link from their email. It should be as simple as a click. Make sure you put the http:// in front of your web address. (this is especially annoying to see in craigslist when you want to see more photos and the website is not a link)

Other ideas to add to your email signature:
- your website
- your direct phone number
- your blog
- brief info about your newest listing
- a quote (not my favorite, but sometimes can be effective)

The 8 Free Things Every Site Should Do

Saturday, September 23rd, 2006

Marketing Guru Seth Godin posted a list in his blog tonight titled - The 8 Free Things Every Site Should Do. (he also made a Squidoo lens for it) He includes 3 rules:

Rule #1: If you have a site, you want more traffic.
Rule #2: You don’t have enough money to buy as much traffic as you need.
Rule #3: You’ve already made your site as compelling as you know how to.

His list is a little technical for the average real estate professional so I figured I would post my own.

The 8 Free Things Every Site Should Do (in no particular order)
1. Post listing to Craigslist.org with a hyperlink back to your website
2. Build a Squidoo lens (here’s mine)
3. Issue a Press Release
4. Google Analytics - signup, monitor your sites progress
5. Comment on other blogs with a link back to your site (good quality comments, don’t comment just to do it)
6. Write a blog
7. Add a signature to your email that contains your web address (emails tend to get forwarded all over the place)
8. Signup for and participate in ActiveRain.com

Trulia.com expands to cover the entire US

Saturday, September 23rd, 2006

Trulia.com has announced that they will cover the complete U.S. by the end of the month. For those that don’t know, Trulia is a San Francisco company that offers a residential real estate search engine that helps consumers search for homes for sale, trends, neighbourhood insights and other real estate information directly from hundreds of thousands of real estate broker Web sites.

With Trulia soon to cover the entire US the rumors of them expanding into Canada must not be far away. Trulia joins Yahoo, Google, Craigslist, Zillow and Realtor.com in providing free, no user login required property search functionality.
vancouver mls reciprocity

BIV covers Provident and Ubertor Blogs

Monday, July 24th, 2006

Business in Vancouver has written an article about myself and my brother and our company blogs. I have been pushing Realtors to blog for a long time and my brother was not immune to me pushing him to do it as well. It has been very successful for us, and my brother has had the same experience with his business. He had been speaking with BIV about his blog and they decided to write an article on it.
ubertor logo provident logo

You can see this article in this weeks edition of Business in Vancouver.

Brothers laud business benefits of blogging
Software and security siblings are among a growing number of entrepreneurs harnessing the marketing potential of weblogs

Bob Mackin (article)

“Ladies and gentlemen, the Blog Brothers!”

Vancouver’s Stephen and Michael Jagger are among a growing population of small and medium-sized business owners using weblogs for marketing.

“It’s different than finding a website,” said Ubertor Inc. president Stephen Jagger. “It talks about who you are and what you do. A blog is more personalized.”

A blog can cost as much as a couple hundred dollars to operate, but many are done using free sites like Google-owned blogger.com. The rest of the investment is in time.

A blog can help generate buzz and feedback for products and services because the medium, when properly used, is one that lends itself to sharing information instead of blatant promotion. A blog can be the classic case of news you can use.

Ubertor formed six years ago as web-hosting company Combustion Labs Media Inc. By 2004, nearly all of the 19 employees were busy with real estate clients. The company launched the Ubertor real estate web-design software template last year. The Ubertor blog includes links to other blogs, such as online classified revolutionary Craig from Craigslist, archives back to August 2004, testimonials from realtors and explanations of the Ubertor strategy.

Stephen Jagger describes a blog as a “glorified newsletter” that archives data so people can follow the evolution of information and opinions.

It connects the company to clients outside markets where Ubertor employs salespeople and allows them to learn about the company, ultimately converting them into customers.

Nielsen estimates 4.8 per cent of Americans publish blogs, while 6.6 per cent have downloaded a podcast.

New York-based JupiterResearch reported last month that 35 per cent of large companies plan to begin corporate blogs in 2006.

Jupiter found that blogs are “underused for generating word-of-mouth marketing opportunities. Only 32 per cent of marketing executives said they use corporate weblogs to generate word of mouth around their company’s products or services.”

“We have had incredible success with our own blog and as a result, find ourselves regularly answering e-mailed questions from all over the world,” said Michael Jagger, president of Provident Security and Event Management Corp.

He started providentblog.ca after a year of prodding from brother Stephen.

“From a marketing standpoint, we have found the blog to be the single most effective marketing effort that we have ever made [and by far the cheapest],” Michael Jagger said.

Provident’s blog covers a variety of issues, from the incompatibility of some Internet telephony with alarm systems, to crime reports, home security tips, burglary statistics and information about community events, such as the annual Kitsilano Soapbox Derby.

Provident has 175 employees with 4,000 clients.

Jagger, a Business in Vancouver 40-under-40 alumnus, is a Simon Fraser University criminology graduate who began the company 10 years ago as a student.

After he notified 100 clients of his blog in March, 70 went to the blog in 12 hours and 41 of those signed up to be e-mailed automatically with every content update made to the blog.

“At the end of the day, the world is a better place on the Internet if more people are blogging,” said Stephen Jagger.

Here is a screenshot of the article:

biv article on provident and ubertor

Feedburner in Business 2.0

Sunday, July 9th, 2006

I always like to post articles that I find that help backup our reasons for doing things or that better explain why we do things. As I’m sure most of our clients don’t know, their sites have RSS built into them as well as integration to Feedburner. We push hard to educate agents about these 2 features but we are still at the point of getting them to take a moment to understand why RSS and Feedburner matter.

If you remember,
- we were the company pushing blogs when no Realtor had heard the word blog.
- we then built a blog right into the Ubertor software
- we also pushed craigslist.com and even ran (and still run) training sessions on how and why to use craigslist.com
- now our Ubertor software is integrated with craigslist.com so that agents can quickly and easily load listings in HTML format to craigslist.com

Well, Feedburner and RSS are 2 technologies that the Ubertor system has and it is worth taking a look at.

Here is an article in Business 2.0 that talks about Feedburner:

Redefining the RSS feed
FeedBurner CEO Dick Costolo tells Business 2.0 Magazine how he plans to put his stamp on the Wild West medium of RSS.

Business 2.0 Magazine (ARTICLE LINK)
John Heilemann, Business 2.0 Magazine
June 27 2006: 6:45 AM EDT

(Business 2.0 Magazine) — Mention to Dick Costolo that, for most of this generation’s Web startups, getting funded has been a snap, and he emits a rueful laugh. “Not for us,” recalls the CEO of the content syndication outfit FeedBurner. “Most venture capitalists we met couldn’t spell RSS - let alone understand it.”

That was in 2004, and Costolo and his three co-founders were toiling in obscurity in their Windy City headquarters. “I don’t know how many times we heard, ‘We like you guys, but you’re in Chicago,’” Costolo says. “Which really meant ‘We don’t get it.’”

Two and a half years later, a lot more people get it - as FeedBurner’s meteoric rise vividly demonstrates. Today the company manages more than 300,000 feeds that use the RSS (really simple syndication) format or a variant thereof, and its customers range from the humblest bloggers to the mightiest publishers: Gannett (Charts), Hearst, Reuters.

Though its success so far has yielded little revenue (and not a dime of profit), the company is now backed by several of the media-savviest VCs in the business.

What the moneymen believe is that FeedBurner is in the vanguard of the creation of a brand-new medium. And while, God knows, talk like that is cheap, I think they may be right.
The return of “push technology”

Before explaining why that’s so, it might be helpful (at least for the uninitiated) to start with the ABCs of feeds. RSS is what used to be called a “push” technology: It lets publishers stream Web content instantly to users who’ve subscribed to their feeds, and lets users keep up with a large number of sites without having to check them manually.

When new content is posted on a site, subscribers are notified and sent either full versions or summaries of the fresh material (along with links back to the site), which they can read inside what’s known as an aggregator, such as NewsGator’s FeedDemon. (Both Firefox and Apple’s Safari browser have built-in feed readers.)

RSS began to take off roughly three years ago - and that’s when Costolo, then 39 and the founder of two previous startups with the same three partners, saw an opening.

“We thought, if this gets big, it’s going to be impossible for content producers to manage,” he remembers. “We’ll say to publishers, ‘Hand us your content to syndicate - we’ll run your feeds and provide you a detailed picture of how many subscribers you have, what’s being read, where the feeds are going. Then we’ll help you monetize them by stapling ads to them.’”

When FeedBurner launched in February 2004, it was instantly popular with bloggers. But commercial publishers were wary, if not outright dismissive.

“They’d say, ‘I only care about feeds in that they drive traffic back to my site,’” Costolo reports. So he reminded the publishers of what happened when the Web boom began. “They tried to use their sites to drive subscriptions to their print products,” Costolo says. “I said, ‘How’d that work out for you? The new medium never drives dollars to the old; it drives dollars to the new thing.’”

Like the Web 10 years ago, he argued, feeds had reached a tipping point. “You can’t stop this train,” he told them. “Content is going to be syndicated and consumed all over the place. Your job is to figure out how to turn that into an opportunity.”
Incorporating advertising

Crucial to convincing the publishers was that Costolo offered to run their feeds and provide them with subscriber data for free. What they saw when they looked at the data was that “hits to their feeds were going up, up, up, while traffic back to their sites wasn’t going up as significantly,” Costolo says. “That caused a lot of them to say, ‘Shit, there’s a lot of money that I’m not making out there on the edges.’”

All along, Costolo thought advertising was the way for publishers to begin to rake in that dough. Initially the company had planned to splice ads from various ad networks into the feeds it manages, taking a cut of the revenue, typically 35 percent.

But Costolo’s team soon decided that it made more sense to build its own ad network - and one that places ads not just in feeds but also on the publishers’ websites. (Such ads, Costolo says, will be “feed-driven.” Unlike, say, ads placed through Google’s AdSense network, which are typically in a column far away from the post containing the targeted keyword, FeedBurner’s will be tightly linked to specific items and positioned in the middle of the page, right under the relevant post.)

With its burgeoning ad network, FeedBurner may be hurling itself into the lion’s mouth. As a manager of feeds, the company has no equal.

But as an ad network, it will be in competition with Google (Charts), as well as Yahoo (Charts), AOL, Blogads, ValueClick, and others. Costolo recalls that when he was seeking VC cash, the specter of Google was often raised.

He dismissed it then, but no longer. “I’ve come around to the view that Google will eventually start managing feeds and monetizing feeds as another way to promote AdSense,” he concedes.
Staring down Google

Yet Costolo views the prospect of tangling with Google with striking equanimity. “We have to leverage our critical mass of publishers to create network effects,” he says. As an example, Costolo cites plans to allow publishers in the network to form “affinity groups” by blending their feeds together.

He mentions the possibility that Daily Kos, Talking Points Memo, and a handful of other popular liberal political blogs might offer a joint feed - leading lefty readers to subscribe to that feed rather than to each individually.

“Then the incentive for all of them would be high to stay in FeedBurner,” Costolo says, “because as part of the liberal politics feed, they’d be reaching more people than they would on their own.”

Costolo’s confidence about fending off Google and other potential rivals also owes to FeedBurner’s head start in a market that’s racing forward at lightning speed. “For RSS, 2004 was all about blogs, 2005 was all about text publishers, and 2006 is shaping up as the year of audio and video,” he says.

Already Apple (Charts) has harnessed RSS to potent effect in its iTunes Music Store, which offers thousands of audio and video podcasts for download, each of them powered by a feed.

And although Costolo won’t name the companies, he says two entertainment giants are about to start using FeedBurner to drive consumers to social media venues such as MySpace. “Hollywood sees how feeds can contribute to the ecosystem of exposure,” Costolo observes.

And FeedBurner intends to make that ecosystem even more complex. For some time the company has been developing a feed-splicing tool to let users create what Costolo calls a “personal content network” - a “feed of me.”

“You put your tags in Del.icio.us, your photos in Flickr, your friends in AIM; you have a blog, a podcast, etc.,” he says. “And we splice it all together into a single feed.”

There are, of course, plenty of folks with personal websites. But with a “feed of me,” subscribers would be able to track changes in your data at the atomic level - being notified instantly when you add a new photo set or playlist, not just when you update your site.

More important, developers could build new applications to display and manipulate all that data, leading to vast new possibilities for advertising and marketing.

All of which is why I like Costolo’s chances in any future battle over this virgin turf - even, dare I say it, with Google. What the guys at FeedBurner understand is that RSS is a brand-new medium, as distinct from the Web as the Web is from newspapers, radio, and TV.

It will be consumed differently and will operate by rules that are foreign not just to traditional publishers but to the titans of the Web. Costolo and his crew don’t have all the answers about where this revolution is headed.

But they’re asking questions that no one else has even thought of, and that’s no small advantage.

John Heilemann wrote “Pride Before the Fall.” His next book is “The Valley.” He lives in Brooklyn.

How FeedBurner Works

1 Publishing software is used to create a standard RSS feed.

2 FeedBurner takes the feed and repackages it, making it easier …

3 … for advertisers to insert ads wherever the feed appears.

… for consumers to subscribe to it by e-mail, on the Web, or in feed-reading software.

… for the publisher to track the size of his feed audience.

Craigslist.com - Free Real Estate Listing Promotion

Wednesday, June 28th, 2006

OK, it has been proven, that adding your listings to Craigslist.com helps expose your properties to potential buyers. So why is it that only some real estate agents add their listings to Craigslist.com?

Craigslist.com is one of the most effective promotional tools that a Realtor can use when promoting their listings on the internet. Now, a website plays a key part in this as Craigslist.com only allows you to add 4 photos and some content about your listing. The power of their system is that you can hyperlink that post directly to your website. (And, as an added bonus, if you are using an Ubertor website, it can direct traffic right to that specific listing using the unique URL system that is built into our software - example: http://www.andrewhasman.com/11 - see how it takes you right to that listing and not to the home page - every listing on your website has a unique URL)

So, we all agree that Craigslist.com is a great tool! (one that is not to be abused)

Why don’t more real estate agents use it? too much work?

Well, if you are using our Ubertor software, check out the “craigslist” tab within your listings for more information on how we can help you add your listings to Craigslist.com quickly and easily.

And, if you don’t know what I’m talking about, take a look at Craigslist.com and click “real estate for sale” as it will give you a better understanding of their system.

If I can leave you with one lesson for this blog…..

Add your listings to Craigslist.com but be sure to respect their rules and restrictions. Abuse it and you will end up paying for it.

20 Points to help your real estate website

Thursday, June 22nd, 2006

In no particular order, here are some of the things that you should do with your real estate website to help it within search engines and for use ability of your users:

1. Link your website to Google Sitemaps
2. Signup for your Google Analytics account
3. Signup for your Feedburner.com account
4. Make sure your content is unique, contains information about you, the areas you work, etc
5. Add your head shot to your contact page
6. Blog - write in your blog as much as possible about relevant topics
7. Make sure that your TITLE and ALT tags are descriptive and accurate
8. Create a useful, information-rich site, and write pages that clearly and accurately describe your content
9. Blog
10. Get other relevant websites to link to your website
11. Promote your website on all of your marketing material
12. Listings - add everything you have to your listings (photos, floorplans, voiceovers, virtual tours, videos, etc)
13. Have your company site link to your website
14. Add your listings to Craigslist.com
15. Create a Squidoo Lens and link it to your website and blog
16. Download the Google Toolbar and watch your Google PageRank
17. Submit your website to DMOZ.org
18. Blog
19. Write solid home page content in the 3rd person
20. Follow Google’s guidelines and rules. At this point, they are the god of the search engines.

If you need help with any of this please feel free to contact our support team.

Craig Newmark Video Interview - craigslist.com

Tuesday, June 20th, 2006

Here is an interesting video with Craig of Craigslist.com discussing how little to charge brokers in New York for loading listings to his website, the future of real estate commissions, a national MLS system, newspaper classifieds, plus much more. Interesting video.

Craigslist.com Added 100 new cities last week. You can see the updated list here.

Very Web Friendly Real Estate Agent’s Home for Sale

Saturday, June 17th, 2006

I always think it is interesting to learn what stocks a stock broker buys for them self or what car a car salesman drives.

Well, Dustin Luther and his real estate agent wife Anna Luther are selling their home in Seattle. Why does this matter? Well, Dustin and Anna are considered by many very influential people, to be leading the way in real estate blogging and online real estate marketing. (their blog)
dustin lutheranna luther
They have just listed their Seattle home for sale as Dustin has been hired by Move.com for his work and expertise in the blogging world and is moving his family to California. I think it is very interesting to see what they have done to promote their home.

1. Posted their home in their blog
2. Linked to their home on Zillow.com that includes the Zestimate of their house
3. Linked to their home on Redfin.com
4. Posted their home on Craigslist.com
5. Posted their home on Google Base
6. Listed it on the Northwest MLS

I think that it is a great sign to see someone of their stature in the real estate and Internet worlds follow the suggestions that we have been giving to our real estate agents as well as utilizing the extra benefits that living in Seattle provides.

It will be interesting to see…
- what their home sells for?
- how close was Zillow’s zestimate?
- what posts drew the most traffic?
- where do the offers come from?
- what would they have done different next time around?