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Ten Steps to Creating Your 2007 Web Marketing Plan
Realtors® often tell me they get few leads from
their web-related marketing. I say to them, "Show me your online marketing plan.
We'll see what you can do better."
Most answer something like, "Plan? What plan? I don't have an online plan."
At that, I'm always reminded of the Humphrey Bogart movie, Treasure of the
Sierra Nevada, where the outlaw (actor Alfonso Bedoya) says his famous
lines, "Badges? I don't have to show you any
stinking
badges."
You may not need a badge, but you do need an online marketing plan. Making one
can gain you leads that bring extra sales. You begin by knowing your audience.
1. Defining your audience: Are they people who live in your town, the
next town? Out of state? From up North? Are they rich? Live in mobile homes? Do
they own horses? How old are they? Do they have children in school? Retired?
First time buyers? Buyers of second homes? Vacation homes? Income property?
For your 2007 plan, you actually have to sit down and write out the demographics
of your audience. Because that is what determines HOW and WHERE you will talk to
them online. Once you have profiled your average audience, (and your several
secondary audiences as well) you are well on your way to knowing where to
advertise to them.
You will better know what pictures to show them on your site, what properties to
emphasize on your site and how sophisticated your language should be in
web-based headlines, text, e-mail messages and more. For your 2007 plan, write
down every characteristic that you can think of that defines both your primary
and secondary audiences.
2. Positioning Yourself. Once you know who your audience is, you need to
package yourself so that you prove appealing to them. Yes, you are a product
here. And just like a product you need to give yourself a pretty online package
and do all you can to become a well-known and trusted brand name. Positioning
has to do with the position that people place you in when they think about you
compared to other Realtors®. No one ever thinks that Hershey's is a kind of
potato, do they? No, because Hershey's has spent billions making itself stand
for something in consumers' minds.
No one thinks that Martha Stewart is a dancer, do they? You need to identify
yourself for your specialty on a citywide scale within the minds of
consumers as Martha Stewart does for her homemaking specialty nationwide. You
need to start talking about yourself in a way so that consumers will hold you in
their minds in the position that you want. It must not be left to chance. You do
it by proper packaging and branding of yourself.
But don't burn your bridges either. A simple, but prominent statement, "Besides
specializing in (whatever) I handle ALL types of realty transactions," lets
visitors know you can "do most everything," too. For your 2007 plan,
write out how you'd describe your skills, services, features and benefits
offered if you really were a consumer product on a grocer's shelf. What
color would your package be? That may help you decide your overall web site
color.
3. Use Realism in Positioning Yourself: If you are a relatively new
Realtor® on a 50/50 split with your broker, living in a small apartment, and
don't come from a rich local family, and don't regularly attend the high society
events of your town, you may have difficulty positioning yourself as the "Luxury
Home Realtor®." People who buy those kinds of homes will buy them from the
Realtors® who are at the social events.
However, if you grew up with horses and know everything equestrian you might
successfully position yourself as "The Horse Property Realtor®." Or maybe you
grew up on a lake or the oceanfront and still live there. You might well package
yourself as "The Beach Property Realtor®." While you're at it, why not create
your very own slogan or tag line to match your positioning?
Next, you have to begin publicizing your new image to consumers. Especially on
your web site. For your 2007 plan, write down all the reasons you can think of
that a consumer can gain by contacting you instead of some "generalist" or
"me-too" Realtor® (like you used to be).
4. Words and Images Position You Online: Your web site says a lot about
you. If yours looks pretty much like that of dozens of other agents in your
area, you are not trying hard enough to position yourself against other
Realtors® in consumers' minds. The easiest way to fix your site so it positions
you properly is to change its headline and subheads. Why? Because the headline
(What? You don't have one?) and subheads are generally the first things that
appear to consumers as your site loads onto their screen. If the consumer is
looking for view lots and your site has a headline that screams, "If You Want
View Property, This is the Place to Be," you can bet that your target audience
seeking view property is going to strongly consider you for buying or
selling their home.
Subheads can position you on your site to appeal to your secondary target
audiences. Maybe you're the "View Property" Realtor®, but you are also very
skilled in selling beach and lake properties, too. If so, you need a subhead
below the headline saying that you are. Often "bullets" are used on sites to
itemize features you want secondary audiences to know about you. Lines of
smaller text should be used to "flesh out" headlines and subheads, giving any
needed details such as names of specific neighborhoods or developments you
handle. Remember always that your home page is simply a portal to the rest of
your site.
Images are less important than headlines, subheads and text. But they should be
just as relevant.
For your 2007 plan, write out your new headline, subheads and several supporting
blocks of text. If you don't do it, who will? Start now.
5. Plan your Marketing; Both Offline AND Online: Let's assume that you
are a wise Realtor® and always plan your farming mailings, etc. not one at a
time, but for at least an entire six months' period. What can you do with each
mailing that will drive consumers to your web site? Is there any point even
telling them that you have a site if it contains exactly what every other
agent's site contains? Of course not---because part of good positioning
is being different from other Realtors®.
"But wait!" you say. "Are you telling me that every time I do a new mailing I
will have to add something newly interesting to my site?" You got it, Gunga Din.
At least every month you should add some content that is new, exciting,
immensely useful or valuable and free for your visitors. And then tell
consumers in your mailings and other monthly promotions what you've added so
they will visit your site. After a while, they get used to you doing this. It
becomes habitual to visit your site each month to get something useful, even if
it is what flowers to plant during that month. Or just before Thanksgiving or
end-of-year holidays, you give them links to thousands of free
food or drink
recipes.
Arizona Realtor® Alice Held
has become nationally famous for the immense and timely content of both her web
site and her e-mail marketing messages which are extremely viral in nature, i.e.
people want to send them to other people, replicating them the same way a
virus does. A great example is the series of "All About It" pages that Alice
creates for most every U.S. holiday. For example, see her
Halloween
page.
If you regularly add new content, and with it, draw more and more people to your
site, guess which Realtor® consumers may consider when they're ready to buy or
sell property? For your 2007 plan, write down the types of new content you'll be
adding to your site every three to four weeks.
6. Use positioning-oriented "signatures." At the end of all
realty-related e-mail messages, include an automatic signature that gives not
only your contact information, but also has links to your web site, particularly
a link to whatever new content you've recently added (see #5 above), and a
positioning statement or "tag line" about yourself. Big firms use these. ("Have
it Your Way," "You Cared Enough To Send the Very Best") And so should you. (The
Realtor® Who Grew Up With Horses"). For your 2007 plan, write several different
signatures so that you can alternate them depending on your audience.
7. Set up an e-mail list of past clients: You spend a fortune snail
mailing them stuff all year long. This year, why not e-mail them incredibly
interesting "factoids" and links to data that you know, from having worked with
them before, that they'll like? How do you get their e-mail addresses? Just ask
them to provide it on a postage-paid bounce-back postcard that you slip into the
next mailing you send to them. Then, far short of SPAMMING, send them an e-mail
ONLY when you have something worthwhile, depending on their interests. Many
Realtors® who do this have a "canned" letter that they send to each recipient
above more custom-tailored comments added for a "personal" touch. Periodically
ask for referrals. Above all, encourage recipients to e-mail you back.
Because if you can set up and maintain a continuing online relationship
with them, you have positioned yourself well indeed in their minds. Your 2007
plan should cover e-mail farming in detail.
8. Make Your e-mails "Viral": Ever get one of those e-mails that looks
like it had been sent to a thousand people before you? A
"viral"
e-mail is one that is so inherently arresting or interesting that people
want to forward it to others and do. Just like a real biological virus, a
viral e-mail message replicates itself with no further effort on your part.
Be sure that you actually give people a strong nudge in the e-mail to forward
the message to others. "Click on FORWARD to send this message to others." Or,
"FORWARD these food recipe links to friends."
Viral marketing is not scary or hard. It's actually just a rehash of "Word of
Mouth" on steroids. And we all know that word-of-mouth advertising is the very
best kind. In your 2007 promotional plan, be sure to actually compose the
first six viral messages that you will be sending out.
9. Assemble your Plan. Take all the elements you created above and lay
them out on a big table. Study them. Then, take a walk and think about your
audience and how your positioning, or lack of it, impacts them in relation to
other Realtors® in your city or area. Then, come back from your walk and fit all
your upcoming online promotional activities into an annual calendar. Time frame
it. Give every action a date to be ready and a date to execute that particular
action. That way you will not forget to do several things and eventually get
yourself so far behind in 2007 that by April you just throw your hands up in the
air and forget the whole thing.
10. Make a real commitment. Make this year different because you actually
do plan out the rest of your profession and career, rather than simply
react to circumstances which is what most of us do and get nowhere most of
our lives. Gandhi said, "In a gentle way you can shake the world."
Here are a few things to ponder in your quest to do just that.
Planning is the key to making our lives turn out how we want them to.
Planning puts us in control instead of simply reacting to
circumstances, which is how dumb animals run their lives. They are merely
stimulus-response survival mechanisms. We are not, and we are not because we can
plan.
Maybe bad guys in Westerns who act like animals "don't need no steenking
badges," but we sort of do in our careers. Thus, let our imaginary badges
officially deputize us to begin planning, in year 2007, the rest of our
professional careers.
Bill Koelzer is a Web marketing consultant to Web-proficient agents nationwide. He is co-author, with Barbara Cox, Ph.D., of the Prentice-Hall books, "Internet Marketing in Real Estate" and Internet Marketing. Koelzer is also webmaster of Orange County Real Estate - Search MLS, among the most-awarded known Realtor ® sites. Contact info: www.koelzer.com or e-mail him at Bill@Koelzer.com
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