Skip to main content

Open House Marketing

By Collateral, Marketing Strategy, Realtor Marketing

There are not many businesses or services other than retail where qualified, motivated buyers are walking in to see you and your product. Professional marketing materials help showcase your listing, but they are also useful to demonstrate to prospective sellers that your marketing stands out among all other Realtors they have met at open houses. We can make you and your brand stand out and become the obvious choice for sellers. Check out some of our services by clicking here.

  1. Open House Detail Package (Everything a buyer needs to know)
  2. Personalized Colouring Pages (to keep kids busy and spread your brand)
  3. Neighbourhood Open House Invitation (Pre-public showing for neighbours only)
  4. Listing Brochure Design (Letter size or 11″x17″ 4 page format )
  5. Listing Maps (Re-usable format)
  6. Open House door hangers

Read More

13 Scientific Reasons Explaining Why You Crave Infographics

By Collateral, Marketing Strategy, Prospecting

We are big fans of using Infographics to convey information. Whether it is on a website a direct mail piece or a brochure a picture is worth a thousand words every time. We have recently created a Personal Infographic that serves as a brochure. Click here to check it out.

The Visual Capitalist website recently published this great Infographic on why Infographics are so effective and we have to share this with you. It’s long, but worth the scroll. Check out their website for more amazing Infographics.

Read More

Realtor® Item of Value – Magnetic Football Schedules

By Branding, Prospecting, Realtor Marketing

Are you looking for an item of value that will be top of the mind for at least 5 months for at least half of the adults in a family? How about a 7″ wide by 4.3″ branded fridge magnet with the game schedule for the football team of your choice? And they only cost $0.89 each.

 

Football Shaped Fridge Magnet

 

Get more details by clicking here.

  • New die-cut football shape!
  • 1-team format
  • Pro or College Division I Schedules available
  • Pro team schedules feature game times, college schedules do not
  • 100% magnet coverage on the reverse
  • Mails for 1 oz. (first class postage)

 

Realtor® Item of Value – Kitchen Scrapers

By Marketing Strategy, Prospecting, Realtor Marketing

The keys to choosing right item of value for clients and prospects are:

  1. Gauge the perception it will make on the recipient
  2. Determine it’s usefulness to the recipient and frequency of use
  3. Determine the longevity or life of the item
  4. Biggest bang for your buck

A well thought item of value will create a positive reaction from the recipient that will reflect well on you. Your name will be further ingrained on their memory. There are hundreds of good ideas out there, but when I ran across this simple Kitchen Scraper it struck me that it meets or exceeds the criteria for an effective item of value. It is branded, can get used daily, should last for years and every time someone uses it you are reflected in a positive light.

Read more about this $2.24 (or less) item of value on the Magnets USA website. They report “Our kitchen scrapers are unlike any other. Specially designed to handle even the toughest of residue, they will get the job done every time. They work so well, don’t be surprised if clients request more for their family and friends.”

Read More

Social Media Marketing Stats – What Works?

By Social Media

A recent major study by Buffer, a Social Media Management Company for marketers and agencies sheds some new light on the use of Social Media.

Buffer looked at over 14 million tweets, 2 million Facebook updates, and data from Pinterest, Google Plus, and LinkedIn to “figure out how brands have been sharing to social media over the past 12 months.” They found that Twitter and Facebook are still dominating the social media scene, with almost 80 percent of brands’ online posts appearing on Twitter.

Twitter is particularly conducive to posting multiple times per day, and indeed, Buffer found that brands posted an average of 18 posts per week on Twitter. Meanwhile brands are posting to Facebook at a slower rate, about once per day.

Facebook links generate more engagement than photos, perhaps because, when you post a link on Facebook, the site chooses a large photo and some metadata from the link for the post. This creates a very eye-catching visual for the news feed.

Meanwhile, a study by Shopify found that 87 percent of Pinterest users had purchased a product the found on Pinterest, and the brands on Pinterest that post multiple times per day have experienced steady growth in engagement.

In a nutshell: post more videos, and while focusing on Twitter and Facebook, don’t forget to hit up LinkedIn and Pinterest.

Read the whole story by clicking here.

Is Social Media Worth the Time Investment for Realtors?

By Marketing Strategy, Social Media

I think this question is one of the most asked by Realtors and one of the hardest to answer, but this report titled Is Social Media Worth the Time Investment by Gill South for Inman News is the most enlightening.

Key Takeaways

  1. Agents are, at times, damaging the reputation of the real estate industry with their haphazard and sometimes alienating social media activity.
  2. More than 35 percent of brokerages are not supporting their agents with their social media strategy.
  3. Agents are criticized for being boastful, too personal, too impersonal and for posting too many listings on social media.
  4. Facebook is the most important social media platform for real estate professionals followed by YouTube, LinkedIn and Instagram.

Click here to read the full report or click here for a pdf version.

Here is a sample of the data the report uncovers:

What social media platforms are agents using

How often each week

5 Must-Knows to Boost Your Site Appeal to Chinese From Juwai

By Website Design

Juwai.com recently published 5 must-knows to boost your site appeal to Chinese.  They say if you’re planning to market to Chinese buyers online understand their expectations, consumption patterns, and cultural backgrounds before incorporating these insights to build your online presence makes all the difference.

Chinese websites vs. Western websites

The first thing to understand is that Chinese websites and Western websites are polar opposites in many aspects. In fact, looking at Chinese e-commerce websites, one would think that most Chinese website designers suffer from horror vacui – a “fear of empty space” in Latin.

The amount of information crammed into a single page could easily be described as cluttered, chaotic, and even claustrophobic to look at, much less navigate. It’s practically an information overload and a baffling disparity for non-Chinese netizens.

This is even more apparent as minimalism is favoured in most advertisings and designs – especially for websites ­– in the West, and probably most parts of the world. After all, it’s commonly perceived that tasteful understatement appeals more to the taste of the affluent.

Not so in China though, where apparently – or at least in terms of websites – less is not always more.

5 Things to Know About Chinese Websites

#1 Language differences

Part of the cluttered feeling stems from the fact that the Chinese language doesn’t have italics or capital letters. This limits opportunities for adding the visual punch that you get with Latin alphabets, making it difficult to create the contrasts required to organise information with type alone.

#2 Minimum time, maximum info dissemination

Time is money, and this rings truer than ever in China. Thanks to the Great Firewall of China, most Chinese internet users are still plagued with slow loading times and limitations when it comes to international sites.

Hence, displaying as much information as possible is vital to retain consumer interest in China, so what may seem to be clutter to you is in fact seen as “content-rich” by Chinese internet users.

#3 Assurance and safety

Chinese consumers require a high degree of assurance – likely fuelled by the amount of fake or low-quality products in China – before making a purchasing decision.

So, while catchy headlines or pretty images are crucial in drawing interest and attention, but it won’t help seal the deal if there is insufficient information to convince Chinese buyers that they’re making a worthy purchase, especially as property is a major financial investment.

#4 Online reflection of China

Fact is, Chinese sites very much mirror China’s urban landscape. Walk around a major city in mainland China, and you may very well be overwhelmed by its bright advertisements, bustling boulevards, expansive choice of retail options, and Chinese shoppers swarming around you.

Websites designers in China aim to recreate this on Chinese websites, ensuring that every spare inch of space gets used up to mimic a boisterous and frenetic bazaar atmosphere.

#5 Digits sometimes play a role

From domain names to emails to social media accounts, numerical digits are a nifty way to catch Chinese attention in China’s cyberspace. Not only are numbers easier for Chinese to remember, but numbers are also homophones or near homophones for certain Chinese words – turning them into quirky and creative wordplays when used alone or combined.

Read the entire article by clicking here.