HUSBlogs.com Is Launched

Ok, Help-U-Sell Brokers:  I promised a blogging solutions for you.  Here are the details

First:  YOU NEED ONE!  Why?  Go back two blog posts and read the facts.

Here’s what I’ll do:

Get you set up:

Help you secure a domain name (like www.setfeeblog.com), set-up hosting, install WordPress, install and customize your blogging template, customize your graphics, and install a dozen plugins that will make your blog easier to manage and more attractive to search engines.

Teach you about your blog:

Show you how to post, respond to comments, check your stats and so on.

Write content for you blog:

At least four posts per month, all localized as much as possible and posted in your name.

Review blog performance with you:

Check stats regularly with an eye towards popular posts, frequently used search terms, ways to drive more traffic an so on.

Visit www.husblogs.com to see a full program description and a sample blog.  The sample uses the basic template and set-up I’ll be using.  Sharp, huh?

If you’re already blogging and just want a little help, let’s talk.  I’m sure there’s a way we can work together.

By the way:  if you’re an ordinary Broker, I’m sorry:  I’ve got nothing for you.  I could only create content for extraordinary brokers, ones focused on the consumer, the consumer experience and doing much more with less.

Flashback Friday: No More Begging!

(Here’s a post from November, 2009 that’s still very relevant.  The point is:  since there is not one iota of difference in the consumer experiences at  Coldwell Banker, Century 21, Keller-Willams, Re/Max, and every other ordinary real estate company, since they are all selling exactly the same thing, their ‘pitch’ ends up being smoke, mirrors and begging.  You have to have something different that works before your ‘pitch’ can be educational, meaningful and powerful. )

It dawned on me 20 years ago when I was working as a Business Consultant for one of the other large national real estate franchises:  In the ordinary real estate world, we were all beggars.

Agents made listing presentations where they begged sellers to work with them.  Then they begged them to reduce the price and relist.  They begged their buyers to be loyal.

Brokers begged agents to come work in their offices.  They begged them not to leave, too.

The Franchises begged (really:  begged) people to join them.  Then they begged them to use the tools, begged them to do the thngs that would help them succeed and begged them to renew at the end of their term.

It was all very degrading, all this begging.

In a universe where everyone is on their own and everyone has the same set of tools, where all the players are just alike — making a convincing argument for your service becomes sophisticated begging.  It’s no longer a matter of educating the customer about the benefits your particular way of doing business can bring to bear on their situation.  It’s about having enough flair to make the ordinary seem special, enough personality to be convincing when you say, ‘Trust me.’

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When I came to Help-U-Sell, I noticed something different.  I saw agents and brokers who had more then their personalities to distinguish them from the pack.  They had systems that worked.  They had a specific way of marketing a listing that got it sold.  They had a unique way of starting a new agent in the business that made them productive.  They had a carefully structured method of working with buyers that not only resulted in loyalty, but also produced such customer satisfaction that testimonials were a cinch.   Everyone — brokers, agents, even the franchisor — was coming from a position of strength because they were backed by a unique business model that worked.

The Help-U-Sell Listing Consultation is not about trying to convince the seller that you’re the best.  It’s about showing the seller enough of your program that they want it, and then deciding if this is a listing you want to take, a seller you can work with.

We don’t chase buyers.  We capture them with a carefully constructed intake system (the Buyer Data Sheet), and then do a consultation that ends in a loyalty commitment.

When we recruit (and we only do this when our program has created more business than we can handle with current staff), we don’t try to convince every agent who walks through the door to join us.  We look for the few who recognize the value of being able to focus on a single, managable aspect of the business.  Then we put them through Science 2 Sales training and hold them to a reasonable production standard.

It’s all about having systems that produce results.  That’s what puts you in a position of strength so that you don’t have to beg for business.

Why You Need A Blog (And How To Get One)

Yes You Do and Yes You Can.

Stop with all of that ‘I can’t – I don’t – I won’t’ stuff and read on.

Our real estate marketplace is largely electronic.  Today, real estate businesses and careers are made online.

That’s where the buyers are and that’s where the sellers expect to be.

You know this and have done a pretty good job of getting more than your big toe into that ocean.  You have an optimized website, a social media presence, a syndication arrangement that broadcasts your listings all over the place, and more.

But, so does everyone else who is serious about the business.

When everyone has the same tools, when everyone is doing the same thing online, the key is TO BE FOUND:  traffic.

How do you ‘Get Found’ in this vast Internet Ocean?  How do you build traffic to your business? 

There are many ways, but . . .

Not too long ago, HubSpot analyzed the website traffic of 1,400 companies.  They split them into two groups:  those with blogs (938) and those without (462).  The blogging group generated 67% MORE LEADS than the non-blogging group.

How can this be?  Why would a blog be better at generating web traffic and leads than almost anything else?  Here are 3 reasons:

  1. A good real estate blog is a constant source of local market information – and therefore, local market search terms used by local real estate consumers every day in their searches.  
  2. Unlike your well optimized website, the content of your blog is dynamic:  it changes every week, becomes bigger, gets indexed over and over as it grows.  
  3. A blog is immediate:  it is a near instant commentary on events and conditions in the local market, and is therefore very attractive to search engines.  

I believe that getting found today by buyers and sellers is a function of 3 things:

Inventory – And of course, Help-U-Sell has a competitive advantage in this area, a superior offer for home sellers.

Saturation –  A mechanism for getting information about your inventory out to as many Internet outlets as possible, which Help-U-Sell brokers have by virtue of their own websites and the syndication that occurs automatically as they add their inventory.

Blogging – Which is a search engine magnet.   They will find you with your blog.  Your blog will drive them to your website.

A few Help-U-Sell Brokers have taken on the blogging challenge, some with excellent results.  Most have not, because:

  • It’s an organizational hassle:  getting set up, learning how to do it, buying hosting and domain names and templates takes time and energy and is often a foray into unknown territory.
  • It’s a rather large time commitment:  You have to be prepared to sit down and write well and intelligently on a regular basis.  It’s not something you do just once or twice and forget.
  • It requires writing skill:  Even for many people who write well, writing is not easy.  It takes so many mental skills, not the least of which is concentration – something that is very difficult to maintain when you have 30 listings and 14 pending sales.  

I’ve been Help-U-Sell Blogging for almost 5 years (and have no plans to stop anytime soon).  It’s something that is very easy for me.  I have always invited Help-U-Sell brokers to borrow from this blog, make the pieces their own and use them however they see fit.  Now I’m prepared to go one step further.

Very shortly I’ll present a program where I will:

  • Set up you blog:   create and customize your template, research and buy your domain name, and set up hosting for you blog.
  • Ghost-Write your blog:  Actually post unique localized content to your blog on a regular and recurring basis.
  • Monitor you blog:  track page views, unique visitors, popular posts and search phrases and make appropriate adjustments.
  • Teach you about your blog:  How to post, how to respond to comments, how to monitor, so you can become as involved as you choose to be.  

Some of you may use this as a first step to blogging on your own – kind of blogging training-wheels.   Others may see this as a turn-key solution, a way to have a blog without having the hassle.  Either way, you’ll be steps ahead in GETTING FOUND, in building traffic and creating leads.

Stay tuned for details . . . and if you’re anxious to get started quickly, get in touch: jamesdingman@gmail.com

 

The Mission

A friend of mine recently had a bit of bad luck with his car:  he wrecked it.  He’s been running around in a rental while his vehicle is being repaired and today we stopped by the body shop to see how work was progressing.

The experience was so different from what I expected that I wondered if perhaps I’d stepped through some kind of rift in the space-time continuum:  an auto body shop worm hole!

The shop was immaculately clean.  The people – all of the people – were neat, clean, and smiling.  We were immediately greeted and then treated like royalty.  I waited in the office, in a comfortable chair.  I was offered coffee and then water.  I started noticing the graphics on the walls.  Their Mission  statement was prominently displayed and I was immediately struck with how honest, how real it was.

“Our Mission is to restore the rhythm of our customers’ lives.”  Simple, straightforward, intriguing.

I actually pay attention to Mission statements and often find that they are pure garbage, cooked up by some disconnected marketing person and saying absolutely nothing.  This one, though?  I saw evidence of it’s honesty all around me.

I am so impressed that I want all Help-U-Sell family members to take a look at a short video that describes the Mission.  It is from their website:

So now you know:  it’s Calibre Collision Center.  They are located in several Southwestern States and based on what I saw today, I can’t imagine taking a crumpled car anywhere else to be fixed.

Our Mission, our identity is very similar to theirs.  We’re all about the consumer experience – it’s one of the ways we are so different from our competitors – and that’s not just marketing babble.  It’s for real.  We get a huge charge out of saving our customers money!  Out of charging them LESS than everyone else does!  When we do it right, we find that they become our biggest promoters!

Go ahead, watch the video again or visit the website.  Take a little inspiration from someone doing it very well.

Flashback Friday: Revisiting the Elevator Speech

Happy Friday, everyone. This is the day we dig into the archives and recycle a SFB Post from the past. Today it’s from our second month in existence and I laughed when I re-read it: I remember the exchange between the Financial Planner and myself vividly – and we are still friends. As you read, pay attention to the ‘Set Price’ bit near the end. Really: what do you think about that? Enjoy!

I had an interesting conversation with a gentleman yesterday about the Elevator Speech. When I told him I worked for Help-U-Sell®, he asked (as if from a script): ‘What do you do?’

Like Pavlov’s dog, I spoke right up. ‘We are REALTORS® and we do all the things the other REALTORS® do – and more – except instead of a commission, we charge a low set fee, which can save you a lot of money when it comes time to sell your house.’

He scowled.

‘What?’ I asked.

‘You lost me at REALTOR®,’ he replied. I continued to look puzzled, so he went on. ‘As soon as I heard you were a REALTOR®, I thought I knew exactly what you do. I didn’t really hear anything that came after . . . nothing to set you apart or make you different.’

‘Nothing?’ I asked, aghast. I was in shock. Seeing my discomfort, he smiled.

‘I’m kidding,’ he said, ‘I heard what you said, I really did. But I was listening like a consumer.’

Turned out he was a Certified Financial Planner and had been working through an exercise in his company to get at how to most effectively communicate their message to consumers in a quick, concise and differentiating way: an Elevator Speech.

‘What we discovered was that when we differentiate first, our message gets through,’ he said. ‘We don’t lead with ‘We’re Financial Planners’ because people have a mental image of what that is and if they put us into that picture we look just like everyone else. Another thing – we did away with all the ‘buts’ and ‘ands’ and ‘excepts’ in our speech. We found that those kinds of qualifiers negated what went before in people’s minds.’

My original impulse was defensiveness: I learned that elevator speech seven years ago. I knew why every word was chosen and I knew why it was supposed to work. But when I ran through it again, in my head, I remembered that the opening phrase was chosen to combat the rumors our competitors were spreading, not to differentiate us from them. We said we were REALTORS® right up front – and sometimes elaborated to say we were ‘full-service REALTORS®’ – because the other guys were telling everybody we weren’t!

‘Let me hear your speech,’ I said. I wanted to turn the tables, put him on the spot and see if I could find the holes in his dialogue.

‘Sure,’ he replied, ‘We fix people’s broken investment portfolios.’

‘Really?’ I asked, ‘How do you do that?’

‘See?’ he answered, ‘It works.’ I continued to look puzzled. ‘The whole point of the speech is to let people know you are different in a way that might benefit them and get them to ask for more information. You played your part very well.’

I’ve been thinking about our speech ever since. Perhaps it is littered with little land mines that could blow up and ruin our chances of getting through to the consumer. I remember Mike Miller, during his brief stay as our Chief Communications Officer, insisting that ‘set fee’ was a negative: Lawyers charge fees, banks ‘fee us to death,’ airlines charge excess baggage fees. He was pushing for ‘set price.’ Personally, I’m not ready to go there; but it is something to ponder.

Here’s what I’m thinking: the answer to ‘What do you do?’ might simply be, ‘We are a set fee real estate company.’ Period. It says you’re different, hints that there might be a benefit to the consumer and begs the question, ‘How does that work?’

Please don’t change your elevator speech – you know, the one you currently have that is working. But chime in: What do you think about the advice I got this weekend? Should we rethink the Elevator Speech? If so, how do you see it in the future? Click the ‘Leave a Comment’ link above and speak your mind!

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