Tuesday, August 18, 2009

Social Network Marketing - Is It Right For Your Real Estate Business?

I don't want to be one of the naysayers who haven't bought into the whole notion of Social Network Marketing (Heck, it's part of my core business), I'm just not sure it's right for all businesses including new home sales. It's certainly not a silver bullet, nor would I recommend it as the first or even second component of your overall marketing program. But if you've properly leveraged other elements of your marketing, advertising and online marketing programs, Social Network Marketing (SNM) could be a nice addition to the team so long as you understand the benefits.

Following is a dialogue between myself and some clients that I thought you might find interesting on the topic.

It all started a few days ago when my client received the following email and forwarded on to me for my thoughts....

Who Do Your Customers Trust?
By Meredith Oliver
In my seminars and workshops, I frequently talk about the dramatic plunge in consumer confidence and how that impacts their willingness to buy your goods and services. I cite a study conducted by PR firm Edelman which studied “informed publics” between the ages of 25 to 64 and explored this group’s level of trust in four institutions: business, government, media and NGOs. Results reveal the lowest across-the-board levels of trust since the survey began ten years ago. What does this mean to you? Your consumers don’t trust you!
The solution I am proposing is to use social media to reestablish trust by allowing your raving fans to do the selling for you! Who do consumers trust? Each other! We naturally trust our neighbor’s referral over any type of formal advertising. Traditionally this has been called “word-of -mouth” marketing.
Here is the GREAT news. Social media is word-of-mouth networking on steriods. And, this is no longer just my supposition. TodayeMarketer.com published a study that confirms online advertising trust is on the rise worldwide. “According to the “Global Online Consumer Survey” by Nielsen, 41% of worldwide Internet users trusted online advertising.” In fact, the study reveals the number one advertising tactic trusted by consumers is “recommendations from people I know”. You should definitely check out this fantastic article by eMarketer.com.
This strategy will require risk on your part. What if the reverse happens? What if someone says something negative? Can negative comments destroy all the trust you’ve worked to build up? Yes, if you don’t have a service recovery plan in place. You need a step by step plan in place to handle any negative posts. The plan should answer the following questions:
· • How fast will you respond?
· • What will your message be?
· • How will you reassure your other online followers?
With a plan a place you can effectively handle negative posts. AND, get this….you can actually earn MORE trust by allowing an honest dialogue to take place, showing that you have a plan in place and that you take your customer’s concerns seriously. This is the mark of a trustworthy company.
But, let me quell your concerns about negative posts. I monitor a lot of “business” social media sites. I don’t see a lot of negative posts EXCEPT for the big “corporation” type companies. Why? No one wants to fire the first shot across the bow. I believe we are all thinking “If I start the negative avalanche it will eventually catch up to me!” We are afraid to say something negative about another business in fear someone else will do it to our business. Make sense? In fact, I mostly find social media pages for small businesses to be a sickening love fest of unrealistic proportions!
Start allowing your past, current and future customers to talk to each. They can sell you better than you ever will. Open up the dialogue and reap the rewards.

My response was as follows....
Basically, she is correct. The trick is to a. get followers and b. get them to start talking about you.
I love my community. I've lived there for 10 years and I wouldn't think of living anywhere else (much like you and Mimi feel about Mountain Brook... understandably)
When the topic of communities and great places to live come up in conversation, I'm the first to sing the praises of my community. But I've never translated that to any online dialog.
I think that space (like most venues for public discussion) are reserved for the few, the screamers and the evangelists. The majority of us are just too darn busy to bother. I believe, that like other venues where the few, the screamers and the evangelists voices have become questionable will likely follow online. Savvy consumers who might tap into these public discussions when making a decision about something (ie. a new home purchase) will likely be just a skeptical of the discussion as any other medium.

For example, before I spend .¢99 on a song I'm not 100% familiar with on iTunes, I frequently check out the user ratings and or comments. This is for a .¢99 purchase. They don't necessarily dissuade me from buying or not buying the song, I'm just curious what others thought. The same goes for Amazon.com purchases.

Or how about going to the movies. You listen to the litany of reviews before going. Sometimes you heed poor reviews and see something else. Sometimes you go b/c of a good review. Most likely, you trust a friend's opinion over any of them.

The same would be true even more so with these online forums. Unless you know the individual spouting their opinion (good or bad) savvy buyers will take it with a grain of salt. Thus the effectiveness of the 'ole fashion referral programs.

Then there's the cost, either in real dollars for someone else's time to maintain this process or your time. At the end of the day, it's just another arrow in your quiver. Not a silver bullet. People are sooo excited about SNM b/c it's "theoretically" free. Just like traditional Public Relations ;-). I hear those PR firms are real cheap.

Here's an excerpt from a recent article in Ideas (NAHB's mag)

"Social media, reputation management, and public relations provide an interactive forum for home builders to relate to buyers, increase key words and enhance search engine optimization. A strong social media program can even drown out negative online placements while playing a key role in reputation management.
It may be helpful to think of social media as an extension of traditional public relations. Successful home builders who want to stay in front of print subscribers have always employed strong public relations tactics. When a press release results in a newspaper article, it is seen as a third party endorsement of the home builder or community. Proactive public relations costs a fraction of print advertising and can be 10 times as effective in reaching the right target audience, creating impressions and building brand.
Now apply that concept to the Internet. Home builders and developers who find ways to use social bookmarking (Digg, Delicious), Social Networking (Active Rain, FaceBook), blogs (Word Press, Blogger), video (YouTube) and more are reaching buyers in new ways. Social media optimization is a strong tool, and it's not just for teenagers anymore. It can provide third party credibility online, just as public relations does in print."
FYI - While I don't sound like much of a proponent, we actually provide SNM services for clients who want to leverage this additional "arrow". I just caution the expectations and over-zealousness surrounding the medium these days. It is a worthwhile tactic once other more direct tactics are in place and working to their fullest capacity.

Just a thought... :-)

Which conjured up additional input from another party...

Adding my two cents here, of course Jay is correct but in this economy and this housing market we need all the "arrows" that we can shove into our quiver.

And social media does give us additional opportunities to link to our web sites providing additional organic "visibility" to the search engines.

Besides, it's not like the sales people all have jam packed days with prospects walking in. This gives them something to do while awaiting traffic and keeps them with a positive attitude which is essential today.


So after all this, we created a straight forward Social Network Marketing program for our clients if they want to jump on the ole bandwagon.
See the details here: http://www.borczdixon.com/social_network_marketing.html

Tuesday, June 30, 2009

From NAHB - The Do's & Don't's of Internet Marketing

Thought you might find this interesting reading.

Following are some excerpts the current issue of the NAHB's IDEAS Sales + Marketing cover story on the Do's & Don't of Internet Marketing. By Scott Huber

• 1/3 of home buyers used the Internet as the FIRST step in the home buying process.

• 87% of all home buyers and 94% of buyers aged 25 to 44 years used the internet to search for homes.
(Source: NAR Profile of Home Buyers and Sellers 2008 study. Nov. 2008)

DON'T - Buy Web traffic with Traditional media.
While you need to put your web address in all of your marketing materials, some marketing directors tell me this is a strategy in driving traffic to their Website. Another example is the spike in Web traffic after a full-page ad runs in the Sunday real estate section. How much did that traffic cost? Break down the math. You can buy clicks on Google for $1 to $4 each. What if you $10,000 on that ad and had only 1,000 visitors? That is $10 CPC. Buying web traffic using traditional media is costly, ineffective, and hard to quantify.

DON'T - Do Social Media When You Can't Do The Basics.
No Doubt about it, social media marketing is the hot new thing. It can help generate buzz about a community or your product, but it takes someone on your staff's time to constantly manage it. If your website can't take advantage of the traffic it receives, and if you can't measure results of your efforts, take a pass on social media right now and focus on the basics. (More on Social Network Marketing below....)

Internet Marketing is the present and the future.Focus on making an effective Website and measure the results. It will be the foundation of your business, and will give you excellent returns for years to come. You'll wonder why you didn't do it sooner.

Pick up the latest issue for the full article: http://www.nahb.org/generic.aspx?genericContentID=98051

For more information on how BORCZ:DIXON can help your business with internet marketing, click here: http://www.borczdixon.com/

Tuesday, June 9, 2009

VOTE for Caitlin Kinney on SYTYCD

Her name is Caitlin Kinney and she's a Top 20 finalist on Fox TV's "So You Think You Can Dance".

An now she needs YOUR VOTE!

So far, she has made it through the panel of judges and now the contestants ONLY advance based on the number of votes they receive from you, your friends and family. So please watch each week and VOTE immediately following the show on Wednesday night.

Shows air Wednesdays (8:00-10:00 PM ET/PT), and weekly results shows will air on Thursdays (9:00-10:00 PM ET/PT).

Some notes on voting:
1. Vote by phone only (you must call). The show does not handle text voting like other programs.
2. There is no indication that you are limited to any number of votes. So vote as much as you can!
3. Voting begins immediately after the show (10pm ET) and last for 2 hours only!

Link to voting rules FAQs
http://fox.com/blogs/dance/2009/05/22/voting-faq

As talented as Caitlin is, she will only advance based on the votes she receives. So please FORWARD THIS MESSAGE to all of your friends and family and help spread the word.

To follow Caitlin's journey, visit her website at: http://www.caitlinkinney.com
(We created the website and are instigating a viral marketing campaign, which means we need you to forward this info to everyone!)
Thanks for your support and enjoy the show.

Monday, June 8, 2009

SNM All The Buzz

How do I create buzz about my product, business or service via SNM (Social Network Marketing)?
Simple answer: YOU don't.

The very nature of Social Network Marketing (SNM) is based on cohesion NOT coercion.

When people willingly generate a collective interest in your product, business or service they will perpetuate that message (good or bad). That is the basis of viral marketing.

Coercion is just the opposite — persuading an unwilling party to act. That is the role of traditional advertising (broadcast, print, or online).

When considering SNM for your business, product or service, the question you should be asking is "How do I encourage people to willingly promote my products and services?

Another simple answer: Make sure your product or service is so unique people want to share it with others.

If you don't think your products or services are unique enough, don't bother with SNM. It won't work.

Consider this: SNM is a giant cocktail party. Is your product or service that guy everyone is gathering around, laughing with and can't get enough of? Or, are you the guy in the corner talking to yourself and eating all the finger food?

Want to know which "guy" you are? Do you need coercion or can you create cohesion?
Check out http://www.borczdixon.com and contact us to find out before you invest a lot of time and money.