Magnetic Real Estate Leads

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With an average of 250,000 new registrations per day, it’s easy to see why real estate agents should be making Facebook part of their marketing campaigns.

But like all social network sites, Facebook is a place to mix with other people, develop relationships and potentially engage in business. It is not a place to advertise products or services UNLESS you adopt a very unique approach. We address this approach in future posts but for now let’s look at setting up a Facebook account correctly so as to capitalise on a solid foundation when business opportunities arise.

Step 1

Open an account at http://www.facebook.com This will only take a few minutes. Complete your details, click the sign up button and you’ll be sent a confirmation email that your account is ready for activation. Do this and you’re away.

Step 2

Create and polish your profile. Make sure you let people know who you are and what you are about. This is a critical step and should not be hurried. Here you can also link your other interests, websites and blogs. If you need to add or delete any information here, you simply click on the edit button.

Visits some of the great Facebook sites like Mari Smith, the Queen of Facebook, and get a feel of how the professionals put this area together. Remember success leaves clues. Learn from the best.

Step 3

Join a Network. If you indicate your location when you register you’ll be automatically connected to a network. However if you are targetting people in other areas or even countries you can nominate your preferred network.

Step 4

Join Groups. Once again depending on who you are trying to connect with, search for Groups where like minded individuals hang out. Facebook allows you to join around 200 groups; so you’ve got plenty of scope. Enter the specific tye of group you are looking for into the search bar and you’ll be presented with a list of groups you can join.

Step 5

Participate in Discussion Groups. The more you are active within your chosen groups; the more people will be attracted to you. Make sure you post relevant, valuable content and skip the cheesey sales pitch. If you are perceived as a person who can help; then your relationships and ultimately your database will continue to grow.

At the end of each post make sure you are using a signature file that includes your website or blog url. If people like what they read, they’ll click onto your site.

Get these basic steps right and you’ll lay a solid foundation to creating a strong following on Facebook which will ultimately lead to more business for you. Get started now. And once you’ve got your account established, please add me as a friend by visiting http://www.facebook.com/whoisgregreed


No doubt you’ve heard of LinkedIn. So what’s the purpose of getting involved? 

As a real estate agent, you want to avoid the trap of looking at LinkedIn as merely a market for which you will sell in. People buy from people they like, not companies. And since LinkedIn is all about finding people that could be of value to you as well as being found by others, you need to start by creating a profile that will best represent you to the world.

1. Brand Your Profile

Branding. I’m sure you’ve heard lots about it. Bradley Will defined branding as:

    Your brand is something unique that differentiates you from everyone else. It illustrates your unique skills and experiences and describes, or “brands” these attributes in the appropriate fashion. Ideally, your brand will immediately showcase your unique strengths.

Why is this important in LinkedIn? Because your LinkedIn profile is being viewed by people looking for skill sets or experience that you have.

2. You Are Not Your Company

LinkedIn, although it is a social networking platform for professionals, is still all about people. Don’t brand your LinkedIn profile as a company. It should be about YOU. If you already own your own company put it in the Company Directory.

3. Connect! Connect! Connect!

Here comes the fun part: increasing your connections! When you connect with someone on LinkedIn, not only will you be able to mutually see each other’s network updates and send messages without entering their email addresses, but you also now become visible to their connections as a 2nd degree connection and to their 2nd degree connections as a 3rd degree connection. This is how you will start becoming visible. And, if your connections decide to leave their connection browsing open, you can take a look at who they are connected and search for people that you might want to start a conversation with, using your contact’s name as a reference.

4. Join Groups & Participate

Alright, you are starting to really work LinkedIn! You’ve got the greatest profile, and your connections, and thus visibility, is on the up. Now it’s time to start leveraging the social aspects of LinkedIn: joining communities of like-minded LinkedIn users called Groups.

Once you are on Groups, you have the ability to take part in discussions, read or post the latest news, check out job postings…and all of this information is specific to your particular group. Answer some of the discussions, post your own question, start communicating! LinkedIn Groups can be very powerful.

5. How to Network on LinkedIn

LinkedIn is a social networking site like Facebook, Twitter, or any of the others. You can find people to network with and take your communications offline. Once you are connected to someone you will be able to directly send them a message without knowing their email address. From there, your communication with them should be like anyone else you meet at a networking event: “How can I help you?” Obviously there has to be some potential synergy to strike up a conversation, but even just saying why you are contacting them and what it is in it for them will be critical to your networking success.

LinkedIn also gives you this ability through its Events application. Look under the ‘Add application’ bar and check out the events clsest to you or where you can add value if they are some distance away.

Once you get started on LinkedIn there’s no turning back! Embrace it and make it a habit to spend 15 minutes a day looking for new people to contact, discussions to join, or events to check out. And expect to start being contacted by people that will also hopefully help you on your journey. Good luck! Article by Bradley Will. efkgsrnybt


You’ve no doubt heard of Twitter by now. But it is worth the effort? Will it help your real estate business? You may have delayed a year or two on Facebook before, only to realize now how useful it can be for generating referrals and keeping in touch with your sphere. Don’t make the same mistake with Twitter! Consider these 5 ways of using twitter in real estate to decide if you should get started today.

Reason #1: Following other top agents in your market.

Even if you never send a single “tweet” (that’s what it’s called when you post a message on twitter), you can sign up and follow the top agents in your market. You already know how useful it is to talk with other agents to stay on top of your local market: new listings coming on, pocket listings, new developments, and general industry gossip. With Twitter, you can stay constantly aware of this chatter even if you’re in the office all day.

Reason #2: You’ll add people to your social sphere you won’t find elsewhere.

A few days after setting up my own Twitter account, I was “followed” (similar to being “friended” on Facebook, it means that another Twitter user is now following all your tweets) by another agent even though we had rarely spoken and weren’t connected on any other social network.

Reason #3: A large social sphere is an asset for winning listings – and selling them.

During listing presentations, you probably tell your client about all the great networking and marketing you plan to do to get the word out. Once you’ve established a large following on Twitter, you’ll have even more credibility to back up your “Master Networker” claims. Though you absolutely shouldn’t be constantly spamming your followers with every tiny price change, use sparingly Twitter can help you get the word out quickly.

Reason #4: It’s a great way to unobtrusively stay in front of potential buyer and seller clients.

In the “old days”, potential buyers and sellers might drive around their ideal neighborhood and see which agent has the most signs. These days, those same individuals may very likely go online and see who’s talking about that neighborhood. When they search “dallas real estate” in twitter, don’t you want to be the one who pops up?

At the same time, many past clients will likely be folllowing you on Twitter. Often times getting referrals means staying top of mind with past clients – I’m sure you’ve felt the frustration of missing out on a transaction because a past client simply forgot to mention you. If they’re constantly getting tweets about your real estate activity, they’re a lot less likely to forget next time they’re talking to a friend who’s about to buy.

Reason #5: You know you’re going to be using it in a year anyway, once everyone else is (just like you did with Facebook!). Why not do yourself a favor and get ahead of the curve?

Extra Credit: Remember, as with all online marketing don’t overdo it. Keep your tweets useful and relevant, and avoid being overly “salesy” or spammy. Try a blend of relevant market news, useful statistics, funny happenings, and advance notice or the inside track on local events that people care about.

If you are spending 30 minutes per day on Twitter, Facebook or YouTube, learn how to make cash profits for your real estate business at http://www.twittercashprofits.com

 


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