Author Archives: Gary Elwood
Author Archives: Gary Elwood
Here’s a little piece of business wisdom that may or may not surprise you:
The freedom, lifestyle and income you’ve always dreamed about depend upon you. It depends upon your patience and it depends upon your planning.
In his 2001 book The 7 Keys to Marketing Genius marketing consultant Michael Daehn, writes:
Many marketing books jump right into the promotion process where instructions on how to broadcast the marketing message are described in detail. The problem with that approach is that if you are sending out the wrong message, it will not only be ineffective but counterproductive.
That’s why it’s so important to create a sound strategy before you start the promotion process. Whether you employ new social media or stick to flagging classified ads or build a sales letter campaign from the ground up…
You need to analyze. You need to plan first.
A SWOT analysis will help you do that.
A SWOT Analysis, is a strategic planning tool used to evaluate the Strengths, Weaknesses, Opportunities, and Threats involved in a business venture.
A SWOT is about defining your advantage over the competition. The questions you have to ask yourself are:
A simple SWOT analysis will help you find out what you do best. And it will give you the road map to a predictable and profitable business that will last for decades.
Here’s what you need to do:
1. Gather all stakeholders.
Since you are an individual contractor you are in a way defining your individual strengths, weaknesses, opportunities and threats.
But it may be helpful to you involve your spouse or a business partner or your broker. Someone who can help you see the things you can’t see.
This is especially helpful when speaking of weaknesses and threats, but sometimes people are so low on themselves they need help to see what they are really good at.
2. Focus on the strengths.
Hammer out all of the positive elements you can think of : education, experience, connections, knowledge.
This is important: Devote enough quiet time. Clear a day or a weekend. Get alone and discover what it is you are really good at. This is important that you get this right.
3. Dig deep and consider your weaknesses.
Even the brightest, most educated, highly successful individual has weaknesses. Find them.
But remember this about weaknesses: when it comes time to work on your weaknesses, only work on those that can damage your life or career.
Habitual drinking or a fear of confronting people are two weakness that could quickly destroy your hopes of success.
Work on these but ignore the benign weaknesses…otherwise you spend all your time on your weaknesses and not your strengths.
4. Evaluate the opportunities in your market.
Unlike strengths and weaknesses, opportunities are outside your influence. You merely exploit them.
For example, perhaps you identify a segment of your market that is not being serviced appropriately AND you have some well-connected people who can help you reach this segment.
This is a huge opportunity for you. Seize it.
5. Discover the threats in your market.
Threats can kill you. That’s why you must pay attention to them.
A threat could be monster brokerage house that systematically mows down competition. You need to realize this and figure out what to do about it. Otherwise you’ll be bankrupt and blue in less than a year.
Or a threat could be a cooling market. You need to identify this and ask yourself the question: is this the best time to go into real estate?
And remember: Be honest during this entire process. The freedom, lifestyle and income you’ve always dreamed about depend upon it.
Related Articles
The Top 10 Miracles of Real Estate Research
Competing with Proctor & Gamble
6 Unorthodox Ways to Become a Market Shaker
I just learned this morning that last week’s post Naked Conversations: The Lynchpin to Your Real Estate Blog won Bloodhound Blog’s Odysseus Medal for the week of Thanksgiving.
Too cool.
And trust me when I say it is humbling because I simply love to write and to share ideas with agents and help them grow their business…and for it to come back with an honor like this blows me over.
Thank you everyone who subscribes and reads. This would be impossible without you.
It’s even more humbling to think my post The Curious Secret to Getting People to Believe You won the People’s Choice Award back at the end of October.
One thing this does is encourage me to work on this blog even harder.
It’s part of my nature to be motivated by these kinds of awards, and to then work my tail off to beat my previous accomplishments.
But not simply in self interest. These have to add value to you.
So, help me with that and let me know what you’d like to hear.
If I don’t hear from you I have to go by my gut. I have to go by what seems to be working based on my most commented posts and my posts that attract attention and awards.
I’d rather you lead me than my nose lead me [subtle hat tip there to the Bloodhound blog. Get it?]
Take care and looking forward to hearing from you!
It’s old news that 84% of buyer’s start there search online [wink wink, nudge nudge], that offline advertising places are losing revenue that, that real estate blogging is hot as ever.
All of this begs the question of managing your online presence, winning the local search engine results war.
But it requires a proactive strategy.
What exactly is your marketing strategy for local search?
If you live in Nashua, New Hampshire, for instance, and someone types in “Real estate Nashua New Hampshire,” that’s a local search.It doesn’t matter if they live in South Florida or West Washington or smack dab in Nashua. You want to dominate the search engine results page for those “local” keywords.
Here are seven concrete steps you can take to improve your local organic search results.
1. Make sure that you have a crawler friendly web site
The first step in improving your business performance in local search engines is to make sure that the search engines can easily crawl your site, and identify your business keywords.
This means you minimize the use of tables, and avoid deeply nested tables. Make sure that your business name and address are featured prominently on the page as text [in fact, make sure your business appears twice on every page] and not hidden from the crawlers in an image file.
Your page title should include your business name, address and key words. Place an “H1” header near the top of the page that also has your business name, address, and key words.
2. Add 10 pages of content to your website.
Any website that adds 10 pages of relevant content will get a boost in search engine visibility. It’s one of the easiest steps in an SEO campaign. Search engines love content. The more tightly focused, keyword rich [read: focused on your local market or markets] content you have on your website, the easier it is for search engines to understand what your website is about and categorize it appropriately.
A blog is a great way to add content to your site.
3. Use videos to supplement your search engine rankings
Great to see agents already seeing real world success with this strategy.
4. Take charge of your local listings
Yahoo! local search will give you a free 5-page Web site just for listing your company with their service.
Google’s local search service is more like a classified directory, but you still have direct control over how your listing appears.
But don’t stop with their Web listings. Take charge of the Yahoo! Mobile and Google Mobile services, too. People are increasingly using their cell phones to search the Internet.
5. Check out your competition
Do a local search for your business keywords (for example: houses, San Francisco, CA) and see who your competition is.
Find out who is linking to your competitors and investigate whether you can get the same sites to link to your business.
The links can be determined by going to Yahoo and typing “linkdomain:” and then your competitor’s web site (i.e. linkdomain:www.yourcompetitorssite.com). Click on “inlinks” in the results page.
Check inlinks for your site as well, and see who is linking to you. Make sure that the information on those sites is correct, and contact them if it isn’t.
6. Get your business rated
Ask your satisfied customers to write reviews and rate your business at Google, Yahoo, and MSN. More importantly, try to get them to use the same keywords that you use in the business description and on your web site as part of their review. Don’t add too many reviews over a short period of time, and make sure that the reviews are unique.
7. Solicit local links
Find the web directories that are local to your area, and ask them to link to your web site. Contact your local chambers of commerce and ask them to link to your business from their web site.
Of course there is much more you can do. And this only includes your organic search: I didn’t touch on paid online searches. But this is a great way to boost your local rankings if you haven’t done so yet.
I’d love to hear what you think.
Outside the obligatory first link on Black Friday by Seth Godin, this post is about all the nice links that will help you with your real estate blog strategy.
[And by the way, happy shopping!]Seth Godin: Create panic by making your customers uncomfortable.
Are you using the right content development strategy for your blog?
I’ve previously talked how content needs to capture attention, a scarce asset in the today’s accelerated information economy. [via doshdosh]
Value Blogging In: Less Writing, Higher Quality
How I Built 10,000 Links in 3 Weeks
Do You Have a Blog Commenting Strategy?
40 Observations about My 2 Year Old Blog by Teresa Boardman
6.5 Reasons Why You Shouldn’t Blog
Writing Good Headlines for Regular Readers, Search Engines and Social Media
What Is the Future of the Real Estate Blog?
Do you have any links about blog strategy you’d like to share? If so, pop them in the comments below. Thanks and hope you had a wonderful Thanksgiving!
Sorry to disappoint you.
This is not a pitch for a nudist colony, a social network for swingers or a therapy method for “heavy talkers”.
It’s a pitch to get you “naked.” That is, to get your blog “naked.”
In 1999 the Cluetrain Manifesto declared:
These markets are conversations. Their members communicate in language that is natural, open, honest, direct, funny and often shocking. Whether explaining or complaining, joking or serious, the human voice is unmistakably genuine. It can’t be faked.
Here’s my question to you: Are you faking your blog?
Are you natural, open, honest, direct, funny and often shocking on your real estate blog?
In the breezy book Naked Conversations, Robert Scoble and coauthor Shel Israel argue that every business can benefit from smart “naked” blogging, whether the company’s a small-town real estate agent or a multinational fashion house.
“If you ignore the blogosphere… you won’t know what people are saying about you. You can’t learn from them, and they won’t come to see you as a sincere human who cares about your business and its reputation.”
In a nutshell, blogging is one of the best ways to communicate with your market. Better than postcards, email newsletters, flyers, magazine articles, weekly radio shows.
How are blogs better than these communication channels?
There are six key differences between blogging and any other communications channel.
1. Publishable. Anyone can publish a blog.You can do it cheaply and post often. In addition, each posting is instantly available worldwide.
2. Searchable. Through search engines, people will find blogs by subject, by author, or both. The more you post, the more findable you become.
3. Social. The blogosphere is one big conversation. Interesting topical conversations move from site to site, linking to each other. Through blogs, people with shared interests build relationships unrestricted by geographic borders.
4. Viral. Information often spreads faster through blogs than via a news service. No form of viral marketing matches the speed and efficiency of a blog.
5. Syndicatable. By clicking on an icon, you can get free “home delivery” of RSS- enabled blogs into your e-mail software. This process is considerably more efficient than the last- generation method of visiting one page of one web site at a time looking for changes.
6.Linkable. Because each blog can link to all others, every blogger has access to the tens of millions of people who visit the blogosphere every day.
Of course you can find each of these elements elsewhere. And none is, in itself, all that remarkable.
But in final assembly, they are the benefits of the most powerful two-way Internet communications tool so far developed.
However, bloggers and sophisticated readers of blogs will sniff you out as a fake if you lie, hide, withhold or micromanage information.
Successful blogging is about being off-the-cuff, transparent and off-the-record so to speak. Even if you sin.
In a New York Times interview, David Neeleman, founder and CEO of JetBlue, said he was “humiliated and mortified” with how JetBlue customers were treated and how his organization melted down.
Then he went onto tick off a number of problems with his company, including the low-cost model he developed.
Did you catch that?
He publicly aired corporate problems.
Using a blog would have been a better communications tool. But remember that like a hammer, a blog is just a tool.
JetBlue sinned. It suffered. But it publicly repented. And the guy at the top probably ignored a whole bevy of lawyers telling him not to admit any kind of culpability.
This is transparency. And it is a case study for how a CEO, politician or real estate agent can use it.
Naturally, you shouldn’t wait until you’ve embarrassed yourself, your family, your clients to start using a blog. You should start before that.
And you should remain open, natural, honest and transparent. Telling the truth is the curious secret to getting people to believe you.
In fact, airing out your dirty laundry makes everything else you say more believable.
Just ask David Neeleman.
In July 2007, JetBlue reported that its second-quarter revenue increased from the first quarter. In fact, JetBlue was one of the few major airlines to post a profit in that quarter.
This weekend I ran into a Realtor friend of mine. I asked her how things were going. I asked her if she had any horror stories that dealt with sellers and buyers in this flat real estate market. She did.
In a conversation that lasted less than 30 minutes, she shared 4 different stories about bone-headed, stubborn clients. And one timid, but cooperative client.
Seller insisted he must sell his home for $325,000.
That’s how much he HAD to get out of it since he renovated the main floor, added the new second floor and built a detached two car garage.
The next closest price a home actually sold for within the last year–$178,000. Agent friend refused the listing.
A seller listed their house for $165,000 when the next closest was $145,000. The home sat on the market for 6 months. After they’d been paying two mortgages. They never allowed my agent friend to lower the price, accusing her of not marketing the home enough. This was not true.
She’d had it listed in all the usuals, MLS, online video, papers. She even sent out just-listed postcards.
When the listing expired, she re-listed on the condition they lower the price to $150,000, but seller insisted $155,000.
My agent friend agreed to $155,000 only because she knew she’d get showings and offers, which she did, but all the offers were around $148,000. She said to take it. They refused.
After 3 months she insisted they lower the price again, which the seller reluctantly did, to $148,000. He then insisted she go back to the agents who had clients who gave previous offers, but of course all the buyers had already bought a home.
The home eventually sold for $144,000 six weeks later.
My agent friend had a buyer who low-balled an offer on a home $30,000 below the list price. The list price, compared to comps in the last year was probably $5,000 above average, but definitely could fetch something very close to list price.
My agent friend suggested they not go in that low, because even though they were in a buyer’s market he was probably going to piss off the sellers. The buyer insisted. Doing her job, she sent in the offer.
The seller’s agent came back, said, “My client knows you are just doing your job, so nothing with you, but they refuse to entertain any offer from that buyer.”
When she shared that information with her client laughed, he said, “There playing tough. Okay, well go back $20,000 under.”
She said, “You don’t understand: they don’t want to work with you.”
He was appalled and said, “Is that legal?”
Seller bought a home, replaced the hot water heater, and a year later put the home on the market, $26,0000 more than for what he bought it for, but $15,000 more than any other home sold in the area.
My agent friend recommend they sell it closer to the comps, but the seller refused.
It sat for 3 months without any offers.
The seller agreed to lower the price, got plenty of offers, but sold it only once it was $1,000 less than the best comp, 3 months later.
The seller was furious he’d replaced the hot water heater.
A nice nurse wanted to buy a home. Over about 3 days, my agent friend drove her around to see 4 homes. None fit the bill. The fifth home they saw did fit the bill. But it was out of her price range.
However, according to recent comps, the home was over-priced at $175,000.
My agent friend suggested they offer $162,500, which high nurses, but still in the nurses range. The nurse agreed because she loved the home to death, but she didn’t think that was such a great idea, didn’t like the idea of such a “low offer” but trusted my agent friend.
The builder of the home came back with $168,000. This shocked the nurse. They countered $164,000. The builder countered that with $165,000. Agent friend and nurse countered with $164,500, which the builder jumped all over.
Here’s the deal: My agent friend couldn’t understand why so many people ignored her advice, especially after she patiently laid out the facts, namely that no home had sold with in the last year for the prices anyone wanted to buy or sell. Except the nurse.
What was the difference? Why do some people, despite your professional experience and wisdom, choose to do things there way?
Not too many people in their right mind would tell the heart doctor that they’d really like to stick to the double bypass surgery instead of the recommended quadruple bypass.
What gives? Let me know your thoughts. I look forward to hearing from you.
The fruit fly.
It’s got red eyes, a yellow-brown thorax and black rings around it’s abdomen.
Fruit flies are so small you could fit five in a drop of water.
It’s got a life span less than 30 days. And a spastic, ridiculously short attention span to match.
Believe it or not, but this, my friend, also describes your typical web visitor. [Just the attention span part, that is.]
This means on the web, you have about 8 seconds to lock-down that attention span and get it to do whatever you want it to do.
Here’s how to do that.
As I mentioned in the past, you are probably going to find yourself working with landing pages if you decide to run a special online prospecting campaign.
This means if you are offering a subscription to a weekly newsletter, market updates or blog subscriptions.
And great landing page design is about leading the eye on a journey that ends in conversion.
However, you can fit an almost infinite amount and type of content into your landing page through links, long copy, audio or streamed video.
For best results, however, you must obey two rules:
Now, it may seem impossible to merge these two rules together…at the same time creating a flawless funnel that leads a visitor to conversion.
It’s not.
But to help you accomplish that seemingly complex task, keep these rules in mind:
Make sure the critical elements in your creative are visible to almost all the visitors without scrolling. Keep them inside the upper 300 pixels of the page.
This way every single visitor can see and act on the critical elements of the page without scrolling.
Remember, your visitor has the attention span of a fruit fly. Your screen must convince them not to bail immediately. That means…
Definitely your headline, subheadlines, no less than 100 words of copy should be above the fold.
Include critical images, your streaming video [if you are using any].
And DEFINITELY any type of call to action copy with the “Subscribe” button or feed icon visible.
According to Marketing Sherpa, two columns generally outperform 3 columns, and 1 column generally being the best design.
The problem is that more columns equal more confusion.
Over 30 years ago David Ogilvy conclusively proved that multiple columns confuses the eye. The eye is not sure where to look.
One column relentlessly draws the eye in one direction: to a conversion.
The only time you need navigation on your landing page is if it is part of a micro site and navigation is critical to the conversion path and contains no distracting links.
Otherwise, nix navigation.
So, maybe you’d like to spend more time on the world’s most exotic, sprawling golf courses, gazing out over a blue Pacific Ocean while your buddy digs his ball out of a sand pit.
Or maybe you’d just like to buy three pairs of Gucci pumps, a new Prada handbag to replace your old one and a bottle of Versace fragrance on a whim one afternoon and not worry if you have the money or not. Because you do.
Maybe you just want to pay off your mortgage. Or a car note. Or simply climb out of drowning, joy-killing debt.
Whatever your ambition, you need to use emotionally-charged copy if you want any ounce of your marketing to make substantial profits quickly.
Here’s what I know: even if you had all of the elements on your landing page perfect still wouldn’t t save it from bad copy.
On the other hand, great copy could save a clunky, second-rate landing page that looks like a child’s Thanksgiving turkey art project. [Not by much, but imagine if it had bad copy, too!]
So, if you don’t have time to learn the craft and write great copy yourself, then hire a great copywriter.
You will not regret the investment.
So, you’ve got five engaging elements to produce a landing page that will convert more visitors: what are you going to do now?
Go get started. And let me know what you think? Am I missing something? Overbearing about the copy thing? Maybe you got landing page test results that prove some of my points wrong. Please share.
Related Articles
How to Kill the Deal: 5 BIG Landing Page Errors
The Six Steps of Landing Page Design
Your Website Is a Room Full of Furniture for Half Blind People
Today, I wanted to share with you what I consider the biggest errors in landing page design.
These are errors that will drain you of money as visitors arrive at your landing page and flee, leaving you with nothing to show for your hard work.
The thing is, these are simple, easy to avoid mistakes.
But I see these most often with real estate agent sites, and I know from our own experience that these goofs can waste huge opportunities to connect with willing, paying clients.
And you don’t want to lose willing, paying clients, do you?
So, before we dive into good landing page design in the next post, here’s what you need to avoid.
Make sure your headline is big enough, that it stands out.
But also, what about your body copy? Is it large enough to read on screen?
You don’t want to use font size smaller than 10 points, cause that’s a definite turn off.
As Jakob Neilson said: Tiny text tyrannizes users by dramatically reducing task throughput.
Also, stay away from fancy font styles. One big reason is because fancy formatting and font styles are ignored.
Your landing page has one purpose: conversion.
If you put links or a navigation bar on your landing page, invariably people will click on them.
You have to remember this about advertising: people are looking for any excuse to ignore you, to put off their decision you are asking them to make.
You might think “Well, I don’t mind so much if they work their way through my site. They’ll probably come across some useful stuff.”
The problem with that is they may come across some useful stuff, and then go away.
You don’t want that.
Create your landing page like a funnel that people slide into, and convert.
Read Seth Godin’s blog post on the funnel to learn more.
You’ve got them to your landing page. Now you want to close them. That means you place everything you need to convert them on your landing page.
Don’t stick a link on there that says, “Click here to Begin.”
If you want subscribers to your blog, then insert a fat feed icon on the page with copy that says, “Click here to subscribe.”
If you want a name and an email address, include the entry boxes on the page AND a voluptuous “Subscribe Now” or “Get Free Report Now” button under the forms.
Rule of thumb: Make it simple and quick. Web users have the attention span of fruit flies.
Speaking of forms, don’t frighten people away by asking more information from them than necessary.
If you want to give someone a free report, all you really need is an email address. So that’s all you need to ask for. [Of course it’s polite to ask for a first name so you can personal the return email.]
Don’t forget: when creating forms, imagine the minimal amount of info you need, and stick to that.
This is the daddy of mistakes.
Anything that serves to distract a visitor is the kiss of death. This includes self-centered messages about how important or successful you are.
Avoid that like the plague.
Use emotionally-charged copy to attract attention, create desire, boost interest and motivate to action.
And the copy should be linear and simple. It should be written with one clear, unrelenting purpose: conversion.
If you can’t do that, hire a copywriter to do it for you. Trust me, it WILL pay off for you in the end.
Your Website Is a Room Full of Furniture for Half Blind People
Last week I started a mini series on landing pages, which relates to your internet marketing efforts.
The good news is a landing page designed for higher conversion rates probably won’t cost you much more than landing pages you are creating now. It’s more of a paradigm shift, a better way of thinking.
And with some agents saying they are lucky to sell one house a month, better conversion of leads into clients, especially buyer clients is more important than ever.
The bad news, however, is this: it will take you more time and thought. But…you take the time and effort and mental sweat to convert more leads…and you’ll rise above your competitors.
Many marketers don’t want to work all that hard. They like to coast. If you’re prepared to roll up your shirt sleeves, the battle is yours.
Here’s are the six steps to designing better landing pages.
Before you start designing your landing pages, define precisely what you are trying to do:
Note: Landing pages should handle only one conversion goal.
Here are some questions to think about when selecting the URL:
One more consideration: use Google Analytics to track results. It’s free. And then decide who is going to monitor those results. It must be a person who can make changes rapidly.
Get your mind off your campaign, your messaging, your creative, your offer and into your prospect’s mind.
Spend some time thinking about the perfect person you want to convert. Then construct your landing page for that perfect prospect.
Don’t try to segment your market here. If you think your market needs to be segmented, then each segment is it’s own campaign.
Here’s what I know: don’t construct a page to appeal broadly. It won’t appeal to anyone. Visitors have to believe the appeal is perfect for their individual needs.
Make a list of all the elements that need to be on the page and then sketch out how you see the page. This is called wireframing.
One thing you want to pay attention to is where your fold is. This is important when you go to write copy.
Divide copywriting into 3 steps.
First, your headline. Understand this is the most important element to your landing page. And slight tweaks to headlines can cause conversion rates to soar or plummet.
Second, consider your call to action. You are asking them to do something, correct? Test this with your headline so that they match. And make sure that your call to action not only appears in the copy but appears in on button: “Join Now”.
Third, go through several rounds of writing copy. This includes sub-headlines, bulleted lists, guarantees, testimonials, explanations and descriptions. Getting the copywriting right is critical to your success so don’t cut corners.
Finally…
Here are your standards:
Keep this in mind: try not to rush a landing page. However, you can test and tweak throughout a campaign to optimize a landing page so you don’t have to wait until you have a perfect landing page to launch.
Testing and tweaking is key to getting the best results.
Next post I promise to share with you 5 of the greatest mistakes in landing page design.
Lately I’ve been thinking about landing pages as we’ve been going through a phase of testing copy for our landing pages.
During that time I brushed up on what I know about landing pages and actually came across some stuff that I didn’t know. Good insights.
I thought it would be useful to share these with you.
Let me answer that by saying what a landing page isn’t because landing pages are often confused with splash pages, bridge pages, jump pages and microsites.
Splash pages are usually flash introductions. And users dislike them vehemently.
Use a splash page and your site traffic will generally plummet as a result of having placed this barrier in front of it.
Imagine your website as a room full of furniture and your users as half blind visitors.
A splash page is like a stained glass door without a knob. And they have to figure out how to get inside.
Many splash screens are graphically rich to entice users to explore the site. Unfortunately, splash pages decrease credibility, traffic, search engine rankings, and web site performance.
And don’t think that by adding a “Skip Intro” link is going to solve your problems.
Skip intro splash pages degrade performance, increase bailout rates [because of frustration] and decrease your search engine rankings.
Most importantly, studies have shown that splash screens reduce web credibility with up to 71% traffic loss.
Ouch.
Examples of splash pages if you are a cat lover. [I’m not. Never mind. Don’t visit that website. I feel bad I even shared it. Please don’t go.]
Doorway pages are designed to be particularly enticing for search engines, but not visitors.
Back to our room full of furniture analogy: doorway pages is like architecture that appeals to the builder of the home, but is not functional, or even practical.
Like this glass bathtub.
Doorway pages are sometimes referred to as portals and gateway pages.
Here’s the problem with gateway pages: they must be closed or navigated through to get to desired content.
A gateway page is like a smoky sheet of plastic in front of your door. This is bound to cause some pain and frustration. A good example of a gateway is the full page ad that appears in front of you when you are trying to visit Salon.
Microsites are a cross between a landing page and a website.
They often have their own domain names. You may even brand them with separate colors from your company’s brand. Maybe even its own logo.
They are small, self-contained web destinations that are separate from a company’s primary site, have their own distinct URLs, and consist entirely of content focused on a particular product or service.
They’re more easily optimized for search engines and, if their content is good enough, can drive word-of-mouth or viral marketing through linking and pass-along.
With the prevalence of keyword contextual advertising, (more commonly referred to as Pay per click or PPC), microsites may be created specifically to carry such contextual advertising. Or along a similar tactic, they’re created in order to specifically carry topic-specific keyword-rich content with the goal of having search engines rank them highly when search engine users seek such content topics.
Because of that narrower focus, these small web sites can be used as hubs for a specific marketing campaign.
They are used when a real estate marketer wants to offer a user an extended experience for branding or educational purposes.
Think Philips Bodygroom.
Or Boutari Moschofiari.
Or the Tedst, real estate sales legend. [Ted will live on forever in my heart.]
A good micro site is in fact a site the visitor might even return to as a destination. Or share.
But it’s not a landing page.
A landing page is where a person “lands” when theyclick on an online ad banner, search engine result, email link, or when they visit a special promotional URL that they heard about on TV, radio or other offline media.
Very few perfect landing pages exist.
The perfect few are usually the result of exhaustive multivariate testing.
However, like most people, you probably don’t have the budget or time to dive into multiple tests.
You need to launch something today on a shoe string budget.
But the problem with most landing pages is that they are asking your prospects to do some pretty unpleasant stuff:
The trick is to get them to see doing these things as a something they want to do. Something that sounds beneficial, even in the smallest of ways, to them.
If the next several posts I’ll get into exactly how to do that.
But first: do you know of any successful landing pages?
According to industry numbers, typical conversion rates are low.
Depending on whether it was emails to a house list to a free offer through search to an email to a 3rd part list, you’re looking at something as high as 11.31% to 6.1% to as low as .97%.
I’ve heard of 50% conversion, but the low teens and high single digits is the norm.