Realtor Web Site - What do you think you're doing?

An agent asked me a question in another one of my posts that warrants a separate post of its own. He is new to web design and a little leary of hiring someone to design his site and even more leary of doing the work himself.

I actually think he is in the same boat as many other real estate agents. Few agents come from a techie background because many techies often work better with computers and not people and many agents usually work really well with people and wish they didn't have to deal with a computer.

If you feel like you must have a web site, determine its purpose first:

  • Are you trying to get new clients? This is the most difficult goal to accomplish. You are competing with every other web site regardless if it is designed by a professional or not and regardless of the budget spent in making it popular. You really have to think about conversion rates too because for every lead you generate you are paying for the popularity in one way or another (i.e. time, SEO time, pay-per-click).
  • Are you trying to provide a service for existing clients? This is quite simple to accomplish. Develop or hire the development of your feature or information and train your existing client base to use it, "Oh by the way, I have this awesome tool you should use to accomplish just that. This piece of paper (or email) shows you where to log in and what to do."
  • Are you just trying to introduce yourself and your services, create an online brochure? The site is easy to build in this case but no one will see it unless you pay to make it popular or drive traffic to the site with print materials and other non-web advertising.
  • Are you just following the trend? If you don't have a distinct purpose and a way to track the results you are likely wasting time and/or money. In fact, you could probably spend the same about of time and money on business cards and hand them out to random people and find more business opportunity than most ineffective web sites provide.

For those looking for new clients, the fact is that most real estate web sites get very, very little traffic and most never get a lead. Of those who get leads typically less than 10% convert to anything serious.

Here are some numbers to give you an example: If your site is sharp looking, has convincing content and great tools and you get 30 visitors per day you may get half a lead or contact (1 lead every 2 days). Of those leads you will get less than 1 in 10 to convert into a serious client who results in a transaction. So that is roughly 1 transaction per month. How much is a transaction worth in your market?

Now, what does a person pay for a great web site? You will likely pay $3,000-10,000 for the site design for a good site. You will likely have hosting fees $10-50 per month. You will have SEO fees $300-1000 per month.You have to spend time writing content or pay someone to do it. You have to pay for IDX services or set them up yourself. In my market, I know a realtor who pays $3,500 per quarter to keep the team site in the top 10 in some of the major search engines for top key words. I know another who paid $7,500 for a decent site and $500 ongoing. He hasn't seen a lead in 3 months, yet, because it takes time for SEO to work. Others pay for google or yahoo ads. Every click costs $.03-1.50 or more depending on the demand for ad space in your region for the key words you are targeting.

So, you build a site and pay all this money for web traffic and design and IF your site is great you get 1 converted client every 20-30 or so days. If you knew you would convert 1 close a month you might be able to justify the time, effort, and money. Otherwise, like most sites, you pay the money and in years only get a couple of contacts.

If you plan to design something inexpensive like an online brochure and then tell your clients about it later there can be great rewards in that. First, it is inexpensive. Second, your clients may like reading a little bit about their agent. Third, you can post client experiences there and people like to read about themselves.

The bottom line. If you are planning on a web site for leads and clients plan to jump in all the way. Plan to pay for popularity, spend time writing articles and/or providing tools, and plan to redo it all if you start getting traffic and no conversions. If you are planning on something else just as another way to promote your business with your clients then seek out low cost opportunities and have fun with it. Don't make the mistake of doing a site "just because every other realtor has one." Figure out what it is that you are trying to accomplish and figure out how you are going to measure your results. Then stick to your plan.

Good luck,

Darren

 

9 Comments on Realtor Web Site - What do you think you're doing?

Thanks, Darren.

I know I need a site, and I am leaning toward the on-line brochure.

Here's hoping you get some discussion on your points, as it seems to me that MANY agents are struggling with this.

 

01/27/2007 08:26 PM by Mike Jaquish Keller Williams Realty, Cary, NC (Keller Williams Realty)


Darren,

I am not a Realtor but a Loan Officer. My degree in my former life was from the technical background. It was not software but hardware. Meaning, I knew nothing about programming and I still do not. There are software programs out there that can allow you to build your site very inexpensively. The software that I use for mine is Front Page 2003. The total cost to set up my site was about $230. The hosting fees are approximately $40/yr. Take a look at my site. I think its pretty in depth, has a lot of information, and helps realtors to gain referrals.

www.rockfordlending.com

 

01/27/2007 10:45 PM by Me . (mortgage)


Darren,

I would also be interested in your take on Jeff's site.

I had contemplated buying Front Page or MS Expressions, but had reservations when I read that browsers other than IE may not function. 

01/28/2007 08:17 AM by Mike Jaquish Keller Williams Realty, Cary, NC (Keller Williams Realty)


Jeff: Great job on your site. I think it looks professional. I'm glad to hear it is receiving leads. Hopefully, they are turning into transactions for you. You are fortunate to have a good eye for design and the ability to put it together. Even your images are optimized for quick download. What image software did you use? Your Flash forms look great too. How much was your flash license?

rockfordlending.com is the perfect domain name. You popped up right away in the search engines for the terms "rockford lending". I didn't see the site show up when I did a search for "rockford lenders" or "rockford financing" or "rockford loans", which should be pretty common search terms for your line of work. How many leads is the site generating? How much would you have to pay for SEO in your market for great site popularity or pay-per-click ads?

01/28/2007 11:26 AM by Darren Hildreth, Realtor® - Las Vegas Real Estate Agent (Specialists Real Estate)


Mike: Jeff's site looks great! I was happy to see that it was optimized well. He knows something about web design because front page doesn't put a site like that together by itself. You have to understand tables and download times, etc. It had Flash integrated in it and the images were well sized meaning he used some type of image formatting software like photoshop, paintshop pro, or other. He basically had a brochure site. I would doubt the site draws many leads from the internet unless he is paying for search engine placement. I did searches in google for his market by using standard lending keywords and found the site only came up in "rockford lending" which is due to the URL he was fortunate to grab. The site has huge potential. It needs SEO work which is my point: he will have to pay for it or do the SEO work himself. There will be more invested in the site than $230 before he gets any real traffic (in fact, if you count the Flash license and the image software license he is likely already more than $230).

Another aspect to look at: how much time has he put into making it look great and work properly? How much is your time worth? He has some 10 pages including, http://www.rockfordlending.com/mortgage_calculator.htm. That page didn't program itself in frontpage or dreamweaver, etc. He had to search to find the code or learn to do it himself.

You have inspired yet another blog topic...I'll add the link to this comment once I have written the post...

01/28/2007 12:10 PM by Darren Hildreth, Realtor® - Las Vegas Real Estate Agent (Specialists Real Estate)


I'll be looking for the link, Darren.

BTW, Rama Polefka told me he would disown me if I came into the cube farm with Front Page...

But, I really want to control my site, and use a reasonably simple program.  That comes from being tooooo much of a hands-on guy, I suppose.

And I don't mind the time, for now, except it will cut into my AR participation... ;)

The IDX integration will be a question for our provider at the Market Center.

01/28/2007 03:19 PM by Mike Jaquish Keller Williams Realty, Cary, NC (Keller Williams Realty)


Mike: Alrighty, here is one of the blogs you inspired: http://activerain.com/blogsview/39302/Software-Options-for-Rookie. It should drum up some other discussion because everyone who designs their own page will either love the program or hate it depending on how much frustration vs. success it has given them.

01/28/2007 05:12 PM by Darren Hildreth, Realtor® - Las Vegas Real Estate Agent (Specialists Real Estate)


Darren,

Front page has worked well for me. The only software that I have purchased is Frontpage and Coffee Cup Flash Form Builder. Front page 2000 was about $190 and the Coffee Cup Software was about $40. The software that I used to alter the size of the images was Microsoft Office Picture Manager. That software didnt cost anything becuase it was part of Microsoft Office, which was given to me by Microsoft. As well as the full version of Front Page 2003. So yes... my cost is down due to free OEM software, but mostly all it takes is to keep playing with the software and reading about what people have done with their software. Thats the part that takes time.

01/28/2007 10:30 PM by Me . (mortgage)


Jeff: Thanks for the update. I'll add your comments to the post I submitted awhile back: http://activerain.com/blogsview/39302/Software-Options-for-Rookie. Good luck with your site!

01/28/2007 10:36 PM by Darren Hildreth, Realtor® - Las Vegas Real Estate Agent (Specialists Real Estate)


This blog does not allow anonymous comments

 
Real Estate Agent: Darren Hildreth,  Realtor® - Las Vegas Real Estate Agent (Specialists Real Estate)
Darren Hildreth, Realtor® - Las Vegas Real Estate Agent
Las Vegas, NV
More about me…
Specialists Real Estate

Office Phone: (702) 320-6900
Cell Phone: (702) 376-5590
Email Me
Las Vegas real estate, Las Vegas homes, Las Vegas real estate agent news information.

Links

Tags (Tag Cloud)

Archives

RSS 2.0 Feed for this blog
ATOM 1.0 Feed for this blog

Find NV real estate agents and Las Vegas real estate here on ActiveRain.
Disclaimer: ActiveRain Corp. does not necessarily endorse the real estate agents, loan officers and brokers listed on this site. These real estate profiles, blogs and blog entries are provided here as a courtesy to our visitors to help them make an informed decision when buying or selling a house. ActiveRain Corp. takes no responsibility for the content in these profiles, that are written by the members of this community.
© 2007 ActiveRain Corp. All Rights Reserved