"What Web 2.0 is about is connecting consumers directly with REALTORs. Guess what? That's what Home Gain does" said Louis Cammarosano, General Manager of HomeGain.com at the Bloodhound Blog UNCHAINED Social Media Marketing Conference, sponsored by Zillow.com. Louis was challenged by Greg Swann about the price of the "leads" and held up well under fire.
Louis quoted me by saying Home Gain is "another arrow in your quiver"
10 Comments on Connect Consumers With REALTORs? Guess What? That's What HomeGain Does.
Brian
With you in the room, I was able to concentrate and get the "arrow in your quiver" quote correct.
Later in the day I gave a tv interview and I kept saying "you need many quivers in your arrows"
That was exactly the point I was making. At bloodhound the participants were taught how to generate their own leads for free.
I added that free isn't really free-it takes up a lot of your time, time that you could be spending with customers instead of time trying to get them.
The other point I made was there was a volume limit to the number of leads you can get through social media as not all home buyers or sellers come directly from google where your blog might be found or if they do, not all consumers are interested in agent blogs.
Many homebuyer and sellers on the internet also click on the paid search ads on Yahoo, google and msn, where homegain advertises. They also come directly to HomeGain.com as well as the sites of over 300 or our traffic partners. This is more exposure than a single blog can garner BUT it does cost money!
Recently HomeGain also added agent blogs to part of the marketing support we give our agents. HomeGain agents can blog directly from HomeGain.com
You can see them here: http://www.homegain.com/realestate-blog Some of them are starting to move up the google rankings...
I want to make a point here- get rid of Home Gain...if you can. Lead generation is the be all and end all of this thing of ours. If you can generate "conversions" less expensively than Home Gain, you should. I calculate their conversions to cost about $70. Here's my math:
$700 buys you 500 hits. 500 hits gives you 70 inquiries, resulting in 7 customers (someone closing within 120 days). Those are good numbers and cheap customer acquisition costs.
If your time is billed at $100/hour and you can find 7 new customers in 7 hours, get rid of Home Gain. If you can't beat that, use them.
I might also add your example only went through the economics for one of our products - buyerlink. What about another of our products Agent Evaluator where you pay $29 a month and only pay 27% of our commission if you close a transaction.
Close $25,000 worth and your referral fee drops to 25%. Close $50,000 and you are at 22%
It takes 5-10 minutes to propose to the leads we send.
I was a previous buyer link customer and I am considering the service again. But first I wanted to be sure that my site, my perspective and long-tail were clear and fully functional and then augment that progress with a regular flow of leads that could more easily become committed to what I offered.
Often the message we put out is not clear, does not ansswer the question for the Internet Empowered Consumer of "What's in it for them". Surprisingly it took me longer to get that clear than I expected. But I am capable of learning and now proceeding along that path.
Thank you always for you insight and commitment to excellence. You bring a great deal to the community.
Brian doesn't just draw conclusions, he asks the questions, gets answers and then asks more, THEN he makes conclusions.
You can trust Brian's advice as its based on his own superior insight AFTER he has done the interrogation/investigation.
Brian With you in the room, I was able to concentrate and get the "arrow in your quiver" quote correct. Later in the day I gave a tv interview and I kept saying "you need many quivers in your arrows"