Sunday, December 23, 2007

Holiday at the Beach

I don't know about everyone else, but it's hard for me to get in the spirit when I stay home in Myrtle Beach for Christmas. Trouble is, it's so darned cold back home that I can't make myself drive up to be with family. This year I'm also in the middle of trying out the new "stop smoking" drug called Chantix. So far it's giving me gas, some diarreah, and I'm sleeping 12 hours a day. Pretty good odds to make you quit smoking, isn't it? Hah.

This month has been the worst I've ever seen as far as real estate leads go. All of our sites have gotten the same amount of traffic as ever, but almost no leads at all in the last two weeks. Really irksome! I have picked up a couple of SEO tricks from a really great SEO company called Stomper Net. These guys are really really on the money. They make some hilarious and interesting videos, and if their tips work, it's well worth the couple of hours it takes to watch them and learn. Lest my competition learn from me, I'll leave it up to you to visit their website and spend the time to learn it too.

New on the website front, we finally got a really good IDX solution just about installed on the condos.net site. There's still some bugs, and the company we went with is about as slow as molasses, but it's looking great, and I'm excited about the finished product.

You can search the Myrtle Beach MLS from it, of course. But we decided to go an extra step which most of the local websites haven't done. You can register for free, put in your parameters of what kind of Myrtle Beach real estate you are interested in, and have the new listings sent to you by email as new properties fitting your description come up for sale. It's a cool option, and one I think our customers will appreciate and use often. You can visit and sign up for your Personal Condo Locator right here.

Hopefully when January 1 comes around, these buyers that keep hoping prices will go even lower will see that the bottom is already here, and decide to get their beach homes before the prices start escalating again during the spring and summer tourist seasons.

Learn more about our Myrtle Beach condos for sale and enjoy some beach pictures on our Condostore website. Merry Christmas and Happy New Year to you all!

Friday, November 30, 2007

Real Estate Ad Budgets Stretched Thin across Copious Media Choices

From MarketingCharts.com

Between the soft housing market and tight budgets, US real estate agents and brokers are facing tougher choices when they divide up their ad dollars - especially when media choices have proliferated - according to a new study of real estate ad spend trends.

Less than half - 47% - of the Realtors surveyed said they are spending more for advertising and marketing this year than they did last year, the study conducted by Classified Intelligence and RealtyTimes.com found. That proportion was 58% in the previous year’s survey.

And despite their complaints about newspaper advertising, Realtors continue to choose print over what is an almost overwhelming number of media-placement options, according to the report, “Real Estate Advertising - Print Fading But Realtors Still Use It.”

Although just 15% of respondents said they still advertise in print, respondents voted newspapers third out of 11 categories for producing qualified leads.

Moreover, half of the surveyed Realtors said the results from national websites are below their expectations - simply not generating enough leads.

Some 39% of respondents said they’re overwhelmed by the number of advertising options; just 5% said they felt they have the decision-making process down to a science.

The study found that the shaky real estate outlook is compelling agents and brokers to use fewer dollars in more productive places, forcing them to reassess their media choices.

Some are turning online: Whereas a year earlier the number of Realtors involved in blogging and social networking was insignificant, some 21% of respondents now say they have their own blog and 25% say they participate on at least one social-networking site.

“Real estate professionals are in a tough spot,” said Peter M. Zollman, founding principal of CI. “The economic considerations in an unsure market are pressuring ad performances to do more, for less. At the same time, choices for those advertising dollars have exploded, causing confusion on where to best spend their budgets.”

About the study: The report was based on responses from 344 real estate professionals, who reported they were everywhere from “overwhelmed” to “scientifically buttoned-down” about their advertising expenditures. The report also reviews companies providing technology to real estate ad publishers, leading European and Asian real estate advertising media, and an overview of the latest innovations in real estate ad technology.
Oct 29-07
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In Myrtle Beach this is particularly true. When I first started out with Condolux, we were the only game in town with the search engines. Now there are about 25 fly-by-night supposed SEO companies (read link collectors) and quite a few competing sites that give me a run for the money on Myrtle Beach real estate.

Real Estate Marketing by Myrtle Beach Web Design

Wednesday, October 31, 2007

Matt Cutts The Google Cat


Matt had this unbelievable picture posted on his blog for Halloween today. He is completely adorable. And all his male fans are giving him hell. You'd think he wore a pink shirt in public or something...haha...



Sunday, September 9, 2007

Building Online Real Estate Classifieds

My friend Bryan Pearl has the unusual background of being in web design and marketing first, and then moving into real estate sales. He writes the below article to share his insight about one of the methods we use for links and marketing...

Building Online Real Estate Classifieds

Placing an ad online can seem intimidating in the beginning. Here are some basic guidelines to follow in creating great online classifieds.

The structure of an AdI use a simple ad structure I call the 4-C model. Capture attention, Create Interest, Cause Desire, and Call to action. In the 4-C structure you can create effective ads to use again and again.

The first C - Capture Attention
You have a very brief moment to capture the attention of a potential home buyers. Design the headline/title with the best description possible, such as UNBELIEVABLE SOUTHERN CHARM IN THIS DOWNTOWN HOME. The right person is looking for this description and you want to get it discovered.

The second C – Create interest
Pick two or three main features of the home and briefly describe the benefits of those features. Don’t go into the boring feature description. Focus on the benefit the feature provides. A good example is a Jacuzzi . The Jacuzzi is the feature but the image some one draws from the Jacuzzi is tranquil peaceful relaxation. A certain level of comfort and luxury is assumed just in the name of the Jacuzzi. Take a few extra words and describe it.

The third C – Cause a Desire
Here you want to tie the first and second C’s together in a question or statement. JUST IMAGINE! as an example. Another could be, WHAT WOULD IT BE LIKE IF YOU LIVED HERE? This can be a short question or several words but this should be the conclusion to the actual ad. Try to tie everything together in the last statement.

The fourth C – Call to Action
This should be simple, but it is another area to highlight some of the benefits. Such as, THIS CAN ALL BE YOURS, CALL TODAY FOR YOUR PRIVATE VIEWING. Then provide your contact information.

I use this format for all of my ads while marketing Huntsville Alabama Real Estate.
Long or short I find it to be an effective ad development process. Feel free to copy this process and use to your heart’s content.

Bryan Pearl is a Real Estate Agent marketing Huntsville Homes for Sale.
To contact Bryan call 256-513-1801.

SEO Tips and Tricks by Myrtle Beach Web Design

Wednesday, August 29, 2007

Search Engine Optimization and Navigation Links

I've had several instances lately with realtors either asking for help, or cutting off their noses to spite their faces, when it comes to the concept of LINKS on their homepages.

It seems we all have our special ideas about how best to have incoming links displayed and where. Since the new algorithim change several months ago where they have almost completely discounted reciprocal links, those of us who know what we're doing have gotten rid of most of these, and particular those endless "links" pages that the ripoff SEO companies have been milking money for over the last couple of years. My group of friends and affiliates have always favored homepage links over interior ones, mostly because they are easier to maintain and it doesn't take hundreds of them to work.

That being said, many realtors even went overboard with homepage links...some having 100 or more at the bottom of their pages. I have a couple of older, possibly "authority" sites that probably have more than they should have...although I've been working to get rid of all but the most important ones.

Real Estate Linking Strategies
In the beginning, we all did reciprocal links that way too. Now most of us are able to find a way to make them one-ways instead, and these are even MORE powerful...requiring even less in number, and if used along WITH a comprehensive linking strategy involving blogs, press releases, article writing, and directory links, they are great for your site's PR. It MUST be done in moderation, and should be done with other realtors that you know and who, themselves, have a concept of proper SEO. Like any other linking, if they screw up and get penalized, it can reflect back on you. The best of all link partners are your competitors, oddly enough.

But as the argument wages on about the number of links on a page, and whether an incoming link from a homepage with 50 others is worth as much, or less than a homepage with 30...or 25...or none, for that matter. Since the beginning, Google has said to keep outgoing links on a page to 100 or less. The question is...WHAT is considered an outgoing link?

Outline Your Website Navigation
If a website has 40-50 great interior pages (with a real estate website, perhaps descriptions of neighborhoods, types of housing, retirement info and such) and also another 50-75 links to other websites...reciprocal or one-way...do you use the total of both? We didn't for a long time. I'm still not 100% sure either way. Most SEO's absolutely think so, however.

But there is a way to lessen the navigation links, and therefore lessen the "bleeding" of PR from the homepage all the way around. So many realtors don't understand the concept of site-maps, themed groups of pages, and how to most effectively link to your inside pages from the homepage. One of the worst culprits are the Advanced Access sites...which all contain scads of pages about schools, population demographics, relocation information, taxes, and all kinds of STUFF, that is important and perhaps interesting to a buyer, is also not necessarily important for most of your viewers...which are there to look at available property! It's good to have alot of content...actually imperative. But you don't need a link to every single one of these pages on your homepage!

In school, most of us learned the basic concept of doing "the OUTLINE". I can't think of a better time to use an outline than for a website that has more than 25-30 pages of content. Try to decide which of your inside pages are more important to your customer and will promote sales. Put these in your navigation and sprinkle the links in your homepage text. You probably don't have more than 10 or 15 pages that are really important. Concentrate on promoting these from the homepage, from your blog, and from press releases as well. They will end up often with as high of a PR as your homepage, and in the best cases, may show up as extra listings in search results! THIS IS WHAT YOU SHOULD BE AIMING FOR.

If you have a page about schools, about weather, about local attractions....relocation resources, businesses, government information, etc...then create a main page for the area. Call that page the name of the area...such as www.yoursite.com/your-city.html. Lump all those "reference" pages together on THAT page, and have one link on the homepage to IT...not 6-8 separate links.

If you live in an area that encompasses 3 counties, 6 cities, and 10 sub-divisions, try to make an outline. Have separate paragraphs in your text with a teaser and heading for the 3 counties.
On that county page, link the city pages....and the sub-division pages if you want. Or have another main page for the cities, and link the sub-divisions off there. Besides the ease of navigation, you are also adding great, themed, and optimized pages for each area, and it gives you another chance to rank FOR that area. Call the pages something like "/randolph-county-real-estate.html" and then "myrtle-beach-condos-for-sale.html".

You'll have only 3 homepage links in this case, instead of 19. If you feel that some of the cities are more important than the county, then add a column on the homepage with direct links such as "North Myrtle Beach Real Estate" or "Myrtle Beach Condos". Keep it limited to important pages! When you do a blog post, do one just about Myrtle Beach's real estate offerings, and link to that interior page from the blog. If you have a featured home in one sub-division, go to one of the classified ad sites such as Backpage.com and do an ad for it...free, or for pennies a day. Put a link on the ad back to that interior page, and you get PR to it!

You end up with an easy to navigate, CLEAN homepage, that doesn't overwhelm the visitor with too many options, yet makes it easy for them to find the area or home they are looking for. And no less important, you help the search engines to more easily focus on your most important search terms on the homepage instead of confusing them as to your main area theme... DILUTING your search terms!

So now your navigation and text links on the homepage are counted more like 15 or 20 instead of 40-50. You've got room to put some outbound homepage links to other realtors...or local businesses, or whatever themed links you find to help you with Google's important PageRank.

Remember that outgoing links are like pin pricks. You lose a drop of blood with every one. Be sure you are getting an equal or greater drop of blood BACK from a link for any that you link out to. Keep in mind that your inner pages usually don't have equal rank to your homepage. So if your homepage is a PR4, and you link to that inner city page that is a PR2, even though it links back to the homepage, you only get a half of a drop of blood instead of a whole one. You want as many great pages of content as you can get, yes! But you don't need to link them all from your homepage. You only defeat your SEO efforts when you do.

One last, very important must.... BE SURE YOUR INSIDE LINKS TO THE HOME PAGE ARE TO YOUR DOMAIN NAME. Don't do the old-fashioned "Home" links to index.html or default.html. Use your main search terms in the links whenever possible, and if you use graphic buttons for your navigation, be sure to use additional TEXT LINKS at the bottom of all inside pages.

I'm off the soapbox now...:-)
Stay tuned for more Real Estate Marketing Tips and Rants from Myrtle Beach Web Design.

Monday, July 16, 2007

Website Hosting and Domain Name Nightmares

The Website Hosting Ripoff

High-priced hosting costs and unethical domain name registration is rife in the website industry. Learn what you should be paying and what NOT to do when you hire a webdesigner!

I have been helping real estate agents and vacation rental companies in Myrtle Beach, SC for over 5 years now. In the last year or so I've gotten out of the designing end and more into SEO and copywriting. But since the beginning I've seen and heard more customer horror stories than seems natural in this day and time. There are a few basic Do's and Don't's that everyone should know to avoid this problem, and I'm surprised that it isn't broadcast more often. If you are planning to have a website designed, please READ this and do a little "due diligence" to protect your own interests now.

Buying Your Domain Name

I won't go into how to choose a domain name here, although it is something to consider. What I want to uncover is one of the worst, most unethical, and COMMON practices I've seen in this area, and make you too smart to fall for it.

Before you hire a designer, go YOURSELF, to one of the major domain register sites. Open an account. Choose a user name that you use often. Choose a password that you can remember. WRITE THIS INFORMATION DOWN. Give it to your wife or husband. Give it to your secretary. Just be SURE you have it where you can find it again. I can't emphasize this enough.

After I've yelled about keeping the login information, let me again say, DO THIS YOURSELF.

You should never, ever, have a webdesigner or website company do this for you. Inevitably, at some point, you are going to either become dis-satisfied with your designer, or find someone else that provides more services, such as SEO. No matter how much you trust the person you hire to do your website, do NOT expect them, or allow them, to register your domain name for you.

This is one of the oldest nasty tricks I've seen, and is still one of the most prevalent. The web designer registers the domain in HIS OWN name. All goes along smoothly until such time as you want to change web companies. All of a sudden you find this "nice guy" you hired laughs in your face and refuses to give you your own website. Or he tells you he will for several hundred or thousand dollars more. Much of the time, you've hired someone locally and don't even have a contract. To my knowledge, you don't have much recourse. You may even have a contract that says in the small print that your designer owns the site.

I had an older gentleman call me one day to ask for help resolving a situation like this with one of the more well known companies here in Myrtle Beach. When I looked at the "Whois" information and told him the designer owned that name, he literally cried on the phone. He had had the website for 2 or 3 years, and was a small sign company whose business practically relied on that website. It broke my heart, but I had no solution for him except to start over.

Buy your own domain name. Keep your login information safe, and be sure you pay for it when the yearly bill comes in. Godaddy.com has domain names for as litte as $8 a year. Pay for it for several years, and be sure your email address is always correct with the registry company. Maybe it's something you would rather not be bothered with...but it's a small bother if you end up with a website that literally makes or breaks your business.

Hosting Your Website
This is another area that I continually see agents and others being taken advantage of all the time.

NEWSFLASH: You can choose your own hosting company!

I have been using Pair.com since I started doing websites. They are the best in the business as far as I'm concerned. If you have a small website that won't have a million visitors a month, you can get a hosting package for under $10 a month. Hosting packages are based on total file size and something called "Bandwidth". Bandwidth concerns how many times your website is visited, plus the size of each page that a visitor looks at. The more large files such as photos, music, or video that you have, the more bandwidth you will use. If your website will contain videos or many photo galleries, you may have to go to a larger package...say $20 a month...to handle the volume. But a normal small website will hardly ever cause an overage.

Now, why would you want your designer to host your website? There are some good reasons. Your website will also usually control your email(s). When there is an email problem, or you need to make a new one for a new office person, it's easier to pick up the phone or email your designer to handle this. Sometimes it can be complicated. It might be worth paying a little extra for them to host it and handle this. But how much is legitimate, and how much is highway robbery?

I have a few clients and even friends that I host a website for. I buy a larger package, and can have multiple websites in my account. It's very important that your website has its own separate dedicated IP number also, but I'll save that for another article. It may be that some designers will offer you a cheaper package to share hosting. They may not even TELL you that you are on the same IP with a dozen other websites. It's much cheaper for them to host them all on the same IP... and worse, many of these designers are actually hosting your site on a private computer in their basement! Ask them where they are hosting it and get the details. Verify what they tell you with someone else if you can. If not, and you trust them to do the right thing, then figure on paying an average of about $25 a month for most designers to host your site. That is the going rate around here.

This means the designer is probably making about $20 a month at a minimum.If they are hosting it on their own server, it may not cost them a dime.

My average price for hosting a regular to large website is $15 a month. If the company has 30 employees that constantly worry me about emails and problems with forgetting passwords, I might increase the price to $25 a month. I never have done this so far. And they DO bug me fairly often...:-)

If your design company is charging you more than $25 a month for an average website, then you are paying too much. If you have a small site and can take care of basic email setups online yourself, then open your own hosting account and save the extra monthly amount. If not, then at least question the amount and make sure it's reasonable - and with a reputable hosting company that provides multiple backup and very low downtime.

If you plan to have a website with an IDX database, or are going to invest heavily in video or virtual tours, then choose a real estate web design company that provides this, and be prepared to pay considerably more than what I've described here. But if you are going to have an ordinary website, little or no video displays, and a reasonable amount of traffic, don't fall into the trap of being overcharged.

You can have a great website for a very reasonable amount of cost if you do your homework up front!

Copyright 2007 by Jan Chilton

If you are interested in website hosting or want help with choosing a domain name, I'll be glad to answer an email question. My website at Myrtle Beach Web Design can provide more information as well. Bone up on real estate marketing tips at http://www.echoforum.com/.

Thursday, June 7, 2007

The Smoke Screens of Ripoff SEO Companies

I conferred with a very large, well-known, and even pretty good real estate website design company yesterday for a friend who asked me to evaluate their Search Engine Friendly (or not) templates and database features. I had looked through the portfolio they presented, and was impressed with look of their custom websites. I am always suspicious of any database driven websites as far as being able to rank them well. I've only seen a very few that did rank, and it's usually because they've found a way to integrate the dynamic pages into a very large and well optimized html website, that consistently presents new content. Even when some of the database pages seem to be spidered, the query strings, or URL's they produce are long and cumbersome, and seldom rank well for anything.

This particular design company boasted of being search engine savvy, and indeed even had several pages and offered a higher end product with ongoing SEO services. After seeing that, I assumed that the person I talked to would be well versed in the shop talk, and I could ask for a few examples, make sure of a few major points, and advise my friend to use them or not.

The conversation I had with this sales rep was littered with smoke-screens and impressive BS that would convince any but the most well-informed realtors that they knew their stuff. And I would bet that even their customers would argue that their search engine placement was ideal, even while bemoaning the fact that their leads were few and ROI was low.

As we progressed into the telephone conversation, the water got murkier and murkier, and I was appalled enough in these techniques to try and air them to the public. My questions and the programmed answers they gave are a lesson in why SEO companies have such a terrible reputation these days...

Templates
I started out the questions by inquiring about the templated sites they offered at a discounted $1600, as versus custom designed sites that were another $1800 in addition to that. So I said, "Do you find that your templated designs rank as well as your custom ones? Templates often have too much coding and a very limited ability to tweak for SEO techniques..."

He assures me that there is very little difference and he thinks my friend is going with the custom design anyway. Our templates do "pretty well" in the searches, though....
Right there I got a sinking feeling.

Without using true URL's, let me explain that this company specializes in For Sale By Owner, Do-it-yourself, directory type sites that customers can pay a fee online and upload their photos, verbiage, amenities and such into a form, which becomes a page on the website. My questions to him were like this:
  • Will the created pages have independent title and meta tags?

The customer can enter that information, he answers.

  • Is there any control at all over the URL's created by the program? (Some of the pages he showed me looked like www,mysite.com/123_dz_12345_/here_is_one_for_miami_ florida/)
Well, no, he replies. That's set in the programming.
  • Can the font tags, header tags, alt tags, photos, etc be optimized?

You can change the fonts and colors, he answers. He isn't sure what the rest of that means.

***Long sigh coming from me. Can you imagine going into a popular site with hundreds of pages, and you, the customer, knowing how to optimize title and meta tags for each page? Obviously they know very little about on-page optimization, and it's not built into the programming.

So here's the clincher. "OK, I say. Show me a customer that ranks. Any customer."

He fumbles a bit, and says, "scforsalebyowner.com" (not the real name)

I type into the Google search "SC For Sale By Owner" and bang...it shows for number 2. I'm almost impressed...:-) It does show for its own URL anyway. He explains that she paid for the whole premium package with their SEO services and all.

But, I say to him, that isn't a search term. Is there a special city they service? He says that it's the main city in that state. (Remember, I'm not using the real location or website here) I type in "Charleston SC Real Estate For Sale by Owner", and it's not there. Bottom of the 2nd page, actually. I type in "Charleston SC FSBO". Not found. I type in "SC Real Estate For Sale By Owner". Again, nothing to be found.

Now he's backstepping. But she is optimized for SC For Sale by owner! And her homepage title tag is even SC For Sale By Owner. There are 1,470,000 searches for SC For Sale by Owner!

Huh???

Yes, he says. Look at the Google search results! 1,470,000 searches!

He means PAGES in the search results that are relevant enough to the term that Google shows them.

But to a clueless realtor or anyone not informed about search engines, this sounds like manna from heaven. I quickly check the old Overture Keyword Tool, and the number of searches for that exact term shows 38 a month. Take away the 25 website owners that are checking their own placement, and it's probably more like 5 or 10 searches...maybe less. So here is the smoke-screen.

At this point let me add that the charge for their SEO services is explained on the site thusly:

Setup Fee $500
These fees are used to submit your website to link directories and search engines to gain link popularity.

Additional Yearly Fees $499/yr.*
This fee is the monthly fee required to maintain your real estate websites optimization on a monthly basis. (Further down it explains this includes buying PAID links...Matt Cutts, where are you?)

Monthly Price $179/mo.
This is the start up costs and total of all the above costs. Total Costs to Start-Total of Above Items $1178

So this customer is paying $179 a month and paid almost $1200 to rank for a search term that gets 10-20 hits a month MAYBE. A search for the city and the words "real estate" number in the 30,000's.

I did a little more checking in Google, thanked the boy, and hung up. This is how these fly-by-night SEO services not only talk a customer into trying their services, but actually convince them that it's working. And this is why so many realtors think that SEO services are useless and they are better off to use pay-per-click or some other method of advertising.

I don't know what the answer to this smoke-screen selling of SEO is, but it saddens me to see a legitimate web design company using the same tactics as Traffic Power and other completely bogus services that are well known now. We, as real SEO practictioners, must find a way to educate the public somehow. The information on basic SEO and even Real Estate Marketing is everywhere on the internet...but seldom do you find easy to understand guides to the ripoff techniques.


Monday, May 28, 2007

Web Designers and Search Engine Optimization

I read an article in Site Pro News this morning that I so agreed with I felt I needed to blog about it as well...the difference between "Search Engine Friendly" and "Search Engine Optimized".

The original article was written by Stoney deGeyter, with Pole Position Search Engine Marketing. The particular part that caught my attention was this...

"Most web design and development companies don't know the first thing about SEO or creating SE friendly websites. And most who claim to be are liars. Sorry, but that's just the way it is.

Hint: If your web developer says they will SEO your website for you as part of the one-time design fee, they are a liar. If they tell you they'll develop a search engine friendly or SEO ready site then there is a better chance they know what they are talking about."
That is so true, and particularly in the Myrtle Beach area...where the competition is getting tougher every day, and the so-called SEO companies have been popping up like weeds.

To my knowledge, there is one other person in our area who knows SEO...and he is GOOD.
I won't mention a name, but he works full time for a competitor, as I work full time for David O'Connell and The Myrtle Beach Condo Store. He gives me a run for the money, and is about as good as I've seen. But then again, we do perhaps have somewhat of an unfair advantage in that we work for ONE company, and don't have to spend our time worrying about getting customers and doing alot of design work.

On the other hand, one of the area's biggest web design firms has been claiming to provide SEO services for over a year...and is about as unable to do this as any I've seen. I hate to see local realtors paying these people for something they don't get. But I guess it's really none of my business.

Back to the article. As he stated above, and further into his article, a website can be DESIGNED as "SE Friendly". SEO itself really has nothing to do with designing or programming a site, although several companies have an extra service of making the IDX results into static html pages that help with content.

True real estate search engine optimization includes the traditional ONPAGE optimization, which a regular web designer can certainly contribute to...or damage irreparably.
I don't think they are teaching the basics of SE Friendly design even at this late date. I suspect any designer that knows it has learned by reading, or by working with an SEO company. But this is such a small part of SEO, that it is almost neglible. The most important part of what you have to be sure of is that they don't design a site that CAN'T be optimized...such as flash, or some database driven sites that have page URL's a block long.

I have been doing this for nearly 5 years now, and it's like second nature to me. But even I forget small things occasionally, and often second guess myself when doing a website from scratch.

Also, SEO is NOT link building. That is the most sure sign that your SEO company is worthless. Yes, a big part of what you have to do is to get incoming links, but the days of the reciprocal link directories are GONE. Yahoo has been penalizing heavy reciprocal linking for over a year, and Google pulled the plug on it the first of May of this year, banning several hundred Advanced Access Realtor sites for the massive state link directories that they have promoted for several years.

True SEO is not just a few things you can do to a site and be done with it now. It's truly an ongoing and time consuming job...especially when the real estate marketing is in a competitive or resort area. I'm not sure that the future of SEO will be able to include this. It takes a constant and everyday round of blogs, writing articles, creating classifieds and more than anything... CONTENT, to rank well in our area. For a new website, it now takes close to a year before Google really likes a website. It would cost a lot of money to really optimize a new site in some place like Charlotte or Miami. Las Vegas would be a nightmare.
Mr deGeyter says it best in one of his closing paragraphs...
"The process of SEO requires hours of additional research and a skill set that usually is not included as a part of the site development contract. There are a few development firms that also specialize in SEO and Marketing and these firms can develop and engage in long-term optimization services. But be aware that any short-term website development contract that claims to include SEO simply will not provide adequate or successful SEO marketing results."
If you are a realtor looking for search engine marketing for your website, do your due diligence. Don't assume a local web design firm claiming they can provide search engine help really CAN. Check the websites that are in the top for your area and search terms, and try to find the company that provided their service.

Be forewarned, though, that an ETHICAL SEO firm will not service competing customers in the same area. So ask around...read the forums such as Webmaster World or Site Pro News, and hopefully you'll soon have a website that brings in leads and is one of your most important career tools.
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Real Estate Marketing and Myrtle Beach Real Estate Web Design
by Myrtle Beach Web Design

Saturday, May 26, 2007

Real Estate Marketing on MySpace

I've had a MySpace page for Myrtle Beach Real Estate Marketing since early in the game. William Shatner, being the internet guru that he is, was one of the first celebrities to see the usefulness of MySpace, and took his website to that site, as well as Live Video and some others. When he first created his page, he invited everyone on his mailing list from the website to be his "friend", and promptly got about 12,000 friends, I think.

Anyway, HE was my first "friend", which I still find amusing.

MySpace stayed a personal type social site for a while, and I decided to put links to my websites and describe my business on it as well...even though there seemed to be no page rank on them, and Google didn't seem to be very interested in the profile pages. It's still pretty much this way...the only pages that have much of a PR and show in search results are the ones like Shatner, who have links going to the page from everywhere.

I threw some links on my sites to my MySpace page, and thankfully it soon picked up some ranking. I used it partially as a promotional tool...but it is also such a personal page, littered with Davy Jones, Shatner, David Carradine, and animal interests, that it isn't very professional.

But I enjoy playing with it...KEEPING it personal, and I think it helps with the search engines too.

And then maybe 6 months ago, it seems like real estate agents everywhere started making a page. Its the "thing to do" to ask to be friends and link up with other MySpace people, and the realtors started doing this right and left. I thought, "Why not?" and started requesting it for all the good pages I found...although my main "friends" are the celebrities that I admire. At this point, I have probably 150 realtors as "friends" on there. It's got to be a useful tool...and I think eventually I will post a bulletin about one of David O'Connell's Myrtle Beach condos and see what happens.

At any rate, with all the talk about the Web 2.0 and social marketing, I think MySpace is one of the best places to start. Do it right, and throw some links to it, and I think it may become one of the top marketing tools out there. I'd much rather spend my time looking at all the interesting pages on there than looking at Delicious or Technorati.

Wednesday, May 9, 2007

Get Off the Recip Links for SEO

In the past 6 months, Google has done alot of shuffling and changing to get rid of the spammers, and as always, to keep those of us who are trying to rank well on our toes. One of the main things that has changed so much is all the hoopla about reciprocal linking.

Google has always based more than half its algorithim on incoming links. When I first got into this business 4 years ago or so, it was fairly easy to work with links and link text...once you understood it. Realtors especially, had no clue about the search engines, and there were just a few of the internet savvy ones around who knew what to do to take advantage of the traffic that a top ranked website will bring. We talked to each other, traded links, learned from each other, and did well. Little by little our numbers grew, and everyone who had a good site with good content who didn't do the wrong things became somewhat cemented to the top. Life was good.

Then the hoards of so-called SEO people moved in. Emailing other people required too much time and too much trouble. They started inventing programs that sent out link requests automatically to hundreds of other websites. Sometimes they even tell you they've linked you first...as if that may make you feel more obligated to return the favor.

I've never done anything but delete these emails. I don't even check the site most of the time.
If someone doesn't respect me enough to send a private email to ask me for a link, then they can peddle themselves elsewhere. I've often thought it was amusing that so many of them (I probably get 10 or more a day!) are putting links to my sites on there for a week or two weeks...and the links get spidered! I never give them a thing, and even if they take it off after a couple of weeks, I still get whatever little boost there is from it, and by the time it's worn off, there are 10 more to take its place. These people are either nuts or just stupid.

But as that grew into a booming business and every town had someone who claimed they could SEO your site, reciprocal linking ended up being more and more of an obvious racket...and we've known that Google was going to put a stop to it sooner or later.

The first part of May, they did. Lots of real estate sites, particularly those put out by one of the biggest templated real estate website companies in existence, were manually removed from the index. It's assumed that by doing a certain number this way, it is intended to make everyone else get scared and remove theirs before they get it too.

And it WAS ridiculous in a lot of cases. Instead of having 2 or 3 pages with good solid links to well ranked sites with some age and "authority" status, this company had a deal going where everyone participating in the linking program was obligated to link to everyone else. They built state directory pages...many of them with 50 or more pages of crappy links to other real estate sites.

The whole thing was a joke. Again, that's how we all suffer from the actions of those who want to take the easy way out and not do the work. I would occasionally get one of their newsletters and it always ended with the most recently created new real estate websites and ordered the readers to add them to their link directories. I'm sure Matt Cutts saw these newsletters too...in fact I personally showed him several. And they realized it was getting out of hand and had to be stopped.

So many of the top ranked sites with those link directories are now banned, and have removed them...now with the problem of what to do with 50+ pages that will have to have actual content put on them...or deleted and presenting a 404 which can hurt your rankings.

It also appears that Google is either killing any boost to the rankings from ANY reciprocal links, or they've just figured out how to spot links pages. Almost everyone I know dropped an entire page rank last week. We didn't seem to lose our actual ranking in the seaches, but it will still hurt in the long run, I think.

In order to optimize a website for Google now, you are going to have to face the facts. It takes CONTENT. It takes one way links such as articles you write, press releases...blog postings...classified ads. It's going to put a stop to all these fly-by-night SEO companies very soon...which is a GOOD thing. There will be hoards of young people in India scrambling for a new job. (Outsourcing link building to East Indians was huge)

It will take months or even years before the rip-off companies will stop claiming the link exchanges still work. After 5 years I still see web design/seo services who will "submit your site to 1000 search engines monthly" and other foolishness that has never made any difference.

But if you're reading this, you're one step ahead. Stop wasting your time on doing hundreds of reciprocal links. Get rid of those inside state directories before you get reported and banned from Google like the "Progressive Passage" (haha) sites were. Hire a legitimate company with a copywriter and make your site informative and interesting about your area. Spend some time on the social sites like MySpace or writing articles and press releases yourself. If you can't do that, HIRE someone to do it. If you want a site that ranks, it's either hard work or money, your choice.
Linking is not "dead". It's how you link, who you link with, and taking the time to do it right.

Real Estate Marketing Tips from Echo Web Marketing...

Real Estate Marketing on the Internet

Finally found time to start the blog for Echo Forum!

I will try to keep this updated with the latest news on the search engines, theories and rumors going around for real estate websites and the search engines, and interesting morsels of information that I run across on the forums and blogs I read every day.

We are a partnership, from my end, of Myrtle Beach Web Design, and my partner in Huntsville, Alabama, Bryan, who has an extraordinary website, Condos and Resorts.com, which we believe will one day be a monster, and a wonderful resource for real estate agents who want to promote condos, resorts, waterfront property, and new construction.

Our joint effort, Echo Web Marketing specializes in real estate marketing, real estate web design, Search Engine Optimization (SEO), and all avenues of internet marketing that Realtors need and use.

Stay tuned!