There’s always something to howl about.

Do You Zlog? Making the Zillow Real Estate Guide Work For You

Do you Zlog? Let me define Zlogging on Zillow.com for you.

Zillow solicited listings this past fall from Realtors and announced the Zillow Real Estate Guide (formerly known as the wiki). I was a huge critic of the practice of posting listings because I felt their intentions were disingenuous. I did notice a cool “back door” to their changes that could promote the businesses of Realtors and loan originators. That back door was the Zillow real estate wiki and I saw it as an opportunity to use Zillow as a personal weblog. So, a Zlogging I did go.

The results were astounding. My personal weblog received 6-7 times the traffic within the first 2-3 days of my Zlog post and I received a call about a loan for a home in Mexico. I took it a step further and started posting “teasers” on Zillow in order to drive the traffic higher. It wasn’t completely altruistic nor within the spirit of the Wiki. I was caught red-handed by the Zillow cops and gently coaxed into more corrective behavior. My more toned down Zlogs were still driving traffic to my website while providing useful information to a consumer.

I walked in the back door, was thrown out by the Zillow bouncers, and invited back to the party through the front door. It was that defining moment that caused me to realize that Zillow has juice. If I can provide useful consumer content, they can deliver hits to my weblog. That seemed reasonable enough to me.

This latest announcement from Zillow, comprehensively analyzed by Bloodhound Blog, provides an amazing opportunity for the Realtor or loan originator to promote their practice on a national and local scale. Greg Swann explained how the practitioner can “mark their turf” in a zip code to gain expertise in the consumers’ eyes by farming via the Zillow Q&A feature. I will show you how to generate referral business by establishing expertise on a national level by Zlogging..

Understand that Zillow is extremely consumer centric and is striving to deliver content that has little or no sales pitch to it in the Real Estate Guide. You must pick topics that are relevant to Zillow’s audience and add value to the community. Nobody like the dinner guest that passes out cards to your friends and neighbors with the sole intention of selling whole life insurance to them. That is what I was doing on Zillow this fall and that was just rude. Instead, write 200-400 words on a topic that hasn’t been covered. Ed Brophy provided a nice example of a good Zlog post today.
Some topics that you might cover include: quality of life issues in a certain neighborhood, material differences in real estate law between certain states and yours (escrow vs. lawyer closings), who traditionally chooses vendor services in a real estate transaction, and other pertinent local issues.

Close your Zlog post with a discreet byline, highlighting your name with a link to your home page or weblog. That will be in good taste and still drive an acceptable amount of traffic to your home site.