My other question: Good ideas and bad ideas. This bites me in the butt over and over. My brain is great at generating ideas, not so great at knowing what makes an idea great. Something new or different is not always better (I need to have that tattooed on the inside of my eyelids). The million dollar question: How do you know?
The way we work is to think backward from the marketing objective: What event or outcome do we want to have happened? “Sell the house!” is a lot to tear off in one mouthful, but how about, “What can we do to get visitors to sit down and ‘try the house on’ in their minds?” That’s where the coffee table book came from.
I wrote the original version of our sign philosophy before I created our first yard sign. That sign was very different from the signs we make now, but that paragraph of small text was there from the very beginning. I knew that if a yard sign was actually going to work to sell the house, I had to get people to stop their cars, and that paragraph of text has been doing that one little job ever since.
This is all Richard Riccelli again, thinking in terms of direct response marketing. The big yes to the house is an accumulation of smaller yeses to particular marketing tactics, so the most effective marketing efforts will consist of taking away the negatives — eliminating the deal-killers. Who can you turn to for that kind of marketing advice? Your buyers. When you show, again and again your buyers will teach you what’s not working in other listers’ houses. Learn from your buyers and eliminate the turn-offs from your own listings.
That’s important. People will read the things I write and decide that I’m talking about tricks or gimmicks or tactics. I’m not. I’m talking about a complete home-marketing strategy, and each individual element of that strategy is expected to fulfill a particular strategic objective. But our strategy starts with four obvious tactics that are omitted in at least 90% of the homes I show: Cleaned, repaired, staged and priced to the current real estate market. Skip those steps and nothing else you do will make up the difference.
We think of it this way: If there are nine plausible homes for every buyer in our market and our listing is second-best, there’s a good chance it won’t sell in nine months. Why? Because this month’s first-best, which will sell this month, will be replaced by next month’s first-best. Our absolute best chance to sell our listing is to be that first-best home, far and away the first-best — in cleanliness, in curb-appeal, in condition, in staging and in price.
Another way of thinking of the same thing: Sales is the art of taking away objections. If we can remove every one of the buyer’s objections to our home, the buyer has no reason not to buy it. Rather than probe buyers for objections about why they almost like our listing, we prefer to take away every objection we can think of before we list the home. That way, even if we’re wrong about price — an easy target to miss in our market — we can make the correction instantly, knowing that price is likely to be the only consequential objection — and get the home sold in a very short span of time.
Most Realtors do what they do for the worst of all possible reasons: Monkey-see, monkey-do. Why does your yard sign look like all the others? Uh… Why does your flyer — if there is one — consist of a list of features? Even though you live in the Web 2.0 world and you know that savvy shoppers despise sleazy salesman’s tricks, why do you withhold information in the hope of coercing phone calls?
There is no “why” that you can direct at our marketing that we cannot answer in detail, outlining the exact strategic objective — the specific response we hope to elicit — for everything we do.
So: The small text on the custom sign stops traffic, which gets people looking at the home. The coffee table book gets buyers to sit down, to feel the home. Even something as simple as the tiny “docent cards” we put up in exceptional homes pull a yoeman’s weight: They convey to buyers that the home is not just a domicile but a work of art. Before they visit the house, and especially when they get back home, the web site gives them an infinite “wish book” experience.
The latter point is important just by itself. Even when Realtors seem to be half-awake to marketing, they treat it as if they have one swing at the ball — and they don’t always seem to take even that one swing seriously, swinging for the fences. Why are our single-property web sites so elaborate? Because we know that the eventual buyer of the home will be coming back to that web site again and again — which (duh!) mimics buyer behavior with the actual house. We want for the web experience of the home to be rich and satisfying every time a potential buyer comes back. We’re not building a site just to shine the seller on or to fulfill a bullet-point on a bullshit “marketing plan.” We’re not trying to hide the home in the hope of inducing phone calls. We’re trying to make that home available to web visitors in every way we can think of — and we will continue adding content to the web site throughout the marketing period.
In July of 2005, Cathy and I were in a CRS class taught by Ed Hatch — a very fun instructor, wired like a congenital basketball coach. He mentioned that agents for The Group in Denver had started putting price riders on their signs. Cathy and I looked at each other and had one of those shared epiphanies that makes our brokerage work. We’ve never even see the price riders The Group does, but ours are huge, with the numerals visible from two blocks away. What are we doing? With one simple sign, we are establishing our transparency to buyers — and to the neighbors. People hate being torqued into calling a Realtor to get a simple answer to a simple question — dreading what they’re going to have to go through to get that answer. We answer every conceivable question passively, starting with that price rider.
But aren’t we losing out on leads? They’re not leads. They’re just curious people who hate the dumb stunts Realtors pull to try to trick them into becoming leads. This again is not at all hard to understand if you think about the way you react to pushy salespeople. With something as simple as a $50 price rider, we can establish silently and passively but instantly that we are not the kind of Realtors to be feared.
Everything we’re doing is devised to fulfill a marketing objective — to elicit the direct response outcome we’re looking for. The “trick” to our tricks is that there are no tricks, no gimmicks, no clever sleights-of-mind to dupe people into buying our homes. Instead we market real estate using the same time-tested ideas that are deployed to market everything else. We think about the response we want to have elicited, then we build our marketing tools to elicit that response. We test everything, and we toss a lot of seemingly-promising ideas. We’re not afraid to be wrong, which gives us a decent chance of being right — if not right away then eventually.
And everything that we’re doing with our listings is documented in BloodhoundBlog posts. Other than our archives page, there is no decent catalog of those posts, but I expect I could teach two or three days just on marketing listings. As always, if you’re interested in these ideas, don’t try to cheap it out — anti-marketing is worse than no marketing. But if you want to see what I’m talking about — see how we solve specific real estate marketing problems — come see us in Orlando.
If you follow that link, the monetary cost isn’t much — just $99 for a 12-hour program. Even so, my price is very high: You have to pay attention. I’m not going to get drunk with you, and I’m not going to have pillow fights with you. This is not a tax-deductible day-camp for Realtors. But if you will lend me your mind for my share of those 12 hours, I will show you how to go home and dominate your local market — in due course — by delivering the kind of real estate marketing prowess other Realtors know nothing about.
Technorati Tags: BloodhoundBlog Unchained, real estate, real estate marketing, real estate training, technology
John Kalinowski says:
Greg,
Have any of your price riders mysteriously disappeared? I’ve had it happen several times now, and I don’t know if it’s jealous agents or competing sellers who took them.
I was sitting an open house one day, when a competing seller from down the street stopped by and made some sort of ridiculous comment about how we were “bringing down the prices in the neighborhood” (we were priced $30k lower than her way-overpriced listing). The following week, my price rider disappeared. I put up another one, and it walked too. Beyond wiring them to a high-voltage system that farmers use to keep their cattle in, what else can you do?
September 13, 2008 — 10:00 am
Greg Swann says:
> Have any of your price riders mysteriously disappeared?
We use these instead of S-hooks. Very rarely do they get messed with. They’re not secure, but it could be they look like they are.
Because our signs are so huge, we’ve had a persistent problem with wind. This Summer (our windy season), I started strapping 24″ bungee cords around the post, hooking into the bottom-most link on the sign. Looks a little weird, but the sway is cut to nothing.
In the long run, our plan is to build a huge H-frame for our signs, then mount the signs within that structure with bungee cords. Somewhere along the line, I’d like to find an affordable in-ground flood-light system. From there, it would be nothing to aim a web-cam at the signs, both for security and as market research.
Here’s to thinking outside the box!
September 13, 2008 — 10:39 am
Jeff Brown says:
Not gonna get drunk with me — check.
How do I get the visual of a pillow fight outa my head?
Listing the BHB way is now the Brown & Brown way, as we reenter the San Diego income property market. We’ve already gone through the first few steps with two investor clients. One of them is now half way done with our ‘to do’ list, spending $15K +/- in preparation for hitting the market.
I’m taking Sean Purcell over there soon for his opinion.
We’re the only ones I’m aware of who’re executing this listing approach.
September 13, 2008 — 10:50 am
Riley Smith | Coconut Grove Real Estate says:
I love your coffee table book! What a great idea. Definitely a listing tool AND way to promote your property. However, sometimes I feel that you really can’t “sell” a house to a person. They will buy the house that they fall in love with.
September 13, 2008 — 12:54 pm
TWA's Real Estate Investing School says:
We take the same approach to renting single family homes. We try to make it the best rental in the school district for the price and features it offers. And the result is often a tenant for many years, not just one. Great post; thanks for the details.
September 13, 2008 — 4:20 pm
Teri Lussier says:
Thank you, Greg! You’ve just rocked my world.
I’ll be visiting this post over and over. If it was paper- which it may become- it would be dog-eared and highlighted to within a inch of it’s life, starting, quite literally, with this:
>The way we work is to think
Now there’s a brilliant idea! 😉
September 13, 2008 — 6:19 pm
Jennifer says:
Greg, will the Orlando BH event be made available on DVD for purchase after the event? Also, will it be similar to the Phoenix event?
September 14, 2008 — 1:36 am
Greg Swann says:
> Greg, will the Orlando BH event be made available on DVD for purchase after the event? Also, will it be similar to the Phoenix event?
No to both questions.
Phoenix was very much abut theory, and Phoenix 2009 will be substantially moreso. In Orlando, we plan to do a one-day class on how to integrate the web into your marketing from the ground up. We want for everyone who comes to go home with a game plan that they can use to hit the ground running.
In Phoenix we had a small audience and we were able to buttonhole everyone on the way in for a model release. We won’t be able to do that in Orlando, so we won’t be shooting video.
I hope this is not a disappointment. We know that in Orlando we’ll be talking to a lot of people for whom much of this stuff will seem arcane. We want to give them everything they need to put these ideas into play.
September 14, 2008 — 7:24 am
Todd Kirke says:
Greg,
I just stubled into here and I’m intrigued about your marketing takes because I am in total agreement. I am a partner in a large format graphic printing company and I started by selling new ideas about signage and the response in little old Des Moines, IA has been fantastic.
I’d love to help anyone looking for alternatives in terms of sign marketing, as it’s limitless as to what we can do. I now focus a lot on 4′ x 8′ signs, how can we shape cut them, what is the best orientation, etc. and we have redesigned a bunch of companies efforts. If there is any interest, shoot me an e-mail todd@multi-media-inc.com.
Take Care!
November 19, 2008 — 11:48 am
Greg Swann says:
Hi, Todd.
There’s a big business to be had in custom real estate signs, if you’re game.
If you look at sites like PSPrint and OvernightPrints, you’ll see how they have been able to use web forms to create a quasi-custom graphics department. For real estate signs, you would want to have full-time layout people, as well. But if you could guide Realtors in how to deliver high-enough-rez images to you, then downsample them to versions that can be worked with on-line, you can give those Realtors partial or complete input into the layout of custom real estate signage.
Then you have to follow through on production and delivery: If I sign off on my job by Noon Tuesday, I want it delivered to my door by Noon Thursday.
Do that and you can take over the sign printing business in due course.
November 19, 2008 — 12:01 pm
Todd Kirke says:
Greg,
Thanks for the feedback, you make it seems so easy…now, we can currently take files, 300dpi is best, in a number of formats, and create from there. Building the site is an expense best covered by me once the work is there, built it and they will come may be an Iowa refernce, but I can do this now without building the site. I know it’s small scale, but for those interested, send me an e-mail. We can shape cut MDO, and coroplast any way you want. I do have templates, but I prefer to design signs as one-offs. Your design is your design, and we’ll stand by that.
I’ll be in touch, and great work on the site, if fit your site profile because I’m sick of mediocrity when it comes to signage. A unique sign will stand out in this rectangular world of signage! I have some pics of our work on our site,
Take Care!
November 19, 2008 — 12:21 pm
Greg Swann says:
Email me your photos. I’ll show them off for you. We admire excellence in any form, but we’re delighted to help people who are pushing Realtors toward better, more dramatic marketing.
November 19, 2008 — 12:35 pm