Posts Tagged ‘2-days-ago’

Connect with me at Connect

Tuesday, July 22nd, 2008

Right now my life feels a little like this motorcycle ride I took a few week’s back…

It’s all a bit of a blur.

Real Estate Connect SF 2008 kicks off in little less than 24 hours and I think it’s shaping up to be one of the best events we’ve put together. But, needless to say, it’ll be slow posting here on FOREM this week.

However, if you want to keep up with everything that’s going on from afar, make sure you:

Follow me on Twitter.
Connect with me on LinkedIn.
Friend me on Facebook.
Watch my Flickr Photostream.
Find me onTechnorati.
Converse with me on Disqus.

More importantly - if you’re coming to Connect.. make sure you say hi in person or give me a call at 971.228.5704.

Hope to see you there.


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Real Estate 2.0 Expands

Tuesday, July 15th, 2008

The guys at 1000Watt have redrawn the Real Estate Web 2.0 mindmap. Make sure you go and check it out.

1000Watt MindMap

What’s impressive is that despite the gruesome economic news and horrific market conditions many in the industry are facing there is still so much innovation happening on the technology side.

I think this is going to be the big story of the latter half of 2008. It’s make it or break it time for many of the players on the list and those who haven’t raised a few rounds for a decent war chest to wait it out (see Trulia Gets Beaucoup Bucks) are going to struggle and probably fail.


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Trulia Goes Pro

Thursday, June 19th, 2008

Trulia continues on its quest for revenue by adding Trulia Pro today - a new ad platform for agents looking to create a quick and easy ad for themselves on Trulia’s search pages.

The package (which runs $39 a month) gives you unlimited “Feature Listings” (meaning participants get their listings floated to the top of the search results) and unlimited Local Spotlight Ads - Trulia’s new take on self-service ad concept.

Trulia CEO Pete Flint gave me a demo of the system recently and it looked pretty straightforward. Ads are easy enough to create (in fact, if you have a profile on Trulia already it’ll prepopulate the ad with your photo). You can add a tagline and a URL to your web site or blog (no-follow’d, natch).

When buying your ads you can pick to have them run in zip codes, neighborhood or cities. You can choose up to 20 locations when checking out (and change them later on if you want to tweak the campaign). Ads show up on Trulia’s search results pages, mid way down the right column.

Nothing terribly new here; Zillow already has its EZ Ads pay-as-you-go platform and Realtor.com has long offered up geographic regions to own. Trulia’s twist is they are offering unlimited impressions - so you’re not paying for a set amount of views. They’re throwing all the pageviews into a bucket and divvying them up according to how many people are wanting to be there.

(It is proportional however, meaning those who have fewer locations overall get more impressions in the areas they have chosen to mark.)

Flint made a good point when I spoke with him that fortune will favor the early adopters - the more people piling into the mix later on means the fewer impressions go around. If you get in early, right now you can own a city - for a while at least. Portland Real Estate is up for grabs, for example.

And Trulia is definitely trying to goose this out of the gates and poach some ad dollars from from their competitors by offering a Trulia Pro promo for the first three months free for current EZ Ad or Realtor.com advertisers.

My biggest concern with the ads however, is the placement on the page is poor so I doubt it draw many eyeballs beyond the initial curiousity phase. Past that, I’m also not sure how many home buyers will actually click through on any of the ads, making the ROI questionable in the long run even with the low monthly costs.

It’ll be interesting to see and hear what people’s experiences are running Local Spotlight ads. And, for that matter, any of the other self-service ad platforms that exist out there already.


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AdReady Lets You Get Creative with Your Ads

Wednesday, June 11th, 2008

It used to be if you wanted to build your own ads online you were stuck writing boring text ads like Google AdWords or Zillow EZ ads.

Not any longer. AdReady is a self-service platform for marketers that’s aiming to change that. It lets you build out a targeted banner campaign in literally just a few minutes and a few clicks.

Basically it’s bringing Google Adwords-level simplicity to banner advertising. 

Using AdReady you start an ad campaign for your business using a library of ready-made creative, which includes a number of pre-existing ads in the real estate category. You can choose your base design based on the most successful CTRs (click through rates) or simply pick whichever design catches your fancy.

The site lets you customize the basic design; change background colors, modify text and upload new photos through a slick Flash interface. When you’re done customizing it applies your changes to a series of IAB standard banner ads.

Just like with Google Adwords, you’re then ready to customize your media buy by choosing the length of the campaign and pegging a dollar figure on how much you’re willing to spend.

When you’re ready to publish, AdReady places your ad on a number of sites through its relationships with third-party ad networks. While you don’t get to choose the exact sites you want to appear on, you can geo-target your ad to a particular area and/or pick certain categories of publishers on which you’d like it to appear.

AdReady just announced a deal to bring the service to the New York Times and it’s not too much of a stretch to see that more publishers will go down a similar route self-service to add new options to small advertisers (and presumably, offload some of their excess banner inventory).

The downside of course, is that your ads will be fairly generic. But nevertheless, it’s interesting to think how you could use AdReady’s platform to create a flexible advertising campaign really quickly and inexpensive. You could advertise your blog, your business and even your listings.

This is definitely a growing trend I’m seeing. Online tools like AdReady, widget builders like Sprout (see Sprout Lets You Build Single Property Widgets) and video tools like Spotmixer (see Video Advertising to Dominate Online Ads) all give you loads of room to get creative, on the cheap.


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