5 Oct 2007

CRT Releases Single Sign On Tool Kit

Filed under: Technology, Online Marketing, Identity — benwong @ 2:21 pm

NAR’s technology arm the CRT (Center for REALTORĀ® Technology) recently released an open source single sign on toolkit. What is SSO and why is it important?

SSO allows a user to log in once and be access to multiple applications. This is much better than having to remember multiple usernames and passwords. A SSO system makes thing more convenient.

This news will likely garner more blank stares than “oohhs” and “ahhs” from the average agent. However, developers should pay attention.Ā  The CRT releasing a SSO tool kit sends a message that online tools need to begin working together.

I’m particularly interested in this because at Sutton we’ve been working on our own identity management initiatives. We’ve been looking at the light weight OpenID to integrate into FlexiSites. That’ll gives our agents the ability to use their FlexiSites as an OpenID enabled URI.

What this will accomplish is the first step towards online identity management and online marketing for our agents. That’s thinking Real Estate 2.0.

20 Sep 2007

Google’s Real Estate Strategy

Filed under: Technology, Online Marketing — benwong @ 12:25 am

Joel Burslem of Inman News interviews Justin McCarthy, the Strategic Partner Development Manager of Real Estate for Google. People should pay attention when Google does anything. Kind of interesting their position on the role of Google Base and real estate.

Real Estate Video by - Real Estate Blogger

19 Sep 2007

What Brokers Ought To Know About Real Estate 2.0

Filed under: Technology, Online Marketing — benwong @ 3:20 pm

At last weekend’s 2007 Sutton Broker’s conference I was discussing Real Estate 2.0 with a few of our brokers. A lot of them were curious about the buzz but didn’t have the slightest idea of what it is all about. This post is an introduction to trends going on with real estate on the web.

An important thing to keep in mind is the generational gap between brokers, agents and the real estate customer because this has a huge impact on RE 2.0 acceptance. A lot of brokers and agents are Baby Boomers. In contrast many new home buyers are Generation X and Generation Y.

So this is the tip of Real Estate 2.0:

  1. Blogging
  2. Social Networking
  3. Open data
  4. Mash ups

Let’s start with what is blogging or what is a blog?

From the Wordpress Docs:

“Blog” is an abbreviated version of “weblog,” which is a term used to describe web sites that maintain an ongoing chronicle of information. A blog is a frequently updated, personal website featuring diary-type commentary and links to articles on other Web sites. Blogs range from the personal to the political, and can focus on one narrow subject or a whole range of subjects.

Essentially it is content written on specific topics displayed in chronological order usually newest to oldest. Blogs are valuable because they are an easy and inexpensive way to build your reputation and identity online. Reputation is what people say about you. And they are talking online. The web has grown into a social tool.

Social networking refers to people having social interactions online. Real estate has always been a people business and the web allows people to interact more quickly and efficiently. The value here is that you can maintain good relationships with many more clients with a lot less time.

By leveraging social networking tools like blogs, FaceBook, MySpace, LinkedIn and participating in online communities like Yahoo! Answers your expertise and your reputation can let you interact with more people which directly equates to more business. As a further benefit by investing in your online identity it will generate business for you while you sleep.

The next part of Real Estate 2.0 is opening up the listing data. This is a controversial subject for many brokers and agents. Protecting listing data has traditionally been synonymous with the preservation of livelihood. This thinking has become outdated. The industry’s mls.ca already has most of the listings in Canada available online all the time. The data is already out there so the value of real estate agents as gateways to listings is already gone. There is more value to the industry as a whole by opening up the listing data.

Making the data available encourages others to use it on their websites and applications. This directly increase the exposure of an agent’s listings. The more eyeballs that see a listing the quicker it will sell. Free marketing, where’s the downside?

Opening up the listing data also encourage mash ups. Tools and data from different websites mixed together to form a whole greater than the sum of its parts. Anytime you see a real estate listing sitting on a Google map you’re looking at a mash up.

This is important because the cost of building something big and complex like listings on a map becomes simple and affordable. By commodifying these things even a teenager can build something that would have cost millions a few years ago. The result is more eyeballs and more free marketing for your listings.

This post just scratches the surface of Real Estate 2.0. The new ideas of sharing, online reputation and identity management do challenge the traditional thinking of real estate marketing. The key thing brokers ought to know is that Gen X and Gen Y is growing up. We’re getting married, having kids and beginning to buy and upgrade our homes. We think in Real Estate 2.0 terms so it is frustrating for us to operate on Real Estate 1.0.

11 Sep 2007

Vancouver Real Estate Meet Up Summary

Filed under: Online Marketing, Identity — benwong @ 3:45 pm

Yesterday at the Vancouver Real Estate Technology Meet Up guest speaker Joel Burslem, Social Media Manager of Inman News and proprietor of the Future Of Real Estate Marketing blog gave a presentation on trends in online real estate marketing.

This is a summary of Joel’s presentation:

  1. Learn the new tools. The “winds of change” are coming.
  2. Build your online reputation. The game is the same, you build your business by touching bases. Online your website can work for you while you sleep.
  3. Have conversations. Blogging and participating in online communities (LinkedIn, FaceBook, Yahoo! Answers, etc) demonstrate your expertise. Have conversations with people. Learn to type. ;)
  4. Show, not tell. More photos, more video and more information. Use your digital camera, make a video, upload it to YouTube.

I share Joel’s opinions and I like to push Real Estate 2.0 marketing ideas as much as I can. In the end, whether offline or online the key is about differentiation and standing out from the crowd. It pays to be remarkable.

Here’s a new mantra, apply the old rules, learn the new tools. The web commoditises everything at light speed. Soon every agent will have a great looking website with a listing search for $5/mo. When everybody is remarkable, nobody is remarkable. The only way to stand out is by investing in and marketing your reputation.

© Copyright 2007 Sutton Group Realty Services Ltd. Powered by WordPress

Close
E-mail It