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Real Estate Website Marketing - 5 Steps to Crushing Your Competition and Doubling Your Business
Getting your real estate website more traffic is easy if you know how Internet marketing works, not to mention search engine optimization. Your goal is to get as much traffic as possible to your website, but not just any traffic, targeted traffic. Targeted traffic is the traffic that might actually have some interest in your product or service, in this case real estate, and be more likely to buy than untargeted traffic you might pick up. Fortunately, there are five easy steps to help you crush the competition and double your business. Step #1 - Links Links to your real estate website on the Internet are very important marketing tools because not only do they increase your rankings with the search engines, they also expose you to more potential traffic. Because of this you must do everything you can do get your site linked to from many different complementing websites. The more links you have, the more traffic you'll receive, and the more sales you'll make. Step #2 - Keywords Knowing the keywords that apply to your campaign and using them effectively is very important for driving targeted traffic to your realty web pages. When you use keywords efficiently and someone searches for those precise keywords, your page will be displayed as a result. Search engines give preference to keywords so you should know what you are doing when you start putting keywords in your content. Step #3 - Directories Find all of the real estate directories that appeal to your services and your market and submit your website to them. People searching real estate directories will come across your site listing and visit you. This is a great way to increase traffic. Step #4 - Pay Per Click Advertising Pay per click advertising is an affordable way to market your real estate site based on keywords and paid advertisements. You only pay for the PPC advertisement when someone clicks on it and visits your website. Many search engines offer pay per click advertising and you simply bid on the keywords you want advertising for. If you are the high bidder you get the first slot, and so on and so forth. Step #5 - Articles Place articles on your website about specific topics pertaining to the current real estate market in your area, nationwide, or current interest rates. New and informative information will keep visitors coming back. If you follow these five tips you will see higher traffic on your website not to mention increased interest in your products and services. You will realize that these marketing tips are easy to use and following them will put your real estate website above all the rest. Don't delay any longer or lose anymore potential clients. Start to work on your Internet marketing campaign immediately and start enjoying the fruits of your labor! Michael Turner reveals his foolproof way to increase website traffic in his free 7 part mini-series. Grab it free right now at http://www.powertraffictactics.com/
MORE RESOURCES: There is something emotionally charged about the buying and selling of New York high-end real estate. How else to explain the juggernaut of reality TV shows about high-end brokers? After 30 years of marriage, Sharon and Michael Newman decided it was finally time to move from the Catskills to New York City. On blocks near Kissena Park streets are quiet, houses are small, and the electricity that charges the atmosphere in downtown Flushing is nowhere to be found. A five-story, seven-bedroom house in Brooklyn Heights has sweeping views of New York Harbor and the Manhattan skyline. Demand is so intense that there are waiting lists in some buildings, and a few landlords report that eager renters are even bidding up rents. Sales at the very high end of the market barely missed a beat in the recession. But that prosperity hasn’t yet trickled down. More borrowers are opting for fixed-rate loans with terms other than the standard 30 or 15 years, especially when it comes to refinancings. Insurance coverage for a co-op unit; when a tenant is ‘blacklisted’; a co-op is smaller than estimated. A shaky real estate market means more sellers are providing buyer concessions, from gift cards to help with paying property taxes. The settlement reached last week over questionable mortgage practices by major American banks hardly cracks the iceberg that is the foreclosure mess. Under the settlement, nearly two million Americans could benefit from mortgage relief from the nation’s biggest banks. A cold war-era satellite relay station is for sale in California after a Silicon Valley mogul gave up on plans to turn it into a weekend home. Court hearings meant to protect New York homeowners from foreclosure are hopelessly slowed by endless paperwork and requests for additional information. The Bay Area and Silicon Valley expect the windfall from the Facebook stock offering to make their in-demand region even hotter. Trinity Church is the largest landlord in Hudson Square and is part of the effort to rezone the area to residential from manufacturing. Rising oil prices and a boom in shale exploration are leading companies to add office space in the Houston area, most notably Exxon Mobil. Ms. de França is the president and chief executive of Douglas Elliman Development Marketing, which focuses on new residential developments. Meet the real estate broker’s interns: an ambitious group willing to do anything, earn nothing and wake up early on a Sunday to fluff the couch cushions at open houses. Plants that light up the winter garden can be found at Broken Arrow Nursery in Connecticut, which has long been a favorite of gardening geeks. A sister in need drew the painter Beverly McIver back home to North Carolina, unaware that a new beginning was in store for both of them. Timothy Sakamoto and Jochen Repolust are part of the small but growing niche making mobile apps focused on specific works of architecture. To promote an auction of 20th- and 21st-century design, the interior designer Stephen Sills has created a preview exhibition in an apartment at the Apthorp. Fishs Eddy now sells plates acquired from the archives of the now-defunct Syracuse China Corporation, many more than 100 years old. The designer Russell Greenberg creates custom baby rattles with ends shaped like profiles of mom and dad. |
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