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How To Buy A Great Web Site
Posted By: Blanche Evans - 03/30/2001

What was once a crowded competitive field of real estate Web site vendors has been reduced to a few remaining players. Just as the investment climate has changed in the stock market, your investment strategy should change as you choose which Web site vendor to work with. So here are a few criteria you can use to judge whether or not a vendor and its products are right for you and your Internet marketing strategy.

Web sites are passive lead generation tools.

How much time, money and effort to you plan to spend on the Web? Do you prefer to sit back and take the calls, or to actively pursue leads on your own? Your prospecting style determines how you should view lead generation tools such as Web sites.

Web sites are passive lead generation tools, like classified ads, newspaper block ads, Yellow Pages listings, online directories, and billboards. Passive means that customers use the tool to find you, instead of your taking the initiative to do the prospecting. Another way of looking at passive tools is that the customer does the work.

Web sites have to be found through search engines or through partner sites and that is why they are passive. When you take the initiative to do the prospecting, that's called active marketing. An example of an active lead generation tool would be a newsletter or an e-card, which you send out to your prospects as a contact and/or nurturing tool. Active means you are doing the work to stay in touch. Active tools are most effective with people you already know.

Many agents choose Web sites in the belief that they are going to be more active than they are actually capable of being. They are lead generation tools, but they aren't contact or nurturing tools. If you are buying a Web site thinking it will help you contact or keep customers in your farm or that they will deliver large numbers of leads, you will be disappointed. Passive tools are always a large numbers game, and if you are expecting the customer to do the work, you can count on far less return than from active tools. However, the passive Web site is a great way to capture those customers who would not have found you any other way.

You can make a passive Web site more active by actively promoting it yourself. Put it on your business card, and include your Web site in your personal marketing and advertising.

Choose a provider by how it delivers leads to you

Keeping in mind that the more you expect the Web site to deliver leads to you, the more you will benefit from having multiple sites that incorporate more than one Web strategy. Think of it as building a Web investment portfolio of leads.

Like any other application service providers, Web site companies produce creative Web sites according to a business plan, and not all business plans are alike. Business plans are developed and modified based on how the company controls or is controlled by cash flow, market presence, local or national focus, investor support, number of customers and a lot of other variables. So to put your choice of Web site vendor into perspective, it is good to know how the company views itself in the competitive environment.

The more advantages a company has to offer such as high traffic volume or the more it spends on your behalf to get you leads, the more its lead generation tools will cost. Companies that actively promote lead capture as one of their benefits will charge more for their Web sites than companies who don't. Why? Getting you leads raises your expectations of what you are going to get for you money and puts pressure on the company to deliver. That's why some companies specialize in design and content, while others specialize in the lead dirty work. Some specialize in both.

Homestore, for example can charge more for its lead generation packages (Realtor.com's I-LEAD lead generation packages and Web sites) than some competitors because they generate more traffic in buyers than others. But that doesn't necessarily mean that other Web sites won't also be effective in leading buyers to you. Realtor.com and Homestore spend money on strategic partnerships and advertising to get people to come to them, and they do their best to keep buyers on their pages as long as possible by providing home buying tools to play with. When you buy a Realtor.com Web site, you are a page in Homestore's book, and your site will be seen either in the Find An Agent directory (passive) or as an attachment to your listings (passive.) Homestore does not submit your site to search engine directories, but consumers can find Homestore very easily in all the search engines and directories.

Sometimes consumers hunt for real estate information by city and that's where you can be found when you have a Web site by a provider such as HomeSeekers. Companies such as Best Image Marketing rely heavily on their advertising dollars to lead consumers to top agents. This is effective because only people who are interested in talking to real estate agents will click on the numerous banner ads that the company purchases in key locations across the 'Net. If you have a site with either Best Image or Homeseekers, you can also be easily be found in search engines because they supply you with your own domain name, www.suzyrealestateagent.com.

For agents who want to have their own domain name as well as get placement in listing services as well as search engines, Comstock and Advanced Access are also a good choices as the companies will also supply you with reports of where your leads are coming from.

To interview a vendor, ask the following:

  1. What is the cost of building the site, and what, if any, are the monthly hosting fees?
  2. Will I be listed as the registrant (owner) of my domain name?
  3. Will you promote my site? If so, how?
  4. Tell me what the lead capture tools are that you offer? Do you e-mail me or call me when I have leads?
  5. Do you offer other lead generation tools besides my Web site?
  6. Tell me about your customer support, when is it available and is there any charge?

A Web site is your online business brochure and information delivery service, but it can be so much more than that. It can also be the lazy way to capture leads, but remember, whenever you rely on something else to do the work, be prepared to cast a wider net to get results.



Responses to this Article

Web Sites Need Great Follow-Up
Posted by: Bob Mori - 03/30/2001 07:04 AM

Re article:How To Buy A Great Web Site
Posted by: Risa - 03/30/2001 01:12 PM

Building a Great Internet Business
Posted by: Jim Crawford - 03/30/2001 06:31 PM

Comstock and their autoresponder service...
Posted by: nrussell@rcmail.com - 04/01/2001 11:03 AM

Auto Response
Posted by: Jim Crawford - 04/04/2001 11:13 PM

Give Me A Break
Posted by: insider_truth - 04/27/2001 07:00 PM

Inside Truth On Homestore
Posted by: insider_truth - 04/27/2001 07:02 PM

I am professional enough to identify myself.
Posted by: Jim Crawford - 04/27/2001 08:38 PM

hey!
Posted by: Oemer771 - 05/10/2002 03:02 PM

Auto Responses
Posted by: Oemer771 - 05/10/2002 03:19 PM


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