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Follow-Up: Vista Print Class Action Lawsuit September 9, 2008

Posted by essentialadmin in General Tips, News Releases, Virtual Assistant Tips.
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Earlier this year I wrote about VistaPrint’s sneaky “rewards” program, and wanted to provide an update as of the end of August. On August 21st, VistaPrint announced they’re party to a class action lawsuit related to these practices.

Here’s additional information provided by wikipedia that I found interesting, specifically how much these referral program (‘majority’ being the reward program) revenues add up to each year ($27.6M for FY2008) as compared to their net income for the same period (39.8M):


 

VistaPrint’s partnerships in the United Kingdom have attracted criticism. Critics have stated that VistaPrint’s customers are enrolled without their knowledge in a reward voucher scheme operated by an associated company, VPrewards.com, at a cost of £9.95 a month, that no information on the reward scheme is provided to customers subsequently and that it is up to the customers to detect the fact that they have been enrolled as members and to cancel unwanted membership. A similar scheme operates in the USA. The number of complaints is significant enough to generate awareness on the web and to be a cause for concern. For complainants, the company claims publicly to cancel the membership, and refunds the monthly membership : however there have been examples of complaints where the company has not done this or responded as quickly as customers would have liked.

In August 2008, the company announced that class action lawsuits relating to the membership discount programs offered by third party merchants on VistaPrint’s USA website have been filed against VistaPrint USA, Inc., VistaPrint Corp., and two third party merchants (Vertrue Inc. and its subsidiary Adaptive Marketing LLC) in Texas and New Jersey. Two additional class-action suits were subsequently filed in both Massachusetts and Alabama. The four complaints, all filed in federal courts, allege that the defendants are in violation of the Electronic Funds Transfer Act (which protects from unauthorized charges) and the federal Electronic Communications and Privacy Act (which prohibits the unlawful access of financial information). “As we allege in the complaint, we believe that VistaPrint and Vertrue are acting in concert to access consumers’ credit card information and then begin charging them relatively small amounts,” says Jerome Noll, counsel for the plaintiff that filed the Massachusetts suit. “You’re talking about $14.95 a month or $12.95 a month, hoping that consumers just won’t notice.”

It should be noted that in its latest 10K for FY 2008, the company states “we expect that referral fee revenue from membership discount programs will decline in absolute dollar terms over that period of time ["by the end of calendar year 2010"], including possibly to as low as zero.”

From a financial perspective, some observers and analysts contend that this type of highly profitable third-party revenue distorts the company’s finances. A relatively small referral revenue can have a relatively large impact on the net income. While VistaPrint, as a public company, properly includes this revenue in its quarterly figures, it is argued that excluding this revenue gives a better picture of the company’s true profitability and the value of its stock. For example, in FY 2008, VistaPrint’s revenue was $400.7m with 6.9% of this ($27.6m) coming from referral fees, the “majority” of which comes from the rewards program. This can be contrasted with the net income for the same period of $39.8m.

Realtor.com: Changes to Enhanced Listings & Sort Defaults November 12, 2007

Posted by essentialadmin in General Tips, REALTOR Tips, Realtor.com, Virtual Assistant Tips.
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For those of you who are REALTORS or Virtual Assistants who explain the benefits of having a Realtor.com Showcase/Enhanced Listing account to agent clients,  I just wanted to give you an update that just happened.

First, when I refer to an “enhanced listing”, I’m making the assumption a person has actually enhanced the listing with at least two images.

It used to be that the biggest benefit of the enhanced listing package (in my and my clients’ opinions anyway) was that the enhanced listings showed first in the search results. Same thing with having a featured tour. These were the only ways of achieving SEO within Realtor.com without having to purchase the really expensive featured property package.

Up until about 6 months ago (or so … can’t remember exactly), a person would search Realtor.com and, before showing the results, it would present them with a screen that allowed them to choose if they wanted to “display listings with multiple images first” or “display listings with virtual tours first”.  Realtor.com stats showed a great majority of people selected one of these choices. Therefore, there was great benefit to having a listing enhanced with multiple photos (only available with the paid enhanced listing package) or having a tour uplinked to Realtor.com.

Then, they changed this, adding further benefit to the showcase agent or agent with a featured tour. They made their “default” sort view act in the following way:

There were two groupings.

The first grouping included all the enhanced listings and those with a featured tour, sorted by price. In other words, say your search criteria was for homes up to $250K. The first 5 pages of search results would only display enhanced listings and listings with a virtual tour, sorted lower price to higher price. This was great for the agent who had either of these.

After those displayed, the second grouping included all the standard listings, sorted lower price to higher price. Bummer for the agent who didn’t have either of these because, more than likely, the visitor would tire before getting to those pages and their listing would never be seen.

Therefore, whether you had an enhanced listing or a featured tour, your listing was given the excellent preferred sort status.

However, they have now removed this preferred sort status. Evidently, a lot of visitors complained that it was confusing … they’d view the listings noticing they were sorted lowest price to highest price, but would get further down and the lower priced listings would start all over again (i.e., they reached the unenhanced listings).

Now, the default view just shows all listings from lower to higher dollar amount. The only sort benefit now of having an enhanced listing is within the same exact dollar amount. For example, if there are 10 listings at $250,000, the enhanced listing(s) will show before all others. Virtual tours have no preferred sort benefit now.

There is an orange nav link that allows a visitor to select a different sort view (i.e., by featured tour or multiple images); however, in my opinion, it’s not obvious and I can’t see people really using it.

I only mention all this because this was a huge factor to my clients when weighing whether to purchase 1) the enhanced listing package (it’s definitely not cheap, especially for top producers … or when it came to offices purchasing the office enhanced listing account), or 2) the Realtor.com virtual tour uplinks (generally around the $25/listing range for agents without the enhanced listing package).

So, if this preferred sorting feature was a deciding factor to you or your clients in the past, it’s now gone … and as of today, they don’t have any plans on bringing it back.

Relocating Your Business: Interview with Amber Drake October 28, 2007

Posted by essentialadmin in General Tips, RV VA Tips, Virtual Assistant Tips.
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Amber interviewed for Loosely Speaking re: Relocating Your Business … Read all about it here

Calling all VAs in the Inland Northwest (WA, ID Areas)! July 20, 2007

Posted by essentialadmin in RV VA Tips, Virtual Assistant Tips.
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Are you a VA in the area of Spokane Valley, WA?  This includes Northeast Washington and Northwest Idaho?  We’ll be having an IVAA VA Connection (VAC) next Friday, July 27th. Because we work virtually, this is an awesome way to connect face to face with fellow VAs. It’s a casual lunch ‘among new friends’ (and professional drop-in childcare is also available right upstairs from the restaurant).

Or, perhaps you’ll be in our area?  Katie Baird over a LooseEnds incorporated our VAC into her  travel plans … she’ll be stopping in on her way to the airport, just a few minutes away … see her blog about it here:
http://blog.looseends.net/?p=215

We have VAs coming from Idaho: Coeur d’Alene, Post Falls, Rathdrum, Hayden, Twin Lakes & the Moscow area, and Katie’s from Prescott, Arizona!

So, if you think you might be in the area (or perhaps within a 2 hour radius since our get together is at 11am PDT), contact me for the details!   Or, if you’re an RV VA in the area, our local Wal-Mart in Post Falls, ID is RVer friendly, and there’s a full service RV park just up the road (I’d lend out our driveway that has water and electric hook-up, but our 37′ 5th wheel is currently for sale and is taking the space!).

VA Connections are also open to those wanting to learn more about the VA biz.

Update: Realtor.com June 19, 2007

Posted by essentialadmin in REALTOR Tips, Realtor.com, Virtual Assistant Tips.
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Nov. 12, 2007:  Another Realtor.com update just occurred that affects previous Realtor.com related posts … click here

———- 

June 19, 2007:

Here’s an update to my previous post related to the benefits associated with having a virtual tour linked to a Realtor.com listing.

Recently, Realtor.com has updated the way their property search results are displayed. Previously, when a person entered search criteria, before displaying the search results, Realtor.com funnelled the visitor through a gateway page that allowed the visitor to indicate whether they’d like to see listings with virtual tours or multiple images first. Most visitors chose one of these options and as a result, those listings would display first in the search results. For example, say the visitor entered a criteria of Hilo, Hawaii; $250,000 – $350,000. If your listing was $325,000, unless it had a virtual tour or multiple images, a visitor would most likely never see it because it would be numerous pages behind the first $250,000 listing. However, if it did have a virtual tour, and the visitor indicated they wanted to see listings with tours first, that same $325,000 listing would jump ahead of any plain listings, even at lower dollar amounts. In effect, this was the way to “Search Optimize” your listing.

 So, what’s recently changed?

Realtor.com has removed this gateway page. Now, by default, Showcase Enhanced listings with multiple images and those with virtual tours, display first. So, ALL the listings with those features meeting the search criteria display first, followed by the plain listings.

What does this mean?  It’s now even more important to either:

  • Have a virtual tour linked to your Realtor.com listing.
  • Have an Enhanced Showcase Listings account — and ensure you at least upload multiple images. Some MLS feeds upload multiple images by default (i.e., Hawaii Information Service), but most do not. You have to manually login to your account and upload the images yourself (or have your Virtual Assistant do it for you!).

There are numerous Real Estate Virtual Assistants who can take care of this for you to ensure your listings get top ranking on Realtor.com. Let me know if you need a referral.

Favorite Virtual Phone System May 26, 2007

Posted by essentialadmin in General Tips, REALTOR Tips, RV VA Tips, Virtual Assistant Tips.
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Whether you’re a Virtual Assistant, REALTOR working with a VA or VA team, or RV remote professional, one of the “staples” of your business will be a virtual phone system. What is a virtual phone system?  It’s a virtual PBX … it combines a toll-free or local number with an autoattendant, Internet fax, call forwarding, voicemail, call screening, “click-to-call me” feature, and more. 

I’ve used several different systems, including FreedomVoice, Onebox, UReach, and a host of others for whom I can’t even remember their names. But, my all time favorite, and the one I use and recommend to clients, is RingCentral.com (BTW, they were voted “Best for Toll Free Numbers” by Inc. Magazine).

They have everything you could possibly want:

  • Toll free numbers and the ability to “port over” your existing toll free number (in most cases) for free
  • Local numbers in some areas
  • Really affordable ($9.99/month)
  • Faxing, both receiving via email attachments or web access, and sending out
  • Really important for the RV Professional — Internet voice recording/uploads. Many systems don’t offer this and when you’re a full-time RVer you don’t have a clear landline … and when you record greetings (especially for clients), you need a clear line. With RingCentral, you can use the mic on your computer and their control panel (no extra software needed) to record your greetings.
  • Numerous extensions ($9.99 plan has 5). This is great for the REALTOR working with a Virtual team. Each person has their own extension, own recording and own call forwarding settings. When they send out communications (i.e., letters, emails, their signature block, etc.), they represent themselves as a part of your team … your clients don’t even need to know they are virtual (and perhaps not even in the same state!). If your team grows, you also have the ability to add on additional extensions for just $2.99 each.
  • Same with faxes. You can setup the fax extension (which isn’t one of the 5) to email each person who should see the faxes that come into the “virtual office”.  Since the faxes (and voicemails) come into the specified email, they can be filed for future reference, or included in the client file.
  • There is a “whisper” feature for the call recipient’s convenience. This whisper announces the caller’s name as well as the phone account it’s coming in from. This is especially important for the Virtual Assistant who services multiple clients. For example, say I provide services for Jane Doe, REALTOR, as well as John Brown, REALTOR. When my office phone rings and I answer, the “whisper” feature will announce, “You have a call for [Amber Drake, Jane Doe Team], press 1 to accept the call”. Immediately, I know which “hat” I’m wearing. Additionally, if my doorbell rings and the UPS man is delivering a package (and the neighborhood canine patrols are barking), I know that isn’t the best time to answer the call. If most appropriate, I can let the call go to voicemail and in a matter of seconds, I’ll have the voicemail delivered to my email box, and can return the caller’s message in just a few moments. Note: if you choose not to have callers “announce themselves”, this is also available as part of the control panel setup.
  • They also offer International Calling options. My husband currently travels weekly to Canada hauling RVs. To call him from my office or home phone (even though I have unlimited long distance), I’m charged about .60/minute for a call to Canada. Calling him on his cell phone isn’t really an option either, as Canada is considered roaming and those calls are about $1.00/minute.  I can pick-up office phone, cell phone or a pay phone if I’m out and about, and dial through my RingCentral line for a fraction of the cost at .05 cents per minute.
  • Easy billing. Keep a card in your profile and set it up to autopurchase mintues. You’ll never run out of minutes while you’re on a call!
  • They have lots of free minutes included. On the $9.99 plan, it includes 100 minutes per month, but they also give you a free bank of 100 roll-over minutes. For example, say you use 110 minutes the first month. They would first subtract from your 100 monthly minutes, and then they will subtract 10 minutes from your roll-over bank. This free bank is good to use anytime in a 12 month period.
  • They don’t double leg bill!  Here’s an overview of this.  Say a caller calls you and the system forwards the call to your designated number(s) (i.e., your office phone). A forwarded call consists of two connections, an inbound call to your virtual number and an outbound connection to the phone you used to answer the call. Other companies charge for each of these connections separately and charge you twice their published rate for each minute. For example, a company advertising 2.9¢/min would actually charge you 5.8¢ for every minute of talk time or 58¢ for a 10 minute conversation. At RingCentral, they only bill for one minute of a connected domestic call. This is a very important question to ask when evaluating a provider.
  • Call logs are available. This may be important to a REALTOR hosting the virtual office for his/her virtual team so he/she feels comfortable regarding its usage.

So, what this looks like for the:

VA:  You now have the ability to post a toll-free number on your website and marketing and present a more professional presence. Your calls are announced to you when you pick-up the phone, allowing you to decide if it’s the most appropriate time to field the call. It’s affordable at only $9.99/month . You can get rid of your Internet fax service as this takes care of that need as well. Call forwarding to your office and/or cell (and/or any other numbers) assures you don’t miss a call.

REALTOR:  Offers the perfect virtual office solution for your vitual (or not so virtual) team. Can also be used for a team of agents and/or in-house assistant(s). Can usually port over an existing toll free number for free so you don’t have to change existing print and internet marketing materials. Provides call logs so you may monitor its usage.

RV Remote Professional:  It’s simply a must have!  It gives you the ability to have your calls forwarded to your cell phone wherever you are. Gives you a fax in and fax out solution without a fax machine or phone lines (a scanner is helpful, but you probably already have that!).  Greetings and account setup can all be done online … no need to find a landline to record a clear, professional greeting or waste cell minutes stepping through a system’s voice prompt for setup.

They also have a free trial, so I encourage you to check them out.

So ….. who’s your favorite Virtual Phone Provider and why? I invite you to post your reviews here.

Join “An Overview of Listing Coordination” Teleconference 6/5 May 25, 2007

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An Overview of Listing Coordination

Join IREAA member and guest expert, Amber Drake of Essential Admin on June 5th at 1pm Pacific / 4pm Eastern, as she discusses Listing Coordination.

This class is ideal for assistants looking to specialize in this highly sought after field. Amber will provide a general overview of the field as well as discuss vendor options and resources for supporting this important role.

This is a free teleclass. Membership is not required to participate.
Click here to register now!

See you there!

Advanced Access Fiasco May 25, 2007

Posted by essentialadmin in REALTOR Tips, Virtual Assistant Tips.
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Now that most of us have recovered from the Advanced Access Fiasco earlier this week, I wanted to offer some insight regarding a couple items, primarily:

  1. What to do if your host’s service goes down and your site is inaccessible (which generally also means email is also inaccessible/bouncing)
  2. How to manually back-up a hosted/template site such as Advanced Access just in case the ultimate nightmare should occur …. data is unrecoverable and your site must be rebuilt from scratch.

For those of you unfamiliar with the issue that brought down something like 10,000 REALTOR sites, in a nutshell, this past Monday morning all sites (including Advanced Access’s own sales site) went down. Phones weren’t being answered, voicemail boxes were full, people were panicking. I personally was attempting every departmental and personal extension I had on file with no luck. They finally posted on the ActiveRain.com blog very late Monday evening (actually, it’s timestamped 12:10am Tues), “At this time, Advanced Access is having significant power issues at our offices and all services are currently down ….”. They had anticipated having sites back up Tuesday morning; however, that did not happen until late in the day for some, and others reporting still being down the next morning.

So … if something like this were to ever happen again with AA (or any other vendor-based website), what do we do in a pinch … and how do we best prepare ourselves going forward?

First, as you’re reading along here … if your head begins to spin with the technical tasks presented, just remember, you don’t have to know how to do this stuff. There are Virtual Assistants out there that can do all this for you!

Second, for ease of illustration since this is all going to be fairly technical as it is, I’ll pretend my site is hosted by Advanced Access (which I’ll refer to as AA). I’ll also pretend my actual domain was purchased and is managed by GoDaddy since they’re my preferred domain vendor).

Third, let me begin with a couple clarifications. When I refer to a “vendor-hosted website”, I’m referring to those sites like AdvancedAccess, Homestead, iHouse, PropertyMinder, etc. These are sites that are not “portable”; meaning you built the site using their proprietary site-builder tools and not a program like Dreamweaver or FrontPage. When I refer to a “custom site”, I’m referring to those sites built more from scratch using HTML, Dreamweaver, FrontPage or the like.

One other item to note. The average REALTOR will sign-up for a vendor-hosted website and part of that package will include the vendor securing the domain name (i.e., www.amber-realtor.com) [not a real site]. Generally, when the vendor secures/hosts/renews the domain name, it is at a higher cost than an independent domain registrar, such as GoDaddy. Additionally, the client loses virtually all control over that domain, and there are less features (such as the number of email addresses) available than if the domain were purchased through a registrar such as GoDaddy.

With my clients, I always recommend the domain be hosted with GoDaddy because:

  1. It’s less than $10/year
  2. The client retains complete control over functionality (more on this in a bit)
  3. The account includes 100 alias email addresses and 1 POP3 address, with the ability to purchase more at a very reasonable rate

So, my first recommendation is to make sure you transfer your domain to an independent registrar like GoDaddy. After it’s transferred, you’ll need to update your nameservers (your website hosting company can give these to you) in the account control panel. At the same time you do this, you’ll need to email some “MX Record” information to your host so you retain your email on the GoDaddy servers. GoDaddy has complete instructions on this … just call their customer service and they can walk you through it … they’ll even send you the email that you forward to the website host. Note … during these processes there will be some short downtimes … a small price to pay for keeping control over your business’s web presence.

After this is complete, my second recommendation is to prepare & familiarize yourself with these emergency procedures in case your website host goes down and you need your email and a temporary web presence.

If your website goes down for an unacceptable length of time, you’ll want to do the following:

The first priority is your email:

  1. Login to your GoDaddy control panel and set the nameservers back to the GoDaddy defaults (customer service can tell you what those are). This does not happen instantly … it can take hours for it to update.
  2. Once this occurs, your emails will start coming through again.

The second priority is getting your web presence up again.

  1. If you have a secondary website, you would now “forward” your domain to that website via your account control panel. You can also utilize the “masking” feature … when you mask a website this is what happens: a person types in www.amber-realtor.com and even though it’s forwarded to www.ambersothersite.com the browser’s address bar reads www.amber-realtor.com. It’s “masked”.
  2. If you don’t have a secondary website, perhaps forward it to your blog, your franchise “free agent site” (I know Keller Williams offers these), your virtual tour inventory page (i.e., http://www.tourfactory.com/ offers a great looking agent inventory page), your Homes & Land webpage they gave you when you placed that ad, or any other webpage that markets you and your listings … think through all the marketing you’ve done, and all those companies who included a web presence (that you never use) with the product or ad you ordered — let’s face it, at this point, any of these pages are better than a “page cannot be displayed error”.

In preparation … in case you have to implement the above procedures, after you have in mind the website you’d most likely forward your domain in a pinch, write the URL down or keep it in a computer file you can access later.

My third recommendation is to backup your vendor-hosted website. Depending on your site, this may be a bit of a feat … but it will certainly be less of a feat than having nothing and starting from scratch if the unthinkable ever happens.

I am a FrontPage person myself, so I would complete this tasked based on the use of FrontPage. A Dreamweaver expert will know how to do this in Dreamweaver. The key is having a web design product like one of these that enables a person to “open” a live webpage and save it locally. When this occurs, all elements won’t save (i.e., images or other host specific elements like slideshows, featured property modules, search modules, form submission elements) as these types of elements will display on the page when the site is online (it pulls from the file online); however, but if the site were to go down, those “links” would be broken. So what is the benefit? I have a client who has invested hundreds of hours customizing his AA site. We’ve put together relocation pages, buyer specific pages, seller specific pages, client pages, team pages, community pages, a ton of custom written text, etc. I have all the custom images already on file. The most time consuming part of recreating his website would be the custom verbiage and design of the actual layout. If we had all the verbiage on file, and the general page layouts, it would save countless hours if we had to recreate the site. You could hire a reputable web design virtual assistant for a one-time project of “backing-up” your site. At least that way you wouldn’t have to start from scratch.

Even despite this really really bad fiasco with Advanced Access … I have to say, they’re still my favorite of all the REALTOR specific vendor-based websites out there. I love their Intellicards, the ability to almost 100% customize the site, unlimited pages, and they’ve done a phenomenal job with their premier marketing for one of my clients … he is always ranked on the first page (and generally in the top 3) on Google and Yahoo for his (very competitive) areas in organic search results.

But, as a precaution, I have backed-up the majority of his core pages and suggest you do the same ;o).

Happy Thursday!

Amber

The Obsolete Employee — How Businesses Succeed Without Employees – And Love It! May 25, 2007

Posted by essentialadmin in General Tips, REALTOR Tips, Virtual Assistant Tips.
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Sunday, May 13th (repost)

How fun … I just received my copy of Michael Russer’s just published book, “The Obsolete Employee; How Businesses Succeed Without Employees – And Love It!” I had the opportunity to contribute a little tid-bit about how the VA lifestyle allowed our family to sell everything in CA, travel the country for a year in our 37′ Fifth Wheel Travel Trailer, and relocate to our exceptional new home in Idaho … see feature on pages 65-66.

Looking back to my VA journey from when I opened my virtual doors in 2001, I could easily say that Michael Russer had the single most impact on my business. It’s true … he was one of the (if not THE) first people in the Real Estate arena who recognized how much Virtual Assistants could help Real Estate Agents, and he travelled the country offering seminars, introducing the VA concept to thousands of REALTORS. In 2003, Russer hosted the “Meet the VA of Your Dreams” session at the NAR Convention in San Francisco. The venue consisted of several Real Estate Virtual Assistants hosting individual “niche” round tables, while REALTORS had an opportunity to visit a number of tables with VAs offering an overview of services available and answering questions regarding how VA/clients work together, with opportunities for the REALTORS to “Meet the VA of Their Dreams”.

I had the opportunity to host a table for my niche, Listing Marketing Coordination, and it was at this event that I received the opportunity to work with my first broker, who remains one of my largest clients today.

I firmly believe, that because of Russer’s continued international educational seminars and programs, thousands of REALTORS have stepped out and are using Virtual Assistants to grow their businesses. I’ve been at maximum client capacity myself for over a year now, and receive numerous inquiries each week with agents looking for an experienced Real Estate VA. Many have commented they’ve been to a Russer seminar or have taken his Virtual Outsourcing course. Having Michael Russer as a VA “advocate” has impacted the Virtual Assistance industry tremendously … as well as positively impacted numerous REALTORS’ businesses. There really is a special symbiosis that occurs with Virtual Assistants and REALTORS that make the business combination a win-win for both parties … I believe because both industries are based on the independent professional model. Thanks, Michael, for your vision back then and continued education today!

I’ll be starting my reading tonight and am sure I’ll learn a ton more. I’m at the stage in my own business where I need to learn how to outsource to assist more clients and multiply my “hours in the day.” If you’re looking for a bit of history on Virtual Outsourcing, how to hire, work with and manage a VA, the benefits of a VA over an employee, the differences between a Virtual Assistant and a Virtual Consultant, a forward glance at the future of Virtual Outsourcing, and a ton more, you can get your copy here (I don’t make any commissions or gain monetarily from your purchase … I just think Russer’s experience in this arena would be invaluable to any REALTOR, SOHO, Small Business, etc.). Or, for all of you who are fed up with long commutes, incompetent coworkers, and uselessly wasted hours trying to please an overbearing boss, feel free to peek under the cover, too. You can learn how to develop and succeed in a whole new lifestyle, encompassing hours you want to work, spending time with your family, and getting to do what you truly enjoy – and get paid well for it!

Michael’s been blissfully ‘employee free’ for over 13 years, and has many incredibly talented people all around the world who conduct business for him, most of whom he has never met face to face. He’s a renowned international speaker, author and columnist who specializes in helping independent professionals and businesses of all types incorporate innovative productivity strategies to achieve a higher level of personal and career fulfillment.

So … there’s my plug for the day!

And … for you Mothers out there …. Happy Mother’s Day … I hope it was spent with those you love. Mine was wonderful! I spent the afternoon at a wonderful buffet brunch enjoying some of my favorite foods: stuffed crepes with fresh fruit, chocolate dipped strawberries, jumbo shrimp, carved roast beef, eggs Benedict, and a ton more … yum. This was followed by a relaxing riverboat cruise up the Spokane River to the base of Lake Coeur d’Alene, with viewing of Osprey and beautiful riverfront homes …. I had no idea I have a 20+ million dollar estate located just down the street from my home. Turns out it was built by the family who began Amway, designed to host numerous people at a time, with plenty of room for entertainment: movie theatre, something like 12 bathrooms and 10 bedrooms, over 12,000 sq. ft., an ice rink, waterfalls and a bridge, and an aquarium that’s remotely controlled from Florida! We also found a few new public parks, biking and hiking trails and swimming spots that we’ll discover and enjoy in the near future. Definitely a wonderful day.

Single Property Websites April 5, 2007

Posted by essentialadmin in REALTOR Tips, Virtual Assistant Tips.
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Single property websites are appealing to sellers, informational to potential buyers, and a great selling point on a listing presentation.  Especially websites with a direct URL (i.e., www.123Anywhere.com), single property websites are also handy for marketing on postcards, flyers and print ads.

For example, iHouse offers their Spotlight product on a volume price model (i.e., more website credits you purchase, the less each costs) starting at $99 for one website (includes domain name).  AgencyLogic offers a similar PowerSites solution starting at $50 per site license (also includes domain name).  Single Property Sites offers their product on a monthly subscription basis, based on the number of active sites per month. For example, their “Best Value” package allows up to 5 active sites per month and comes with a pricetag of $29/month. A domain name will cost an additional $12/year per property. 

This can be quite pricey, especially if you’re a top selling agent. For example, I have a client who currently has 20 active listings and another 3 that are under contract, taking back-up offers, so marketing continues.  In his case, the tools above would cost:

  • iHouse Spotlight:  25 activation package = $1,750
  • AgencyLogic PowerSite: 25 site pack = $875
  • SinglePropertySite: $112/month for 25 active sites (equivalent to $1,344/year) + $11.99/domain name (another $275.77 to market his 23 listings) = $1619.77

But …. do you really need to spend the big bucks to achieve the same thing?  NO!  You don’t.  Here’s the alternative solution that will only cost $9.17 per year per listing per year.

Chances are, as a real estate professional, you already have an agent website.  Also, chances are, you have the ability to display your listings on that website, with the further ability to add items to those listings such as a virtual tour link, images, custom descriptive text, etc. Also, your website probably already has a method to contact you for more information about the displayed listing.  If your website doesn’t offer these basic tools, I would first suggest investing your marketing dollars here.  One great tool for this is AdvancedAccess.

After you’ve created the listing on your website, that webpage will hold a unique URL. To find that unique URL, look at your webpage using the public view (i.e., not in edit/administrator mode) — simply go to your website and use your navigation to get to this webpage. When this webpage is displayed, right-click your mouse on an “empty” whitespace area of the webpage (i.e., not on an image, link or other element). A mini-dialogue box will appear … choose “properties”.  Within this new box, about half-way down, you’ll see an Address (URL) section that will look something like this: http://www.essential-admin.com/portfolio.html.  You’ll want to select this URL address by placing your mouse at the beginning of the URL and holding down your left mouse key as you drag it across the complete URL so the whole URL turns black. While it’s black, copy it to your clipboard by simply pressing your Ctrl+C keys (together/simultaneously) on your keyboard. You won’t see anything happen but it’s just been copied to your Windows clipboard. 

Now, open up a Word document and paste this URL (i.e., either select the Edit/Paste command from the menu or use the keyboard shortcut Ctrl+V). I recommend having a document where you keep all your property URLs, so this will be your first entry in that document. Make sure you label it with the property description ;o).

Now, go to GoDaddy and purchase a domain.  I recommend selecting something that will be easy to market, such as 123anywhere.com. Once purchased, you use their “Forward Domains” menu to “point” this new domain to your existing webpage. Just copy (Ctrl+C) the URL text from your Word document you created above, and then paste (Ctrl+V) it into the GoDaddy forwarding box.  Save and you’re done. Give it a couple hours to update. When ready, type the new domain name into your Internet browser and you should see that property page display.

If you’d like to further make it display nicely, “mask” the domain when you’re setting up the fowarding (there’s another easy option in that menu for this). If you “mask” the domain, when a visitor types in www.123anywhere.com, their browser address bar will say www.123anywhere.com instead of the website URL on your website.

Using this method has the potential of saving you a lot of money in two ways:
1) You only pay less than $10 for a domain name.
2) You save time … whether that be your own valuable time or that of a VA or assistant … in creating the webpage. For example, chances are, you already either add or “enhance” the listing on your website once, so it’s already there. If you use a secondary tool to display the property page, you (or your VA/Assistant) have to enter the information a second time into their system.

If these steps are a bit daunting, but you’d still love to take advantage of the cost savings provided by this alternative method, contact a virtual assistant to help you. If you need assistance locating a good one, contact me and I’ll be glad to help.