Monday, December 29, 2008

SEO Quick Tip #1

Try to keep your word count between 300 - 750 words on each page of your website, especially your home page. This is a good way to keep your site search engine-friendly, and it also keeps the site from running on too much. People won't read what you have to say if you're trying to say too much.

Labels: , ,

Saturday, December 27, 2008

Marketing Quick Tip #3

Put links to a few of your favorite websites on your homepage. But make sure they are links that are actually relevant to your website (for instance, as a real estate agent, you don’t really want a link to NASCAR). You can also send the company/website an email letting them know you linked to them. Maybe they’ll be nice and return the favor, which is free marketing for you!

Labels: , , ,

Tuesday, December 23, 2008

Happy Holidays from CyberSunshine!

CyberSunshine would like to wish everyone a happy holiday and a
prosperous New Year. We look forward to 2009 and all it has to bring.

Labels:

Sunday, December 21, 2008

Finding the Purpose of Your Real Estate Blog

I know we talk a lot about how to improve your blog, how to make it pretty, how to be good at SEO stuff, and why you should have a real estate blog. But I think the most important topic is the one I have not yet mentioned! I can't believe I forgot this one!

Why do you blog?

That's actually a really important question, don't you think? Let's delve deeper into the answer...

The purpose of my blog is two-fold, as with most blogs. I blog to teach you how and why you should blog, and I blog because it's good for CyberSunshine's SEO. But if you're a real estate agent or a real estate broker, you're most likely not going to want to blog to teach people about blogs and SEO. You'll want to cover topics closer to home (your home).

One of the most important ideas with a blog is to always keep a good focus on your audience and the purpose of your blog. Don't get roped into the politics on other social networking sites, and don't write posts that are geared towards real estate agents or brokers. You'll want to write posts geared to the local people in your town, or the people who want to move to your town. Keep that perspective, and you'll be just fine.

To help you maintain your perspective, I'm going to be doing a new series that will give you ideas for blog posts. That way you'll always be able to come up with a post that is appropriate for your real estate blog. Make sure you check back for it!

Labels: , ,

Friday, December 12, 2008

Your Real Estate Blogging Dictionary: Trackback

The simplest definition of a trackback is that it is a comment containing a link to a post that someone wrote and referenced to the original post. Yeah, that made sense, right? Okay, so I'll give an example that does:

Jack wrote a post on his blog about water sources. Jill read that post and then had so much to say on the topic that she went and wrote her own article about wells as a water source. She sent a trackback to Jack's blog, and a comment appeared on his post about water sources. The comment contains a link that goes to Jill's post. So now, Jill's readers can go to Jack's blog and read the post that inspired Jill, and Jack's readers can read what Jill had to say on the topic if they want additional information. So Jack and Jill are both benefiting from the trackback, because now both get additional traffic from each others' sites. Hooray!

Now if you want to send a trackback, here's how you do it:

1. Write your article.

2. On the site you want to link to, find the Trackback URL. Usually if you click on the title of the particular post and scroll to the bottom, you'll find something that looks like this:

Trackback URL:

http://www.cybersunshine.com/blog/2008/11/yourreal-estate-blogging--dictionary.asp

3. Put that link in your post wherever you like.

That's it! The internet elves take care of the rest for you. Congratulations, you have just done the easiet networking ever!

By the way, sometimes blogs are not equipped with Trackback. In that instance, just go ahead and leave a comment on their post with a link to your own post. Usually I write something like, "Great post, thanks for pointing out (insert valid point)! You inspired me to write my own post about (insert your article topic). You can check it out here (insert the URL to the post, not to your blog)."

Other places to read about Trackbacks:

Wikipedia

Reference.com

Labels: ,

Wednesday, December 10, 2008

Stuff You Need: Cool Captcha

Okay, so maybe simple things amuse me tremendously, but I think this captcha is really neat.
We are all familiar with "captchas", those "questions" you fill out at the end of an online form that is used to limit cyber-bots from spamming too much. Usually it's just some word or words, or even just gibberish, and the letters are all wobbly and hard to read, and you have to try and distinguish what letters you're seeing so the site will allow you to submit your form. Anyway, those are not only annoying, but ineffective. The reason I think they're ineffective is that you have to try really hard to separate the letters on some of them, and even if you're not a cyber-bot, you may still get it wrong and then you can't leave your comment or submit your form or whatever it is you're doing. I know most of them only give you so many tries before it kicks you out and won't let you post.
Anyway, this particular captcha asks you to choose all the cat photos. When you hover over one, it makes the image bigger so you can see it better (which explains the large image of an orange cat in the middle of the photo). The other feature I love about this captcha is that it shows pictures of animals that are currently adoptable through Petfinder.com, and encourages you to adopt one. CyberSunshine is big on helping the animals.

This isn't the only neat captcha I've seen out there though. I have seen some that make you do a math problem, which, for me, is a bit of a problem since I tend to be more creatively-minded than mathematically-minded! I'd like to show you an example of that particular captcha, but it escapes me at the moment who's site I saw it on. So since I can't show you that one, here are two others: "KittenAuth" and "Are You Human?".

Labels: , ,

Wednesday, December 3, 2008

Real Estate Blog Project: Give Your Blog a Face Lift

You can't deny that this country is obsessed with looks and beauty. Aesthetics are important, whether we like it or not. When you meet a new client, you are expected to be well-groomed and have an outfit on that matches at the very least, and you should look like a professional person that can be trusted. So if you go to all that trouble to make sure YOU look good, shouldn't you put the same effort into making sure your real estate blog/website looks good? Think about it... your internet self is seen more than your actual self, and by many more viewers. You owe it to your real estate website to make sure it looks fabulous at all times.

You may have noticed that CyberSunshine just got a fancy new makeover. We're prettier than ever now (Jealous? You should be!). Every few years you should get a makeover for your site, for several reasons. And here is a list of those reasons:

1. Your site looks outdated and old-fashioned. That's not good. It makes you look like you're not up to speed with the times, and nobody (especially not the twenty-somethings that are currently making up the largest buyers market right now) wants someone that's outdated. Your real estate website is your image, and it is a direct reflection of you and your services. Make sure you're presenting yourself in a way that matters.

2. Your site is cluttered. This is really bad. Nobody wants to muddle through your mess of links and blurbs about how wonderful you are, just to find your listings. Not to say you aren't wonderful. I'm sure you are. But you don't have to drill it into people's heads a thousand times with all the testimonials and the paragraphs your assistant wrote six years ago covering your degrees and accomplishments. Make the site nice and neat, and spell out clearly who you are and what you do, and do it in a short paragraph if you can. Nobody wants to read your resume. They just want a basic description about why they should hire you, and then they want to see your listing. So make it easy, and make sure your content is limited and your navigation is clear and makes sense.

3. Your navigation doesn't work, or other links are broken. HUGE mistake! Always, always, make sure the links work on your page! Every couple of weeks (or days if you're a little OCD) check out the links on your page to make sure they work, especially the important ones (Contact Us, Listings, Home Search). If your links don't work, the potential buyer is going to continue on to another site that came up on Google and not even give you a second thought.

4. The services listed are no longer services you offer, and your photo is from 1986. Okay, seriously, you do not still have a poufy bangs thing going on, nor do you rock the blue eyeshadow. And what's with those shoulder-pads? Are you a line-backer for the Cowboys? Make it a point to update your photo once a year. Misrepresentation is a mark against you, and when your potential lead meets you for the first time and realizes that a) that photo was not from last year's Halloween party, and b) you're nearly 25 years older than they thought you were, they are going to be a little perturbed. While you're at it, make sure your service and your specialty areas where you sell are actually accurate. Nothing turns a buyer off faster than calling your office for a specific neighborhood and finding out that you USED to sell there, but it's been several years since you actually have.

I'm sure there are other great reasons to give your site a face lift, but for now these are the best ones I can come up with. So check out your site, give it an assessment from a non-biased point of view, and determine if it needs some help. Then email me and I'll get you set up with a fantastic designer!

Labels: , ,