Mark Eckenrode

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Mark Eckenrode is a Certified Master of Guerrilla Marketing raised on comic books, punk rock, and Pepsi. He's also the chief marketing trainer at HomeStomper where AgentGenius readers can learn unconventional methods for winning with social media.

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15 Comments

  1. Mack

    WOW Mark. What a load of information in a first post. As you stated in # 5, our clients could care less if we have an ABR, CRS, SRES, GRI, CRP, or any other designation. What they really want to know is if you can solve their problem, get their home sold or help them find the the home of their dreams. I also liked # 11. For those that do not want to invest in their business they are welcome to all the discount prospects.

    Maybe you just virtually slapped some people in the back of the head!

  2. Bob

    7. Fail As Fast As Possible

    Marketing is not a pass/fail, win-lose activity. True marketing success is when you have a scorecard of 55% successes and are able to use those to dominate your market.

    Oftentimes, the best marketing comes from a string of “failures” because, if you were paying attention to those failures, you learned a heck of a lot. So, fail as fast as possible so you can win more often.
    8. Be Willing To Adapt

    What you thought was right will often turn out to be incorrect. That’s okay so long as you take the new insight, adapt, and apply.

    Along the same lines – “Be attached to the outcome, not the method”

    Marketing, no matter how creative, doesn’t work the same way across the board.

  3. St George Rentals

    This is a good list that I am going to continue to come back and look at. I am a big proponent for marketing. You could wish to give away money but if no one knows then what are you going to do?

    Excellent information.

  4. ines

    What awesome insight into the marketing world, especially for those of us that are learning as we go. I have to tell you that ever since I got into real estate and started “marketing” ourselves I realized that maybe I should have studied marketing instead of architecture because I like it that much. It’s amazing what I’ve learned from “failing” and you are right…..failing as quick as possible would make the process so much easier.

    What I really like about blogging and marketing is the fact that I can put myself out there for our audience – no facades, our straight-forward personality to attract like-minded clients – blogging is an amazing marketing tool.

  5. Justin in Hawaii

    I think you should bold #4, Relationships are Key. As I’m learning marketing, I’m finding that relationships are everything!

  6. Mark Eckenrode | HomeStomper

    glad y’all are digging it.

    @justin: yeah, #4 is pretty darn important. think about if all your competitors stole your best marketing ideas, targeted the same areas, even broke into your office and stole your client list… the one thing that they can never steal is your personality and the relationships built around it.

  7. Brad Nix

    My favorite part about Mark’s ability to deliver good advice on marketing is that he continues to add value in the secondary comments/follow-up conversations…see Comment #6 for what I’m talking about. His comment to add to the conversation is as good as the post itself!

  8. Matthew Rathbun

    Mark,

    This is a great summary of the foundation for marketing. I am not sure I agree with all the commenters interpretations, but I know that getting the consumer to know that I am better prepared than the average agent is a combination of things. Reading an agents blog, seeing proof that the agent has greater industry education than that a pre-license course, showing our ability to be professional in the quality of the marketing are all good…. using whatever technique we can to show that we care is even more important.

    I am especially fond of #12. I am SO tired of getting spam mail with “coaches” that promise if I spend $300 and two days with their course; I’ll be rich forever.

  9. Jay Thompson

    Well there is a post jam-packed with golden nuggets… nicely done!

    The purpose of marketing is not to make a sale

    I think a lot of folks get lost in this one. Too many feel like they’ve failed if they don’t close a sale with every marketing effort. Often it’s a multi-step process with the actual sale many steps down the road.

    Folks want to connect with people and they’re attracted to personalities
    Bingo. That’s why it is *so* important to display that personality in blogging (and elsewhere). People can be repulsed by personality too — and that is OK! I’d rather have someone read my blog and think, “That guy will never be my agent” than to find that out after working to together for weeks. No agent is the right agent for everyone.

  10. Daniel Bates

    Awesome article! I think my best marketing advice is to have a long range view. Always keeping your eye on the immediate future gives you choppy results at best. Plan for the long haul and you’ll be more satisfied with the successes and less disappointed with the failures. I have a thousand “great ideas” every day. I don’t go acting on every one though. I plan them out and roll them around in my head and on paper and when I’ve developed it enough I act.

  11. Steve Simon

    Your number 1 is not always true. Accurate records and trackbacks to different marketing efforts, and a thoughtful fiscal ROI analysis are ket components of a good overall marketing strategy.
    You yourself, Mark, forcefully wrote in this website about different landing pages and approaches that change depending upon initial selections of a visitor, the record keeping associated with that and the creation of multiple doorways to get optimal result certainly would be considered “Rocket Science”

    Your number 4 is questionable…

    Number 7 is just wrong; many marketing studies have shown the third time a mailer or marketing effort was initiated was when it proved to be worthy… buyer resistance and other factors come into play.

    Nine and Twelve are almost diametrically opposed.

    To me your list sounds like someone put it together much too quickly.

    The purchase of a house or property is not an action that works like selling an eBook to web surfer.
    Using phrases like “Call to action” tells me someone has taken too many “Magic Bean” seminars themselves.
    Just my thoughts :)

  12. Mark Eckenrode | HomeStomper

    @jay: good point. personality disqualifies prospects as much as it qualifies them. it’s when folks try to walk the middle road and “play it safe” that they never really attract the “right” people for them… and i’m sure more than a few of us know how frustrating that can be.

    @daniel: yeah, that’s a great addition to the list, “long range thinking.” heck, it’s the first step in 7 Habits of Highly Effective People… so, is your marketing in line with your long term goals? thanks for that addition.

    @steve: interesting. well, it’s defintiely obvious you don’t like me or what i have to say however you still seem attracted to my personality :-) i’m sure i’ll receive more of your criticisms in the future, i just hope they end up being constructive.

  13. Chris Butterworth

    Good list, Mark.

    #4 is tops in real estate marketing – people buy from people. period. the end. You may have billboards all over town, and use every web2.0 gadget available, but if some schlub agent with no marketing budget and no technology knocks on the prospect’s door, he’s got a better chance of getting their business than you do. (provided he doesn’t drool on himself & turn the prospect off!)

    I would add Consistency as a corollary to #s 12 and 7. Marketing is unlike running an ad – rather than getting a quick hit, it takes time to develop a brand/message. Switching from one plan to the next to the next too quickly is like chasing rainbows looking for the pot of gold.

  14. Paula Henry

    Silly me – I don’t know where I was in September, but wanted to stop and say welcome to AG! This type of info is what makes your blog one of my favorites!

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