Ginny Cain McMurtrie

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Ginny is a 360 degree marketing specialist with over a decade of experience in real estate-related fields. She’s held senior level marketing positions at Alain Pinel Realtors and Prudential California, Nevada and Texas Realty. She left the corporate world in 2007 to start her own marketing communications company, Cain Communications. She markets to segments that matter using media that matters. Follow her on Twitter @ginnycain.

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8 Comments

  1. Lani Rosales

    Ginny, some banner ads on Realtor.com are also hideous, so I hope they’ll take your advice and look at all angles, including graphic design- it might be worth spending a little extra for a professional polish and a unique message. Your advice (as always) is spot on!

  2. Fred Romano

    I get called from realtor.com about 2 times a month trying to sell me on those banner ads! They say I need to use the “foreclosure” ads because they will generate the most traffic to my site, but the problem is I don’t get involved with foreclosures! UGGG – can’t win.

  3. Colin Egbert

    I think the ads on realtor.com are pretty effective because they are making a pretty nice profit off of advertising and they have a large amount of residual customers

  4. Missy Caulk

    Banner ad’s are not effective in my opinion. At least they have not been for me.

    I agree when a consumer is on a big vendor site looking at a listing, they need a HUGE REASON to leave and go to your banner ad.

    I just don’t get ROI on them.

  5. Doug Francis

    R.com makes an excellent pitch that they are the #1 site for traffic… and I almost bought the zip-code package too. It was so tempting but a little voice in my head told me to wait and do a little research.

    Look at what you have spent, look at the results, and don’t be afraid to make a decision to allocate your money toward the valuable database you already have in your client base. I bet those relationships will produce a far better ROI with a simple, low key strategy like Facebook.
    -doug

  6. Mark Eckenrode

    great advice, ginny. it’s important to get a full grasp on where the ad will be shown, who will be seeing it, under what context they’re seeing it, and why should they make with the clicky … only then can you start creating a good ad.

  7. Doug Buenz

    After countless calls from Realtor.com, I finally bought a banner add with the purpose of driving traffic to my web site. The banner add was well done, and focused on LOCAL in-depth content such as neighborhood descriptions, etc.

    Well, it did drive traffic to my web site. Exactly one visit. And that was me making sure the link worked. Otherwise nothing. nada. zilch. nyet. It has been 2 months now.

    If banner ads worked, it would be difficult or impossible to purchase one because the agents would never give them up. Is it possible that a visitor might click on it or contact you and buy a house? Absolutely. It is also possible that Julia Roberts would call me to meet for coffee. Yes. Both are theoretically possible. And just as unlikely in my humble opinion.

    Let other agents spend their money on banner ads, and instead keep your money and call 20 people you know and see if they or someone they knows would like to buy a house. I’m willing to bet your return would be far better. And Julia if you are out there, Tues and Thurs mornings work best for me!

  8. Derek Taylor

    I had a foreclosure banner ad for over a year and did get 31 leads from it. What I have discovered is that you need at least 50 leads to get one closing. I have not closed any of those leads as of yet. I do have one still active. I really don’t think that I got a good ROI from it.

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