Kelley Koehler

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Kelley Koehler, aka the Housechick, is usually found focused on her Tucson, Arizona, real estate business. You may also find her on Twitter, where she doubles as a super hero, at Social Media Training Camp, where she trains and coaches people on how to integrate social media into successful business practices, or at KelleyKoehler.com, a collection of all things housechick-ish. Despite her engineering background, Kelley enjoys translating complex technical concepts into understandable and clear ideas that are practical and useful to the striving real estate agent.

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Who is your website for, anyway?

13 responses to “Who is your website for, anyway?”

  1. John Lauber

    Good thoughts Kelley. I too am going through a web “makeover”. I kicked off my blog, but I’m looking at changing out of my template site so it doesn’t look like so many others. Even though, as you noted, are they really different. I think these websites are sort of like print media. Sellers expect it, too a point. Hopefully, it pulls in some buyer leads as well. Then there’s syndication of listings to the major searches and IDX. I’m trying to figure out a niche, as well. People see so many websites that they expect certain things when they arrive at yours.

    Good luck with your redo.

  2. Scott P. Rogers

    Our company runs approximately 66 web sites — one for the company, and one for each web site. All sites have the following main site sections: searching, buying, selling, financing, moving, my services, blog. On all of the sites combined, we have over 100,000 visitors per month. Of all of the web traffic, an astounding 93% of page views are in the searching section. I believe it is important to focus on the blog (which I do), and the local info (which I still need to do), and the profiles of site users (which I still need to do), but in the end, the stats continue to reinforce for us that the majority of our time, energy and money needs to be focused on a creating a great IDX search experience.

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  4. Shailesh Ghimire

    Kelley,

    Different customers require different sites. With how “relatively” easy it is to customize sites for different customers I’ve always wondered why peole do these cookie cutter sites. Let me share and I idea I’ve had in the past, but not enough resources to pull together.

    I’ve wanted to create a database driven content library – all idexed by certain tags (as many as you like). Then build websites for different markets with their unique market focus. I as the webmaster write content for the database. The website picks up relevenat content for it’s market and posts the contnet.

    The reason why I like this model is becuase it allows you to compensate for the overlap in information and the priorty level of that informatoin for each market. It allows you to maintain as many websites as you like since you’re only maintaining one database it doesn’t kill you to maitain all of them. I would decouple the website from the database and only snchronize data on a pre-scheduled but regular time frame. This way the websites all exist independently of eachother.

    It’s an idea I’ve had – I’m sure there are many holes in it, but something I’d like to bounce off of some people. One of my many crazy thoughts…..

  5. Janice Bovee

    I hear you, I think that my site is always in a state of perpetual makeover. It is next to impossible to be all things to all people. I’ve come to the conclusion that separate sites for different types of buyers would be the answer but who has the time? I think that a good property search is the most important part of the site and then answering as many questions as you can think of…although one can run the risk of overkill. You have given me some ideas to think about.

  6. Greg Cremia

    I agree about multiple websites. I have 15 lead generating real estate sites developed for different geographic locations. I chose the geographic criteria because I could figure out what keyword phrases will likey be used and developed the sites around those keywords.

    Real estate is all about location and buyers search location. Therefore location is a good way to catch buyers. The luxury market is typically restricted to certain neighborhoods so to get those buyers a site about those hoods would get those buyers. Of course if you are not planning on using the internet to market these sites and plan to spend money to market them then keywords are irrelevant.

    I am curious what types of keyword phrases different types of buyers would use. Do buyers really use different search phrases depending on their social/economic standing?

  7. Carol D. O'Dell

    When my husband and I were searching for home in Florida, (we lived in Missouri), I found most websites inept at giving me a decent picture of the community (city, amenities, neighborhood, layout, etc.) We clearly knew what we needed: we needed a mother-in-law suite, plus 2-4 other bedrooms, we needed to be within a 20 mile radius of work. Is this so hard to do?

    More infuriating is that many homes you think are for sale are sold, or taken off the market. You get all excited, like the video tour, the layout, the price, and bam. No enchilada. Back to square one.

    In today’s market where people want and need their houses to sell, it seems that an up to date, functional, concise website would be the standard, not the exception.

    In creating my own website, for a very different business, I found that I couldn’t just follow a template, I had to follow my gut and include the things I most look for in a site.

    ~Carol D. O’Dell
    Author of Mothering-Mother: A Daughter’s Humorous and Heartbreaking Memoir

    available on Amazon
    http://www.mothering-mother.com

  8. Eric Blackwell

    Kelly;

    Excellent points! We are just finishing up our EXTREME HOME SITE MAKEOVER (REALTOR EDITION) grin… It has been three years and we are due with our main RE site. I thought your best point was right here:

    “I can look at those different audiences and decide what that person wants to see, and then I need to present it to them in the proper manner at the proper time. There’s a lot of overlap of information, but presentation is completely different.”

    well done!

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  10. Matthew Rathbun

    I hated redoing my real estate marketing plan, but when I did, I saw a great return on my investment of time. I think everyone would do well to make over their web marketing plans about every six months or so.

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