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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8 Comments

  1. Carson Coots

    What a great way to approach a site… We are in the process of developing a master-planned community website, and one of the challenges is breaking up the audience into segments and targeting each effectively. Good way to brainstorm.

  2. Benn Rosales

    geez, your site is going to be awesome…

  3. Benn Rosales

    I think you have to, it’s a very expensive task.

  4. Nicole Mills

    “I’m running with the idea that answering questions that can’t be answered elsewhere will make people want to work with me: an implied quid pro quo. Does this make me a useless bag of information? Am I really adding value, answering a need, becoming useful? Or was Mom right about not buying the cow if the milk is free?”

    Hi Kelley,
    I’m constantly wondering about this. Since I started using a website, it’s always been my opinion that it should provide information…lots of it. I try to put relevant, useful info. too, not the canned, keyword stuffed crap you find on many RE sites. I also provide this information in hopes that the consumer will see that I’m providing something that others aren’t, and doing so in a “real” voice.

    I do get comments, occasionally, from clients that they like my site, and find it useful. Those comments keep me working on my site, but I do often wonder…am I providing too much and not asking enough in return??

  5. Kerrie

    I have been trying to figure out how to market ME. I’m a bit different than the “typical realtor” in that I sold new homes for over 10 years and that my personal is “owl, bull, tiger” quoting Charles Clark? I am almost equal parts to the tee with NO lamb.

    How do I attract people that will appreciate my thorough, scientific and numbers approach to real estate. I believe that my main asset is being able to take the emotion out of the listing price or buying price using data. I do also agree that buying or selling is an emotional experience but help the numbers take precedence. I also have an extensive psychology background that helps diffuse this. I work well with engineers and creative types, not so well with nice church ladies who must ask everyone they know before they make a decision. I have several types of websites right now & have taught myself to create & maintain them however am not very successful at increasing the page rankings. There are services you can pay but my budget is tight & I’d at least like to know how they do it so that I can make sure I am getting my money’s worth.

    I work great with email, text, google searches for info & more but need to get my site seen. Any ideas?

  6. Bob Wilson

    Kelley & Nicole,

    I have done this with my site. It features an integrated blog where I write only for consumers. Since I’m in San Diego where distressed sellers are the rule, I started doing a series on HR 3648 from its introduction to its passage and becoming law. I then wrote an overview of the new law.

    The response has been far more than I expected.

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