Main

June 27, 2006

Internet leads to happy customers

Every few weeks i receive a newsletter from the US from a group called Classified Intelligence.  It is a great read and full of useful information about what is happening in the online classifieds world.

In the June 8 edition, there is a great article about the most recent Californian Association of Realtors (CAR) survey - note there are 185,000 (yes that many) real estate agents in California!

Apart from the normal stats that they produce, one really stood out - 94% of buyers who primarily use the internet (internet buyers) were very satisfied with the home buying process while only 25% of traditional buyers were satisfied.  The report then goes on to identify that 68% of internet buyers were very satisfied with their agents versus only 24% of traditional buyers.

So what was driving this?  Perhaps it is the instant communication.  23% of internet buyers expected instant communication from the agent while 21% wanted a reply in 30 minutes.  Only 16% were happy with a 24 hour turn around.

Internet buyers reported greater satisfaction with gathering information on neighbourhoods and schools, how well their agent kept them informed and their overall understanding of the buying process.

Internet buyers were quicker to buy - spending only 2.2 weeks searching an average of 6.7 homes vs 7.1 weeks for traditional buyers searching an average 15.4 homes.

What was very interesting is that internet buyers (and it is an buyers agent market) interviewed an average of 1.5 agents before selecting one while traditional buyers interviewed over 3 agents.  An important note was that 69% of internet buyers said that agent response time was extremely important in the selection process.

Internet buyers love to communicate with their agents via email with 83% preferring email.

In short - if you are targeting the internet buyer then you really need to be on your game.

June 23, 2006

A tale of two property portals - propertyfinder.com versus primelocation.com

Back in December last year we were reading headlines of how primelocation was being sold for £48m and how they were the next big thing.

If a week is a long time in football then 8 months is a very long time in the life of a property portal site.

According to independent media analyst, ComScore, since October 2005 propertyfinder has under gone a massive 95% growth in visitors to the site while primelocation has achieved a miserly 22% growth.

Given some agents may pay two or three times the cost to advertise on primelocation than on propertyfinder, it is clear which site drives the agent's advertising spend further.

These figures are produced by the independent media monitor ComScore and only show UK visitors to the sites. In the same period there were an additional 100,000 international visitors to the propertyfinder site.

 

 PFvPL.jpg

May 17, 2006

The Power of Viral Marketing

We have all heard about viral marketing and have seen some great results. 

So, propertyfinder.com in partnership with allrealestate.co.nz and realestate.com.au, decided to try the same viral marketing campaign.  This time it was based around the concept of weird flat mates.  We create a website www.weirdflatmate.com with an interactive blog and a commercial (that hasnt aired on TV) and let it loose.

The results have been fantastic.  The TV ad has been viewed over 370,000 times around the world.  It was featured on the front page of myspace.com in the US.  The approach has been way beyond our expectations.  The website has been visited by thousands and we have had thousands of comments and stories about living with weird flat mates.

Viral marketing is certainly the way of the future.

If you havent seen the ad, check it out below.

April 24, 2006

propertyfinder Lauched Wierd Flat Mates Viral Campaign

Have you ever had a weird flatmate? 

63% of Australians and over 80% of the English have had a weird flatmate experience.

Online research findings

Recently we conducted surveys on both realestate.com.au & propertyfinder.com to uncover the truth about weird flatmates. The results were surprising, entertaining, and scary. You wouldn’t believe what some flatmates get up to! Since consumers were so engaged by the topic, we decided to launch an international viral campaign across our Australian, UK and NZ sites.
 
Viral campaign

Today we are launching the campaign with a video clip created specifically for the internet, which features a most unusual flatmate. This cutting edge, comical clip will have people laughing all the way around the globe and leave you wondering what your flatmates get up to when you’re not around. wierd%20flat%20mate.gif

The ad will appear on a number of external sites, including myspace.com, zooweekly.com.au and lycos.co.uk (to maximize the viral uptake of the clip), as well as on key channels on ninemsn.com.au. We will also promote the clip on our own sites (www.realestate.com.au, www.propertyfinder.com, www.allrealestate.co.nz) and in newsletters.

To view the ad click here (http://www.weirdflatmate.com/blog)

weirdflatmate.com

To encourage consumer engagement with the video clip and our brands, we have sponsored a dedicated website - www.weirdflatmate.com. Flatmates around the world will be able to share their own flatmate stories via a blog on the site. In addition they can download the clip, review the survey findings in detail, read interesting flatmate stories, and respond to weekly polls. It’s fascinating reading!

March 30, 2006

Dot Boom - The Rapid Growth of Internet Advertising

Around the world online advertising continues to grow with more and more of the marketing spend moving online.

In the UK, the Internet Advertising Bureau (IAB) recently showed that the online advertising market grew by 66% in 2005 to A$3.2 billion (£1.4 billion).  (See: http://www.iabuk.net/en/1/na2006q1adspend2005.html)  It was Search and Directories that recorded the greatest growth.

The story is the same in Australia, the Audit Bureau of Circulation (ABC) recently reported that the Australian online advertising market was A$620 million in 2005.  This was a 60% growth over A$388 million spend in 2004. 

Continue reading "Dot Boom - The Rapid Growth of Internet Advertising" »