real estate ad wording Most sales start with a listing.
Not exact matches
The
ad, which appears below, will run in several NYC - area papers — including the Sunday NYT, which is not a cheap piece of advertising
real estate, although there's no immediate
word on the cost of this campaign.
If 10,000 people a day see your
ad because you didn't restrict your key
word sufficiently (the phrase «
real estate» isn't targeted enough, for instance), you'll spend $ 500 to $ 600 a day, and the lack of targeting means not many of those people can be converted to a closed sale.
PED — perhaps the magic is in the use of the
word / term «listing,» as it relates to
real estate per se, and by default, its definition, rather than having the seller «buy an
ad,» on Realtor.ca — buying an
ad on Realtor.ca could, one could think, have no repercussions.
We could not live where we wanted (as an aside, I have a 1939 Toronto Star classified page framed in my office with the
words «restricted neighbourhood» in many of the
real estate ads).
Any
real estate salesperson person who has ever written a classified
ad knows that
words can be interpreted differently by different people.
The
words that
real estate professionals choose to describe a property in listing
ads could potentially result in the home selling for a premium, suggests an analysis that looks at listing descriptions and their effect on sales price and probability of sale.
When times are slow, we find ourselves doing the dirty work: extra floor time, double open houses, mailers, or overspend on internet leads, google
ad words,
Real Estate sites that barely feature you... We are trying to get back to the peak and in doing so, unconsciously spending an absorbent amount of time focusing on building new business through cold marketing and forgetting about where most of our business actually comes in through — our past clients.
It pays to understand what goes into a great
real estate ad, and how to
word it appropriately matters.