Interview with Manhattan's Property Grunt

Grunt“This is a blog by a soldier in the trenches of the Manhattan real estate war presenting information and commentary on the market.”

With his his anonymity firmly in hand, the Property Grunt is always good for some no-hold-barred real estate analysis. Reading his blog, I often wished I lived in New York where things seem so much more exciting. From the Grunt’s stories, it is obvious that this person is an experienced and successful agent. Some day the Grunt may be unmasked, but for now, I’m just happy he’s blogging!

What inspired you to start blogging?

First of all I enjoy writing and quickly realized there were many people who were just as clueless as I once was about real estate and I decided to pull the curtains back.

Are there any special topics or issues that you enjoy covering?

I enjoy looking at every aspect of real estate from mortgages to property management. The one thing I do emphasize in my blog is that whether you are buying for personal or for investment purposes you should exercise extreme caution. Real estate is sensitive to many outside forces and it is also illiquid. It is these aspects that get people into trouble.

What have you done to personalize your blog?

The only thing I have done to personalize it is my content. However I will be implementing other features to further personalize it.

Do you have any favorite posts?

I have had so many favorite entries but I have narrowed them down to four.

One of the things I dislike about this business is that the general public is unaware of the various nuances of my profession. This article clearly displayed that ignorance and I was more than happy to educate this writer.
http://propertygrunt.blogspot.com/2005/08/holy-grail-more-like-holy-st.html

This was an incident that actually happened to me on the 4th of July. It was so bizarre and so New York I had to write about it
http://propertygrunt.blogspot.com/2005/07/open-letter-to-whole-foods.html

I was beyond aggravated with this agent for what she did. She was very lucky that she was dealing with me. I knew other brokers who would drop her in a second. It is also indicative of the type of people that gravitate to this business.
http://propertygrunt.blogspot.com/2005/04/poachers-beware-i-will-beat-you-with.html

These were two incidents where I quickly learned that being an agent brings a ton of hazards.
http://propertygrunt.blogspot.com/2005/02/when-gun-misfires-disasters-that-occur.html

What are some of your favorite blogs (real estate or otherwise)?

I have a whole Torah of blogs and sites I enjoy. Anything that is on the Curbed links list which include Inman News, The Real Deal, The Walk Through, and The Matrix. The Realty Gram Blogger and Your Best Agent these are just some of the many other sites I check for news and developments in real estate. Opinionistas is a fantastic lawyer blog and Mimi in New York is another guilty pleasure. And of course a new favorite is the Rain City Guide.

What tools/websites do you find most helpful in putting together your blog?

Honestly, the only thing I have used is blogger. Parts of the design that I have customized is just code I have picked up. I do plan on utilizing dreamweaver and hunt for some javascript that would spruce up the place.

How does blogging fit into the overall marketing of your business?

At this point it doesn’t. I do not use my blog to generate sellers or buyers since I just interested in educating people the best I can. However I am examining other opportunities.

What plans do you have to improve your blog over this next year?

My objective next year is to update the GUI. More on that later.

What is the one tool or feature that you wish your site had?

There is actually a lot of tools I would like to have and I plan on implementing them in the near future.

What do you think real estate blogging will look like 3 years from now?

Everyone in real estate is going to have a blog which will be used primarily as a marketing tool. However there will be factions that will play the Matt Drudge card by kicking open the closets and airing out the dirty unmentionables. Expect a lot of firings and lawsuits in the future.

(Read more interviews with some of real estate’s top bloggers under the Real Estate Q&A category)

Interview with Tim O'Keefe of the Real Estate Marketing Blog

tim o'keefeI’m really glad that Tim O’Keefe agreed to the interview because he represents a different type of real estate blogger. He uses his Real Estate Marketing Blog to highlight the marketing services he provides to real estate agents. I really like that I can turn to his blog for interesting and opinionated posts on how to better market real estate blogs. Like all the real estate bloggers that I’ve interviewed, a lot can be learned from both his style and his content.

What inspired you to start blogging?

As a Search Engine Optimizing Company, I was blogging long before launching The Spider Juice Technologies Corporate blog-http://houseblogger.typepad.com. I tested, wondering if it was given any special priority by search engines. Contrary to what many believe, I found that they are not treated with any more special priority than a typical website.

However, the real difference was that blogs are not static like a typical website. They are usually focused. In fact, the more focused the better as far as positions go. I knew that search engines love content. The more content you offer the more chances that keyword phrases (intentional or otherwise) will get picked up and positioned. That was the hook. Easy publishing, because a blog is just a real simple and easy to operate Content Management System.

I found that that a blog still needs to adhere to the principles of the Search Engine Marketing Triangle. That is at the top of the Triangle, a page needs to have “on-page content” optimized. Most blog software does an OK job of “out of the box”, on-page optimization.

The bottom two angles are about Link Equity or inbound links. Because of RSS and Pinging, blogs can find natural and automatic links that are necessary for a web page to position highly. These links tend to offer much more natural structures into the blog page. I found the system to be beautiful as an additional tool for my clients. So about a year and half ago, I began to test on client sites, as well as launching my own blog .

Are there any special topics or issues that you enjoy covering?

I believe it essential to have an opinion on how to do a business. Otherwise, why hire you or me? The blog allows us to speak directly to our audience. It best be something useful and unique. In the beginning. I did what I find most newbie bloggers do. That is parrot back already over reported information about real estate. BOHHRING!

It became quickly apparent that if this thing was going to be worth anything to my business, that it had to be extremely useful for the reader. So my blog will rant and editorialize various topics to do with SEO, Pay per Click, lead generation/follow-up and anything about online marketing. I rarely will offer anything without giving an opinion. I do that because the blog is my chance to offer my personality on my business.

The typical searcher scans through webpages, looking for something useful. How do they know if it is important? You have to tell them either directly or indirectly. That engages your reader and gets them into you. Guess what? At that point there is a good chance that you just rose above all the other agents out there, and you have etched out a bit of their brain to remember you. Because, your opinion matters to them! This is what gets subscriptions, RSS reads, and of course more traffic.

Authors of articles, or books and publications are given a psychological Authority over their market. There isn’t a whole lot of money in writing books. But write a book and you will be given instant implied expertise. That psychology works with any kind of writing, including blogs.

Another way to say this is that I look at blogging as a way to position ourselves as thought leaders.

What have you done to personalize your blog?

When you have an opinion it is all about personalization. I don’t think personalization is accomplished by taking a picture of me with my family and my cats. It is offering an opinion that hopefully is valuable enough, and persuaded in a way such that the marketplace says we are viable.

I will weave stories from my personal life in order to make a point. I think I have mentioned my wife, kids and even the Youth Football team that I Coach. I don’t believe that I have brought my cats into a post though. LOL

Do you have any favorite posts?

The Bubble and MLS posts are definitely soap box issues for me. I also, have written about various market segments that I think are wide open for growth.

What are some of your favorite blogs (real estate or otherwise)?

Let me go down my RSS Reader- Albion and see- http://michelfortin.com, http://BoldApproach.com, http://sethgodin.typepad.com, http://seobook.com, anything political, and so on. I love reading intelligent and even conflicting opinions.

What tools/websites do you find most helpful in putting together your blog?

Typepad is simple. WordPress and Drupal, rock as far as functionality. I like them for different reasons/features.

How does blogging fit into the overall marketing of your business?

To read me is to know me. My work hopefully pre-frames my readers into knowing that we are experts. There are no surprises. The hardest thing in the world for a business to do is differentiate itself from the other “noise” in the industry. The blog allows you and me to make our expertise a foregone conclusion. Thus, we are able to shorten the sales process and get down to the nitty gritty of doing business quicker.

What plans do you have to improve your blog over this next year?

I will be adding Audio, Video and my blog will be an entry way into upcoming books, and Membership site for the do it your selfer agent.

What is the one tool or feature that you wish your site had?

none.

What do you think real estate blogging will look like 3 years from now?

More integrated into traditional website models.

(Read more interviews with some of real estate’s top bloggers under the Real Estate Q&A category)

Interview with David Smith of The Affordable Housing Institute

David SmithI’d be hard pressed to name someone covering real estate issues who has mastered the art of blogging better than David Smith of The Affordable Housing Institute. His posts are always 100% original, highly entertaining, filled with informative facts, and full of interesting opinions. I simply love that he takes on complex issues, adds a bunch of tangentially relevant graphics and treats his readers like they’re worthy of some intellectual stretching. Regardless of what day you choose to read his blog (he has a new post every day!), and regardless of what issues he’s covering (it might be the French Riots, Rebuilding New Orleans or Terrell Owens), you’ll be sure to be reading a post from someone who has spent years thinking about real estate and housing issues.

What inspired you to start blogging?

Even before blogs emerged as a technology, I’d done blog-like things: written numerous articles, spoken at seminars, established a personal Web site, written movie reviews that I sent to people who expressed interest. All these were blogs-before-blogs. But the blog’s ease and immediacy of posting, plus the unique ability to link to source material, made it an ideal forum for me.

Plus, several people who knew me urged me to. Nothing like peer pressure.

Are there any special topics or issues that you enjoy blogging?

Our business is complex, and I like reducing or dissolving barriers to entry of understanding. I also like illuminating political maneuvering, especially when newspapers are missing the real point.

Ricky, Lucy 'splaining things.
“Look, I’ll ‘splain.” “Okay, ‘splain.”

What have you done to personalize your blog?

People such as you have told me my style’s unusual. I title the posts because each is a small essay. I pepper in allusions, movie quotes, funny pictures and snarky captions. My text is Edgar Bergen, my visuals are Charlie McCarthy.

Bergen and McCarthy
“Oh, I’m supposed to believe the dummy writes your captions? “

Do you have any favorite posts?

I tag Essential Posts, and Primer Posts. I have a whole series of Sherlock Holmes on housing finance. Beyond that I have particular fondness for Eminent domain: the wrong fight, Slums are economically rational, Reselling Mystico Towers, Prescribing New New Orleans, L’horloge Orange (which got me linked by Instapundit), Tearing down the French high-rises, and GSEs: fierce competition. Fierce. These feel to me genuine advances in knowledge, besides being fun to read.

What are some of your favorite blogs (real estate or otherwise)?

Boston Sports Media is a work of genius that renders sports pages obsolete. Paul Phillips on poker does a great job expressing who he is. The Volokhs have perfected the group blog. Belmont Club adds real value by interpreting news. Pepys Diary is perhaps the apotheosis of hypertext value-added — not only the diary, one post a day, but also a panoply of user-generated wiki-type comments. Phil Gyford deserves a MacArthur.

What tools/ web sites do you find most helpful in putting together your blog?

I read the news on-line — mainly New York Times, Washington Post — and grab articles that are seeds for blog posts. Knowledgeplex is useful too.

How does blogging fit into the overall marketing of your business?

Demonstrates guru insights and reminds people I’m a guru.

What plans do you have to improve your blog over this next year?

I’d love to have more blogger-writers on the AHI site. Beyond me, we have two, whose pace has fallen off recently.

What is the one tool or feature that you wish your site had?

A time-compression algorithm so I could write more ☺.

What do you think real estate blogging will look like 3 years from now?

As a business, classical real estate brokerage is facing the kind of big-bang price drop that confronted stock brokers when Charles Schwab and others introduced first discount and then on-line brokerage. In real terms, fees are likely to drop, and the service is going to reinvent itself from seller representation to buyer advocacy. This is consistent with other internet-driven reversals, where high bandwidth means narrowcasting specialist content providers like blogs, and the scarce commodity is not the content to display but the eyeball to see it. Blogging is a means of building personal brand and hence distinguishing yourselves from the common broker.

In other words, you folks should keep getting with it!

Get Smart
“Got that, chief?”

(Read more interviews with some of real estate’s top bloggers under the Real Estate Q&A category)

Interview with Merv Forney of the Northern Virginia Real Estate Guide

Merv ForneyI’ve really enjoyed following Merv Forney of the Northern Virginia Real Estate Guide and I was glad to see that he responded to my request for an interview because I happen to think he’s figured out some of the key ingredients to building up a great real estate blog. He provides regular market updates with charts and graphs, he writes with a personality, he throws in a fun posts to liven things up, and he’s constantly improving the layout and content of his site. All things considered, I think he has one of the best agent/broker blogs and agents looking to get into the blogging would be well served following his model.

Merv is affiliated with RE/MAX Renaissance of Leesburg, Virginia and the Managing Director of the Choice3 Realty Group. In addition to actively serving clients, he is responsible for all aspects of the business including planning, operations, technology, marketing and general management.

What inspired you to start blogging?

When contemplating this new career, I knew Pam and I needed to be different. This is a “me too” business to the extreme. As a result of much market study, I concluded that everything about us needed to look and feel new, unique and personal. Every templated (or not) agent website looks the same, feels, the same and, in my mind, not very professional. Everyone has exactly the same canned content. I also concluded that the consumer wanted something different. We had a custom website built (www.choice3realty.com) on a content management system (CMS) that happened to be MovableType (my designers choice for a CMS). Part of my spec was to be able to add or change content easily. I had no idea what MovableType was. A month after going live (2/1/2005) with my website, I attended a breakfast seminar hosted by a Chamber of Commerce associate focused on using technology for the benefit of your clients. His management coach that co-hosted this talked about BLOGGING and its power to reach out and gain an audience. Drum roll……OH! MovableType! I had blogging tools I didn’t even know about. On March 25, 2005 my Blog was published and I posted my first article. Inspiration? I don’t know. Wanting tools to be different? You bet. Once exposed to the capability I knew it was something we needed to do. Am I glad we did! I didn’t know where we were going with our blog. It just naturally evolved. Blogs take on the personality of its owners.

(PS: I have the best designer in the world: Donald Peterson at http://www.newark1.com/blog.htm, http://www.newark1.com/ and http://abqstyle.com/index.htm. Donald started blogging AFTER I did. How interesting.)

Are there any special topics or issues that you enjoy covering?

There are many things I enjoy writing about. If you look at what I do most, it is market commentary based on research and data. People want real information. They want it form a real person, not some big organization pumping up there own agenda. We have no agenda and I think it makes us different. The next thing I enjoy doing is exposing the incompetent behavior of those that shouldn’t be in our business. Not by name but by experience. Our profession gets a bad rap from a few very bad or marginal agents. Finally, I really enjoy sharing my strange sense of humor. You can find a little of it in our archives.

Well, maybe not finally. I’m a technologist at heart. I love discovering new things and trying to figure out how to use it for the benefit of our clients. I write a little about it but mostly experiment with it. That’s one of the reasons I enjoy what you do…keeping abreast of a changing landscape. (no suck up intended, just fact).

What have you done to personalize your blog?

I think most everything about our blog is personal, from the collage of pictures (I took them, well…most of them), to our writing style, what we cover and the way we approach our business. I write what I feel and what I believe. Also, I really like exposing (hmmm… featuring is a better choice of words) our clients on the web. I have a thumbnail slide show of our happy clients on our archive pages. They really get a kick out of it.

Do you have any favorite posts?

Personally, I love my posts in the Signs and Entertainment categories. They are just plain fun. Lets me expose a little more of my zany side. This can be a very dry business and we need to break out once in awhile. I like using pictures to make a statement. See Blog Spamming under Blogging.

What are some of your favorite blogs (real estate or otherwise)?

You know it’s hard to just point out 1 or 2. There are many good ones. Rain City is one. Jim Duncan’s in Central Virginia is another. I think the blog that gets my best design vote would be Fraser’s Toronto at Home! Great content too.

What tools/websites do you find most helpful in putting together your blog?

I use MovableType. It might be overkill but a non techie can use it or a technical person can really exploit its capability.

I do my own content programming so I am always searching for free tools and scripts. There are an abundance all over the web. I also watch what you do and say and shamelessly try to copy it if I think it will work for me.

How does blogging fit into the overall marketing of your business?

Even though we promote our clients and their properties, our blog personalizes us, sets us apart from the crowd, our humanness comes through. Potential clients get to know us through what we present and write about without ever meeting us. My last three listing appointments were because of our blog. I (“We”, sorry Pam) went prepared with data, told them what we would do for them and exactly what it would cost. Our blog actually drives more traffic to our main website. I am astonished that we got such a high Google ranking in such a short period of time.

What plans do you have to improve your blog over this next year?

What I really want to do is to provide more interactive tools. There is an abundance of market data available in our MLS data base. It’s just to hard to get it out. I want to let prospects and clients put in their own criteria and get table, charts and graphs that fit their properties demographics. I don’t see anyone data mining the MLS extensively. The data I prepare, like our Market Snapshots I dig out manually.

What is the one tool or feature that you wish your site had?

I like the way map searches are evolving. I’ll keep watching and when they mature I’ll jump in. I’ve experimented a little but not impressed yet. Our MLS needs to make more data available to agents that have the ability to use it creatively.

What do you think real estate blogging will look like 3 years from now?

Geeeeeez. That’s almost like asking what will my house be worth 6 months from now. I have know earthly idea. What I do know is that it’s beginning to catch on. The most forward thinking, creative people have discovered its power.

Here’s one last thought. This is a “me too” business. When others discover that some of us are using it to create business success, everyone will want to do it. There will be companies marketing real estate blogging templates just like real estate websites. The difference is: blogging is hard work, time consuming and needs to come from the heart. Most agents will not have the stamina for it and revert to what is easy. I would love to teach blogging (and have been asked to do so) but right now, we see it as a strategic advantage in our market. Anyone seriously interested in starting a blog can call me and I will tell them everything I know and help however I can. It’s actually very easy to get started and can be FREE! But, I will warn them that it takes a significant commitment for it to be effective in their business. I found several real estate blogs that got started with a few posts and then went dormant…maybe it proves my point.

(Read more interviews with some of real estate’s top bloggers under the Real Estate Q&A category)

Interview with Todd Carpenter of Lendorama

Lenderama LogoWhen I started blogging, Todd Carpenter of Lenderama was the first real estate blogger I got to know. Looking to spread the word about rain city guide, I signed up on his list of real estate and mortgage blogs, which led to some interesting conversations that moved from email to a message board after he opened up this interesting forum for all things mortgage related. He seems to quickly pick up on real estate and mortgage technology trends, making his blog a great read.

todd of lenderamaAs a Mortgage Technology Specialist in Colorado, Todd has been at the forefront of mortgage technology as both a user and a speaker for over a decade.

What inspired you to start blogging?

I read a book from Hugh Hewitt called Blog. I realised that I had no real interest to talk politics, but that a blog covering my industry would make me a bit of a Pioneer. The first time I Googled “Mortgage Blog” back in January, there were about 100,000 results. Now there are over 6,000,000

Are there any special topics or issues that you enjoy covering?

I like finding stories about other mortgage brokers in non-industry related situations. Like the broker who went to the Texas Hold um championships.

What have you done to personalize your blog?

I have a personal blog called the Pagan Capitalist. Otherwise, I keep Lenderama pretty much business focused. When I post about a story, I generally like to share my opinion of it, or possibly joke about it.

Do you have any favorite posts?

Not really

What are some of your favorite blogs (real estate or otherwise)?

http://growabrain.typepad.com/growabrain/ because it’s funny
http://bendegrow.com/ a local libertarian
http://www.freakonomics.com/blog/ it makes you think
http://www.lileks.com/ because it’s funny AND it makes you think

What tools/websites do you find most helpful in putting together your blog?

Blogging and web publishing in general are a lot easier if you know some HTML. I learned everything I know about it at http://htmlgoodies.com/ .

How does blogging fit into the overall marketing of your business?

Besides personal sales calls, Blogging is my only form of Marketing. By blogging to other mortgage professionals, instead of direct to consumers, I have gained some what of a reputation for being an industry expert.

What plans do you have to improve your blog over this next year?

What are you talking about? My blog is perfect! 🙂

What is the one tool or feature that you wish your site had?

A search engine that was specific to the real estate/mortgage industry . One that I could personally edit to keep only relevant links in the data base. Sort of like a searchable version of my Big List http://blog.mariah.com/dir.html

What do you think real estate blogging will look like 3 years from now?

Bigger, much bigger. There’s no reason why EVERY agent shouldn’t be blogging. It’s simply an online version of the same “keep in touch your client” marketing plan that every Realtor is already using.

(Read more interviews with some of real estate’s top bloggers under the Real Estate Q&A category)

Reflections on Real Estate Interviews?

As I continue to post interviews with some of my favorite real estate bloggers, it is getting harder and harder to not plaster my opinion all over the posts… Maybe at some point, I’ll try to summarize some of the things that I’ve learned from the interviews, but for now, it seems best if I just let the interviewees speak for themselves!

After publishing this next interview in a few minutes, I’m going to take a little break from posting interviews until after Christmas.

Interview with Alex Stenback of Behind the Mortgage

Alex StenbackAlex Stenback of Behind the Mortgage has a way of making real estate writing entertaining. While all of his articles convey good nuggets of information, he often throws in articles like Your Lawn is a Legume to keep you on your toes. Additionally, his linklubes are among the best in real estate.

When not blogging, Alex is a Mortgage Banker at Prime Mortgage in the Twin Cities area.

What inspired you to start blogging?

I’d been an avid blog reader, as much for the entertainment value as anything else, while at the same time, looking for a better way to communicate with my clients, prospective customers, and professional partners – canned newsletters have never been my thing, and really how timely is a quarterly, or even monthly newsletter anymore. One day it just sort of dawned on me – why not a real estate and mortgage blog.

Are there any special topics or issues that you enjoy covering?

Because most of the mortgage industry is such a sales-pitch, huckster-come-on oriented marketplace, I enjoy educating readers on how it really works and exposing some of the more tawdry tactics and operators in the business – I really try to respect the intelligence of my readers, who are generally the opposite of those that fall for the “lowest rates on the planet” type of advertising.

What have you done to personalize your blog?

After I’d established the blog, maybe eight to ten months in, I had some professional design work done, but for newer bloggers, I always recommend against getting too caught up in the design and appearance of the blog – focus on the content first, develop your style and a readership, then worry about looks – some of the most widely read blogs around run a very basic template to this day.

Do you have any favorite posts?

One of my early posts about African Weather and Mortgage Rates remains one of my favorites, along with the times we’ve broken news stories, which then got picked up by local media.

What are some of your favorite blogs (real estate or otherwise)?

Too many to list, but one of my all time favorites, and maybe my biggest influence was Hugh McLeod’s www.gapingvoid.com.

What tools/websites do you find most helpful in putting together your blog?

RSS feeds, delicious, and google alerts.

How does blogging fit into the overall marketing of your business?

Readers who become clients accounted for 20% of my business this year, which is a number that stunned even me. Its been great PR as well – If done right a blog will get you more valuable PR (media mentions, interviews, expert status, search engine rankings, etc.) by accident than most PR firms could get you on purpose, and at a vanishingly small fraction of the cost of any paid web marketing effort. Also, some advice for those considering a blog – let sharing information, informing, and entertaining your readers be your focus. If you are blogging just for PR, Search engine rankings, and to have another advertising channel to pipe the same old canned real estate content onto the internet you are putting the cart before the horse, and the blog may very well fail – people’s radar for sincerity is highly tuned in the blog world.

What plans do you have to improve your blog over this next year?

We’ll be adding a couple of new features, a few of them still in development and top secret, but they will be complimentary to the blog, and dabble in other forms of media in one case – I am a big fan of keeping it simple, and good – there is such a thing as too feature rich – part of the reason blogs work so well is because they are very narrowly focused – many larger websites are sunk by their own ambitions to be all things to all visitors.

What do you think real estate blogging will look like 3 years from now?

The marketplace is starting to get very crowded, with major media (NYT, ahem) starting to catch on to the form. I think we’ll see more “superlocal” blogs emerge – call them real estate microblogs, where rather than focusing on major metropolitan areas, they track real estate happenings in very specific areas, neighborhoods, etc.

(Read more interviews with some of real estate’s top bloggers under the Real Estate Q&A category)

Interview with Fraser Beach of Toronto at Home

fraser beachFraser Beach’s Toronto at Home blog has been another major inspiration for Rain City Guide. The unique and clean layout of his blog personifies professionalism and his content is always interesting and well written. Unlike most of us, I’m under the impression that Fraser doesn’t have bad blogging days!

When not covering real estate issues, locally-based news and general real estate advice for home buyers and sellers, Fraser runs a successful full-service discount brokerage in Toronto.

What inspired you to start blogging?

I guess you could say that playing on the internet became my hobby in ’95. I was an early member of MetaFilter, the grandfather of weblogs, and when Blogger made it easy, I started my own blog.

Are there any special topics or issues that you enjoy covering?

I try to constantly answer the question “hows the market?”, because that’s what most people want to know.

What have you done to personalize your blog?

The blog it fully integrated with my website — so I guess it’s just me. I like the “minimalist” style of web design.

Do you have any favorite posts?

Hopefully, my current one.

What are some of your favorite blogs (real estate or otherwise)?

Grow-a-brain, Curbed, and of course Rain City Guide :-). My favourite (Canadians spell funny) site, bar-none, is coudal.com.

What tools/websites do you find most helpful in putting together your blog?

TypePad (typepad.com) does it all. It can be totally customized and I really like playing with HTML and CSS.

How does blogging fit into the overall marketing of your business?

The website and blog + MLS, is our total marketing and communications effort — and I constantly have to decline business.

What plans do you have to improve your blog over this next year?

I just redesigned it last weekend, and will again when a new design concept strikes. Like Lexus – the constant pursuit of perfection 🙂

What is the one tool or feature that you wish your site had?

Thinking about podcasting.

What do you think real estate blogging will look like 3 years from now?

Probably there will be a lot of ghost-written, cookie-cutter services like there are now for websites.

(Read more interviews with some of real estate’s top bloggers under the Real Estate Q&A category)

Interview with John Mudd of Inside Real Estate

[photopress:inside_real_estate_screenshot.jpg,thumb,alignright]If you follow real estate issues on the web, then you’ve likely come across John Mudd. There is no one in real estate blogging that is quite like John. He’s a master at marketing giving him a nearly ubiqudous presence in real estate circles on the web!

My introduction to John was when I noticed this February 2005 press release where he was drumming up support for a blogging award. Not surprisingly, he went on to win the 2005 Business Blog Award for the best Real Estate blogger and I quickly learned that he was definitely a real estate blogger on top of his game. In addition to his highly successful blog, InsideRealEstateJournal.blogspot.com, he’s a regular contributor on the Inman blog and he runs a very successful real estate company in the St. Petersburg, Florida area where he sells luxury homes, waterfront homes and condos.

What inspired you to start blogging?

Adnan Arif. He and I went to the same college. I was in the student senate when I met him. He ran an unsuccessful campaign for student body president. What was born from that was a very nice student-run Web-magazine called MAXED. I wrote columns for it. Adnan published it. After college I wandered around for a little while, then settled into a public relations/publicity career. Then I went into real estate at my dad’s advice because it was a “money business.” Adnan sold me on my creating a real estate blog. I created one and have been getting sales from it ever since. He and I also created Hundred Acres ( www.hundredacres.com), which crashed when our host stopped service without telling us. He also has Wrist Fashion (www.wristfashion.com) and some other blogs (he should have them linked to on Wrist Fashion) that make for interesting reading from time to time.

Are there any special topics or issues that you enjoy covering?

I use my blog to generate leads that I convert into sales, so I usually like topics that inspire phone calls or direct contact using my Contact John form. I get a lot of those. Usually featured listings and recent solds get great responses, as do market reports and location reports ( i.e., downtown St. Petersburg).

What have you done to personalize your blog?

My name is on it. It’s everywhere on it. There are also news releases and plenty of news articles and blog posts about me on it. It’s my best self-promotion tool. I’m a big Web marketer.

Do you have any favorite posts?

I like the one about downtown St. Petersburg’s condo future a lot. I get a lot of calls on it.

What are some of your favorite blogs (real estate or otherwise)?

Curbed (New York version; if they get a Tampa version up and running I hope they’ll let me contribute). Inman News Blog. LOCATION LOCATION LOCATION. Blog Herald. Gawker. Blogcritics. Luxist. The Diabetes Blog. Wonkette. I enjoy Steve Rubel’s blog and Jeremy Wright’s blog ( www.ensight.org) from time to time. Any blog that links to my blog or website. These are all on my blogroll or elsewhere on my blog.

What tools/websites do you find most helpful in putting together your blog?

Blogger. I’m a self-starter. I now have one Google AdSense ad on my blog, because they let me used targeted ads. That way real estate ads don’t appear there. I use Blogrolling for links, but I don’t really need to, I just did it that way since Blogrolling came out (it used to be hip to blogroll links, until Tucows bought them). I prefer hardcoding everything in. It’s not hard to do.

How does blogging fit into the overall marketing of your business?

It is my business. My blog and my website are my business. I use mailings and ads to help brand my website. The blog drives traffic to both and helps with PageRank. All of my business comes from the Web, I would say. On a rare occasion it may come from a mailing or a sign call or meeting someone in person, but 98 percent of it comes from people I “meet” online first via e-mail or phone conversation as a result of what they read on my website or blog. I have a buyers list of around 5,000 buyers because of leads generated from my blog and website combined. I don’t know of any other Realtor or broker in the industry able to do that in two to three years on a $0 budget.

What plans do you have to improve your blog over this next year?

No plans, really. Same blogging strategy as always – post about interesting stuff that is worth posting about, get lots of leads. He/She who has the most contact information wins in a down market.

What is the one tool or feature that you wish your site had?

No wishes here, really. I would love it if I had artificial intelligence robot assistants to hep me with all this stuff, and it would be nice if I had a robot follow-up assistant. I have tried outsourcing it and no one has my technique for conversion, so it’s a waste of money and time. I convert the leads into sales, but I haven’t seen anyone else be able to. I figure I could program robots to have my style and tone. Never try to sell a prospect you get online or you will lose them.

What do you think real estate blogging will look like 3 years from now?

Not much different, but we may see more transaction management systems integrated into websites. I wish we had seen those integrated into websites a year ago. Imagine, having your customers able to login on your website to view all of their transaction documents. That definitely adds value to your services. I think we’ll see more Google map integration, although that will depend on broker flexibility. Some IDX rules are far too static or too firm to allow for that, and some blogging software won’t allow for it, either. I see more real estate bloggers reviewing real estate products. I’m getting review requests by the ton as I write this. Realtor-bloggers are opinion leaders in their industry. When they talk people in the industry listen. Not everyone in the industry is comfortable with that, yet.

(Read more interviews with some of real estate’s top bloggers under the Real Estate Q&A category)

Interview with Fran of The Real Estate Blog

[photopress:Fran_photo2_Ed_Carreon.jpg,thumb,alignright]It is very appropriate that the first person who agreed to an interview was Fran of The Real Estate Blog. As I described in this post, The Real Estate Blog has been a major influence in the development Rain City Guide.

As a real estate agent, Fran will forever be linked with her teammate, Rowena. (I even find it hard to say “Fran” without saying “and Rowena”). They are one of the most successful real estate teams in Southern California, host a radio show , create some great caricatures, and write for one of the longest running real estate blog…

What inspired you to start blogging?

We started blogging (actually, it’s I … the Fran half … I do all the blogging) because it was the “new” thing on the internet back in 2003. I thought I’d give it a try!

Are there any special topics or issues that you enjoy covering?

Personally, I enjoy bringing back real estate-related stories from my travels. Real estate is a very popular topic anywhere you go.

What have you done to personalize your blog?

I’m not sure about this question. I know some people take their blog in a personal direction … that is, their blog is a reflection of their real estate business in that they use the blog to promote their business (perhaps put their listings on the blog, or post the latest information about themselves) but that’s not the focus of our blog. I’ve intentionally channeled our blog to be informational in a general sense, with what I hope is real estate-related snippets of info, usually with links to the bigger-picture online article.

If people want to learn more about US, there is a link from our blog to a short bio page.

Do you have any favorite posts?

One from my travels to North Carolina (July 13, 2005). . I thought that was interesting.

What are some of your favorite blogs (real estate or otherwise)?

Actually, I don’t read blogs. I do not read other real estate blogs because I don’t want them to influence what I post on my blog.

What tools/websites do you find most helpful in putting together your blog?

I watch for online information about real estate, either through the MSN homepage, or from the California Association of Realtors (CAR) and the National Association of Realtors (NAR). Also, trade magazines, again from CAR and NAR. Plus, knowing that I have to blog (posting every-other-day), I keep my eyes and ears open for interesting information in the course of doing business.

How does blogging fit into the overall marketing of your business?

We do not use the blog to market our business. It’s a separate venture. Our main website, www.franandrowena.com, is about our real estate business. Our blog is about real estate information in a general sense. Through www.franandrowena.com, however, there is a link to our blog. Hopefully people will be curious enough to visit our blog from there. Truly, it’s my opinion that the general public does not know what a blog is.

As far as marketing our business, I believe the “link” to our business is in terms of credibility. People who find our blog realize we are active, working realtors who try to keep on top of the latest information and share that information.

What plans do you have to improve your blog over this next year?

Good question! I’d like to bring a more personal touch to our blog, rather than just quote/reference information from other sources. More personal entries, insights and my opinions, for example.

What is the one tool or feature that you wish your site had?

I’ve got to figure out that trackback feature (a direct link to each entry).

What do you think real estate blogging will look like 3 years from now?

Probably old news … people will be on to podcasting, or something new technology.

Update:Read more interviews with some of real estate’s top bloggers under the Real Estate Q&A category