May 19, 2012

Can QR codes help generate real estate leads?

Are you noticing more Quick Response (QR) codes lately? You probably first saw them on FedEx envelopes a few years ago – a square black-and-white graphic, sort of like a bar code, sort of like a digital Rorschach test.

QR codes are now showing up in lots of places, from business cards to billboards. Why?

The QR graphic is encoded with a URL, text, or other data. Scan the QR code with your smart phone’s camera, and you’re taken directly to a Web site – and whatever content is waiting for you there. It might be a funny video, a valuable coupon or, we would hope, something else delightful.

From the Wikipedia entry on QR codes:

Although initially used for tracking parts in vehicle manufacturing, QR Codes are now used in a much broader context, including both commercial tracking applications and convenience-oriented applications aimed at mobile phone users (known as mobile tagging).

Imagine QR codes on everyday objects, so you could hit a “like” button for something you come across walking down the street.

Smarter real estate agents already are using QR codes to instantly connect with home-shoppers in innovative ways. Now any ‘for sale’ sign or piece of marketing collateral can become a paper-saving short-cut to any Web page, including an online MLS listing.

It’s easy to generate your own QR codes here. Try it!

Smarter Company helps real estate professionals generate leads through optimized local search and other marketing innovations. Scan the code with your phone to learn more!

Yelp Monocle — virtual reality on your smart phone

Yelp Monocle

Could this technology be used to create a killer real estate app?

Have you seen Yelp’s Monocle app? It’s insanely cool.

Check it out if you have an Android phone or an iPhone.
Monocle uses your phone’s camera and GPS capability to overlay Yelp reviews on the real-world view you see through your phone’s camera lens.

As you walk down the street, you can point your phone at businesses and see translucent Yelp entries – including the starred Yelp ratings.  It even works when you are miles away – you just point your phone in any direction and you’ll see the Yelp reviews for whatever businesses are out there. Click through and you can read the reviews.

It’s virtual reality that’s actually useful!  And it’s an indication of where we are going with smart phone  connectivity and local search.

Can you imagine how this technology might be applied in real estate? It could be an engaging way to connect with home shoppers. Imagine pulling up to the curb of a home that’s for sale and pointing your smart phone at the house for a quick description of the specs, and link to comps in the area.  Maybe there’s a Make-Me-an-Offer link…

Do you think this technology could help sell homes? Or is an old-fashioned paper flyer more practical?

In any case, if you’re in real estate, it’s time to get out ahead of the technology curve, or risk being left behind. Optimizing your marketing for local search makes you more visible to qualified local leads — and smarter Realtors are taking advantage of that.

It’s time to optimize your marketing for local search

The revolution will not necessarily be televised.

But it will definitely be texted, tweeted, Googled and photographed in mega-pixel magnificence.

It’s nothing TechCrunch readers haven’t been exposed to over and over. Or that  the millions of people who bought iPhones in the last few years haven’t known all along. But the idea that high-powered handsets are going to change the world is finally real for me.

I started using a Droid X recently, and I get it now. I got it last Friday night, when the MapQuest print out led us astray. I turned to the Droid and asked it how to get us where we were trying to go. We thought we were miles away, but it was a quick u-turn to the Stone Brewery — and we made it just in time for our reservation.

Once there I checked in with FourSquare, and got some valuable tips from previous patrons. I took pictures. I enjoyed myself.  And I have some opinions about the food, service and overall atmosphere that I will be sharing on Yelp.

My experience, in aggregate with the thousands of others who visit Stone this year, is going to become part of a permanent public record that will either be good for Stone’s business, or bad.

A trend will eventually emerge — a majority of people will say they love the place, or that it sucks. And that will have some veracity and real influence in the decison-making process of other prospects and customers. It’s a dynamic that smarter real estate professionals  know they can’t afford to ignore.

Again, this is pretty much old news in some quarters, but the winning Realtors of the future will be those who are the first to master:

  • Mobile search that facilitates real-time decision making
  • Connecting and engaging on social media platforms
  • Really listening to customers, and managing to give them what they say they want

That future is here already. Adapting to it is not rocket science. In fact it’s pretty simple. If you in real estate, it is imperative that you optimize your marketing for the new realities of hand-held search. At the very least, you need to:

  • Set up your Google Places page (and do it correctly)
  • Have a Facebook presence that generates leads for your business
  • Respond to reviews on Google Places, Yelp, etc.
  • Control your local presence at Yahoo and Bing, as well as Google

Of course, you have homes to sell, and no time to spend on this stuff. But it’s critical, in this economy, to stay competitive. The future of your business depends upon it.

If you haven’t taken these steps yet, call us today at 858.922.3006, and we’ll get you started.