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Apartment Finder

Our initiation period for Project Massive Network at Network Communications, Inc. ended at the beginning of this month. I thought it would be fun to share some of our progress.

As regular reapicture-124ders will remember, in mid-April we launched an initiative to get everyone in our company active on social media. We engaged Domus Consulting to run a month-long series of Social Media 101 webinars and I invited every person in the company to connect with me.

My challenge to the company was to create more than 100,000 connections among all of us by the first of June.

We did it!

As of June 1, about 1/2 of the 1000 people associated with NCI had connected with me on Facebook, LinkedIn and Twitter. The total reach of their combined networks is more than 250,000 people!

The initiative grew rapidly over the 45 days, from a total of about 25,000 connections after a week and breaking through 200,000 in late May.

The rapid adoption of social media inside the company has been rewarded with heightened engagement with our local market partners.

picture-141A foundation premise of our social media initiative was that the unique nature of NCI — a confederation of independent local market teams organized around powerful national brands — would translate effectively into social media engagement.

Our local market teams quickly began to set up fan pages, build profiles and grow their connections among their professional contacts. In the Apartment Finder team alone, we have nearly 10,000 fans to our local fan pages on Facebook. We have thousands more across our other brands as well.

The second stage of our project was to develop a marketing approach to our customers and prospects that could leverage social media. A good demonstration of it is in our Apartment Finder brand, where we have set up a The Apartment Finder Blog, which publishes content that is then distributed out to the more than 80 local Facebook presences that we maintain. These Facebook pages have become micro-blogs, taking advantage of the simple-to-use technology Facebook provides.

We are now turning to the next phase of our project to leverage social media. The first step was to train ourselves, the second was to develop a clear process for effective marketing and the third will be to connect consumers more easily with our customer’s content while they use the social web.

I’ll give you more updates about that in the next few days. In the meantime, I feel relieved. When we set off on Project Massive Network, I didn’t know what to expect. Today, I’m infused with enthusiasm and excitement for the energy that it has sparked across different pockets of our company.

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Hitwise released an engaging report on the state of online classifieds this week, with conclusions driven by their analysis of their proprietary database of web traffic.

Two things stood out to me: First, Hitwise’s observations about the significant growth in classified website visits is a clear counterpoint to the accelerating decline in newspaper classified revenues. Second, Hitwise’s analysis shows that the real estate category — both rental and resale — is highly fragmented, creating an unique dynamic in terms of how traffic to classified web sites is generated.

Online classified traffic growth and restricted offline distribution

Broad analysis of the traffic to online classifieds shows a 84% increase in visitors over the past 12 months. The economic downturn has driven an increase in usage, but the share gain on the part of classifieds has been steady over the past three years, as the accompanying chart shows.

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The number of sites participating in this growth has increased substantially as well.

In addition to capturing more visits, the industry is also growing in terms of number of websites.
In February 2009, Hitwise reported on 1,048 websites in the Classifieds industry, compared with
814 in February 2008. Much of the growth is from localization of existing classifieds offerings, in
particular the addition of Craigslist properties.

Looking at this chart in relation to the decline in newspaper classified revenues over the past three years demonstrates the power of two things: ubiquitous, free distribution and low-cost to no-cost advertising.

Newspapers have built their business on a restricted offline distribution: you typically don’t get the paper unless you pay for it. They built their classified franchise on timeliness: the newspaper was available every day. Consumers were trained to turn to the newspapers to search classifieds for the most timely information about key purchases: what cars are for sale right now, what jobs are available right now and what houses are for sale right now.

Today, the newspaper is beaten on every count by online and multi-platform competitors. The result has been a $9.7 billion decline in classified revenue. The distinction between newspapers and other free printed classified magazines, such as The Real Estate Book and Apartment Finder, is intentional. While the printed classifieds are not able to compete with the internet classifieds in terms of timeliness and comprehensiveness, they continue to be relevant in terms of ubiquitous distribution. This justifies continued investment by advertisers and help to create a business context for distributing the listings information online and in the printed product.

The Long Tail of Classified Search

The classified category is a uniquely long-tail category, Hitwise’s research shows.

Picture 21.pngNearly 50% of the search phrases driving traffic to the broad Shopping & Classifieds category were one or two word searches (“bicycle,” for instance.) In contrast, only 30% of search phrases driving traffic to classified websites were such short terms.

As illustrated above, traffic from multi-keyword search queries to All Other Classifieds websites is
much higher than average for the Shopping and Classifieds category as a whole.
In the four weeks to February 28, 2009, only 9.93% of search terms sending visits to All Other
Classifieds were one word search terms (such as “bicycle” or “apartment”), compared to more
than a quarter (25.04%) for the Shopping and Classifieds category as a whole.
By contrast, 28.80% of queries sending visits to All Other Classifieds contained five or more
keywords, nearly twice the share as for the Shopping and Classifieds parent industry.

Picture 24.pngOur experience at our real estate websites, Apartment Finder and The Real Estate Book, bears this trend out. For Apartment Finder, for instance, in a recent two week period we had visits to our site driven by more than 1380,000 search terms. The top ten terms — all one or two words and very intuitive — drove less than 1/4 of the traffic. The remainder of the terms — typically three words or more and very specific to the interests of the consumer — drove three-quarters of the traffic.

[This consumer behavior drives an interesting dynamic in sales calls, by the way. We know that the best way to get traffic is to create content that aligns with highly personal and specific searches. Marketing managers want to see that a media partner comes up high on the searches that comprise a small portion of the actual results. To accommodate the needs of our sales organization, we actually end up diminishing the efficiency of our organic search optimization. Nuts.]

The fragmentation of the real estate classified market

Interestingly, Hitwise’s analysis of traffic to classified web sites supports an argument that I’ve made in other posts — the market for real estate information online is much more fragemented than other classified markets.

Picture 25.png

In the Real Estate Classifieds market, the top four websites made up 37% of category visits in
February. This is a marked change from the Auto Classifieds category, where the #1 player (eBay
Motors) accounted for 70% of category visits.
With such a large purchase, consumers are likely to do a lot of cross shopping, comparing
listings on various websites. Hitwise clickstream data shows that 15% of downstream visits from
Real Estate Classifieds websites went to another website in the Real Estate Classifieds category
in February.

In addition, the real estate category derives nearly twice as much traffic from search than do the competitors in the Auto or Employment category.

The fragmentation of the real estate category presents distinct challenges to agents who are looking to differentiate themselves from their competitors. By committing to one online service or the other, they are significantly reducing the likelihood that they will intersect with the majority of buyers in their market.

One final note:  While I have not focused on it, Hitwise’s report details the absolute dominance that Craig’s List exerts in the classified website category.  Remarkable.

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Using the value of a lead to drive the value of the sale

March 18, 2009

A creative sales executive rethinks how to explain the value of her product

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