Charlotte Real Estate Video

I've long been preaching to my Realtor friends that they need to buy a camera and start making short videos of their properties.  I've seen several agents doing it, and I think it's an excellent way to market your listings - or other listings if you don't have one yourself.  I don't understand why it isn't utilized more.  As a buyer's agent or listing agent, you always visit homes and condos for sale.  Why would you not bring a little camera and film the property?

I have a friend, Sunny Yates, who sells Charlotte real estate (North Carolina) and understands the value of video promotions.  She also has a top ranking website, www.sunnyyates.com.  I've seen a couple of the videos tonight, and was literally floored with them, and what an excellent marketing tool this can be.

One was a short, narrated video of some of Sunny's Charlotte MLS listings, and the other two are interviews with some of her affluent clients.

The first interview was with the NASCAR CHIC, who fell in love with and purchased a waterfront home on Lake Norman.  As a former Jersey resident, she expresses what she enjoys about living on the lake.  She and Sunny talk about her likes and interests, and of course, Nascar.  She shows some clips of the boats and describes their great life in the beautiful Lake Norman community. 

The next interview was promoting Charlotte real estate, again with a Lake Norman resident.  I really think videos like these would go a long way into convincing someone to choose that neighborhood when relocating to the area. 

Not only do these kinds of videos promote the property, but if a real estate agent has the looks and personality to be good on video, it can promote the agent as well.  Anyone who sees these videos cannot help but be impressed, and a potential seller would see that she can advertise their home in ways that most Realtors never even think about.

According to Nielson and CNN Money, YouTube had 69 million visitors during the month of May.  Is this not astounding?  I think you should promote the videos through emails and in print, but YouTube's ready made (and free) traffic is there for the taking.  There are also ways to make the videos show up in the search engines. 

The big engines are moving closer and closer to bringing mixed media into the search results - sprinkling videos, blogs, and news articles in with webpages.  As they work on perfecting the results that most please their users, the use of videos, and especially YouTube and Google videos are going to become extremely important to marketers.  With the real estate slump that is going on around us, anything an agent can do to attract a buyer should be utilized and learned.

Like a website, you should use your key search terms in the video title, put a link to your website in the video description box, and take the time to type in a couple of paragraphs describing your property, or your interview or walk-thru.  Better yet, make a transcript of the video and enter it in the place provided.

Use several good key-terms in the description as well.  Submit your video to the various social and bookmarking sites, with optimized titles and descriptions.  Have a section on your website that links to the videos.  Take the time to write a blog posting about them and link to them from it.

Done correctly, you can promote the video that promotes yourself or your properties, and gain a tremendous edge over 90% of the other real estate agents who sit in the office and wait on the phone to ring.  Truthfully, everything you do that promotes your website will reward you 10 times over if you take the time to do a quality job and learn how to get the search engines to notice.

Thankfully, there will be a need for real estate SEO providers for a while yet, and the good ones will teach their clients about videos, blogging, and all the other marketing methods that go hand in hand with websites and search engine traffic.  Choosing a "real" seo expert out of all the rip-off companies gets harder all the time. But it's well worth the effort to find one who is experienced in real estate marketing and can help you with ideas and techniques to make that sale.

 
This post has been included in North Carolina Information Mecklenburg County, NC Information Charlotte, NC Information
Post is included in group: Realtors®
Post is included in group: Posts to Localism

9 Comments on Marketing Real Estate with Video

I would agree that SEO is important, however, as a buyer I don't believe that Google will be the first place I look for a house. There are MLS searching tools out there, one of my favorites is Redfin  because it let's me search using a map. On these sites it is most important to distinguish yourself from the other listings and stand out. VIDEO is the best way to do that in my humble opinion. In fact, video tours and other commentary are so new, there isn't a good indicator online as to which properties have video or not.

Check out the video tour icon I use within the main property image. This way you can let people know there is a video to be seen! Partner up with a new media and video person to get these little tweaks done right!

07/01/2008 08:55 AM by Dave Haft (DC Video Tour)


I've never really gotten into videos, I have been using them for several years for my listings  I need to further explore this.

07/01/2008 09:03 AM by Jim Crawford ~ Atlanta Real Estate-ABR E-PRO (RE/MAX Greater Atlanta)


SEO may be THE most important thing that drives buyers to your website.  I think one of the last statistics I read was that 80% of buyers begin their search with organic search listings on Google and Yahoo.  I have never heard of Redfin that I can remember, and although Realtor.com gets a lot of traffic, I have my doubts about Redfin.  If it were important IT would be found in the search results...and at least in my area, it isn't.  Maybe it's more popular in your area...not sure.

As far as videos and SEO, it is completely amazing what you can do if you upload a video to YouTube, and include your website URL in the description.  Then you do a blog post and link to the video and to your website.  Then you take BOTH of these things and put them on your social site profiles.  The amount of links that comes from all this will shoot your site up for the terms that you include in your links on the blogs.

I agree that it would be cool to have a way to tell which listings have a video.  But on a small scale, doesn't your individual IDX indicate that?  Otherwise, you could just go to YouTube and search for "city, state, real estate"   As long as you include that in the title of the video (or the word homes if it's better for your area's search terms) then it will show in a search on there for that.

You could also have a list of videos on your homepage.

Jan

07/01/2008 09:59 AM by Jan Chilton - Real Estate Marketing and SEO (Myrtle Beach Web Design)


Jan, I do appreciate the fact that most people begin their search for a home with google. I don't doubt the 80% statistic you mention. Search Engine Optimization (SEO) is definitely going to get your SITE listed, afterall, that is how most websites are found these days. From the REALTOR's perspective, I completely agree that you are taking all the right steps to improve your business.

My comments above are designed to give you a sense of the buyer's perspective and a future in which consumers want to do most research on their own. So when we start talking about particular property listings, I don't believe that Google Search is the most friendly search tool. Although this is where myself and most others begin, once they find a suitable listing search tool, like Zillow, Google Real-Estate Search or a map-based tool on a REALTOR's site - they will most likely return to that tool rather than Google. So, what I am suggesting is that internet-savvy buyers prefer searching through listings on their own - listings that are not from one particular agent.

Once we get to this pont where do-it-yourself buyers are more numerous, it will not only be important to promote your website as a realtor, but each listing as it is input into the MLS must stand out. That's where video comes in to play even more.

Best,

Dave

07/01/2008 06:53 PM by Dave Haft (DC Video Tour)


Jan,   I have a video camera and I'm ready to start, just afraid to take that step.  Don't know enough I guess, your advice is, just do it?

07/01/2008 07:53 PM by Mary Jo Schaffer Bandera Texas Real Estate (Sweetheart Realty)


I've been shopping for a flip video camcorder... I don't love the idea of being in a video but I do love the idea of showcasing my listings. I currently use visual tours, but a short video uploaded to youtube and the front page of my website could be very powerful.

07/01/2008 08:41 PM by Debbie DiFonzo, United Country VIP Realty, SW Missouri


For those of you new to video, rather than investing in a camera right off the bat:

  1. Using the Digital Camera you probably already have....
  2. Switch to 'Movie' mode (usually indicated by a picture of a hollywood film camera)
  3. Record A Test Movie, with some narration (you may have to speak closely)
  4. Transfer the movie file (typically mov, mp4 or wmv) from the camera to your PC or Mac (connect camera directly to computer using the cable it came with OR remove the memory card from the camera and slide it into the computer's card reader [if it has one])
  5. Go to YouTube and Click yellow 'Upload' Button (remember where you put that file on your computer!)
  6. Follow the steps to title the movie, adding a description (in the future you'll type in your contact info/website here)
  7. Once it is done processing your new video, check to make sure it plays with clarity
  8. Went well? Consider getting a flip video cam

Feel free to drop me a line for more tips

07/01/2008 09:12 PM by Dave Haft (DC Video Tour)


Mary, go to your nicest listing and walk through it, slowly panning around the rooms as you talk.  You might want to look at the place first and decide what you want to say..."Here we have a nice wide kitchen with granite countertops and a newly tiled floor...etc."   Keep them under 10 minutes..the smaller the better.   If your camera will save the video to a wmv format, that's the best.  If it's a .mov format (mine is) then you will need a program to convert it. 

Join Youtube, and you'll fill out a form to explain what it is.  Try to put your search phrase in the title of the video, and in the text box use it again, along with putting the URL to your website.  It won't let you put a link, but it will turn a full URL into a link.  Once you've got all that done, then go to your blog, and do a small blog about your new video, putting a link to the video page using some version of your search phrase, like Austin Tx Real Estate - Address of Home as the clickable part of the link. (known as the anchor text)  I'm sorry if I sound too obvious, but I don't know how much you know...

Also be sure the blog links to your domain name of your website, also using your main search phrase as the anchor text.  

Now, take the blog, and submit it to as many of the social sites as you can.  You'll need a nice profile on all of them before you do it.  Digg and Facebook and Naymz are 3 of the best.  Twitter, Friendfeed, Propeller, and Delicious are next.  Some are bookmarking sites and some are social ones. 

Submit the blog, then submit the video separately.   This will bring links into the video, which links to the website and to the blog which links to the video AND the website.  It works wonders.   You just want to be careful not to spam those social sites.  When you submit something to them, whether blog or video, be sure it has some substance and is good content.

By the way, Youtube functions as a social site too.  You will have a profile on there, and Google owns it.  So always be sure and look around to see if any of these places let you link to your website, or bring your blog feed directly into them.

I agree with Dave, just use your digital camera video at first.  I've got a $200 Canon about 2 years old that takes the best videos you've ever seen!  it's just that you have to move slowly and try not to shake.  A professional would have an expensive video camera on a rolling tripod.

But it doesn't cost a thing to try or to use YouTube!  Next thing you do is to blog about how many social sites you have, and link to the social site profiles.  That gets your profile spidered so that when you submit these things, the profiles have a bit of link juice powering them as well.  Complicated and rather mind-boggling, ain't it?  :-)

Jan

07/01/2008 10:34 PM by Jan Chilton - Real Estate Marketing and SEO (Myrtle Beach Web Design)


It just occurred to me that it might also be possible to put a link in the actual MLS listing to the YouTbube video...and even to the blog about it?  I'm not that up on listing stuff since I'm not a Realtor...but definately I would try it and see.

If you get your website to the top of the searches for "Your City Real Estate" or Your City Homes for Sale", the buyers will be coming to your website to see your IDX...so make sure it's a good one with good photos.  I don't advise any client to just use the MLS link they give you.  Several of the real estate website/IDX providers have figured out how to make the listings into static pages that can be spidered too, which adds hundreds if not thousands of pages to your website!  There's only 3-4 companies out there that can actually do it, though.  I'm working with a guy here in Myrtle Beach to see if he can get the program to work to my SEO specifications.  If he does, it will be a killer IDX.

Jan

07/01/2008 10:49 PM by Jan Chilton - Real Estate Marketing and SEO (Myrtle Beach Web Design)


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