![]() |
Leverage An IDX Property Search And Build Your Real Estate Business |
Lesson 2: Showcase An IDX Property Search To Generate Leads |
|
|---|---|
Thank you for registering for my email course on maximizing the prospecting potential of your realtor website! To gain the maximum benefit from these lessons you need to already have a web site. If you don't already have one, you can click here to order a real estate agent website through Superlative hosting. If you do have one, then great! Let's get started... During the past few years that I have been consulting exclusively for real estate websites about prospecting online, one thing has become abundantly clear: a realtor web site without a property search is virtually worthless. It makes perfect sense really. As a realtor you have special access to privileged information about the housing market. Specifically, that information is the inventory of available property listings. To make your website a true real estate business success you must leverage that privileged listing information and maximize its potential. |
|
Think of your website as an online store. Your online store can only meet the needs of your visitors if it is stocked with merchandise that they want. As a realtor, that merchandise is property listings, news about the current market, and buying and selling information. For the most part, homeseekers only seek out a realtor website for one main reason and that is to search for property. This is true 92% of the time. Failure to provide a property search to your visitors is tantamount to opening an online store with no products.
Property searches can take many different forms. What form they take is largely dependent on your Multiple Listing Service (MLS) and web hosting company. The MLS plays the major role in what kind of property search you can make available to your clients. Since a property search is compiled from the data they provide, an MLS sets the rules and regulations on how that data can be disseminated and displayed. Some MLSs are more restrictive than others, and it is these restrictions that will determine what kind of IDX property search you ultimately receive.
|
The acronym IDX stands for Internet Data Exchange. Internet data exchange refers to a reciprocal data sharing agreement between an MLS and real estate brokers and vendors. The agreement consists of protocols for how the MLS data will be shared and transmitted. The most popular form of transmission currently is the ftp retrieval of compressed files. The agreement covers the limit to which this information can be broadcast and who can market the data in public spaces. The IDX agreement also comprises how search data will be formatted and displayed. IDX data can be distributed by the MLS itself, its members, or by vendors such as web hosting companies. Ordinarily, IDX searches are provided in two main styles. One style is framed and the other style is unframed. As a default, most MLSs offer some form of a framed search to their realtor members and the general public. This type of MLS search is better than nothing, and in the arena of real estate marketing, beggars can't be choosers. However, there are severe limitations to most framed property searches. The most profound limitation and drawback is that most framed searches do not feature any form of lead capture or broker/realtor specific lead generation. Considering that you are leveraging the search data to generate leads, the absence of any lead capture is a total disaster. There are workarounds that realtors can implement on their websites to overcome this major deficiency of most framed searches. Look for me to discuss these workaround options in a later article. Another major drawback to framed searches is that you have no control over what property data is displayed to the user and how that data is presented. The MLS or vendor decides what information to include and how this information will look. This can lead to endless frustration for realtors with a branded website because the colors of the framed search may or may not match their color scheme and theme. Additionally, not being able to manipulate what listing data is available can be a serious problem. Some realtors prefer for their clients to be able to see the physical addresses of properties they find. Other realtors do not. Regardless of what may be preferred, the decision in a framed search is made for them. To give you an example of what I'm talking about, the worst framed IDX search I've seen to date has to be the framed IDX search of CLAW in Los Angeles, California. Not only is this IDX completely devoid of any lead capture, but it also lists the complete listing agent and broker contact information in the property search results. Imagine being stuck with this MLS search on your website. Not only will you not get any leads, but you will be referring your hard earned traffic directly to your competition! OUCH! CLAW members have my deepest sympathies. |
Which Website Would You Prefer?Listed below are some current realtor websites that are live on the Internet today. These sites were selected based on their differences in property search content. Click the corresponding links to each site and try to view them from the perspective of an ordinary web surfer looking to search for available real estate.
No IDX Search
Framed IDX Search
Unframed IDX Search |
The best case scenario for IDX is an unframed IDX search where an MLS is reasonably flexible and has very few formatting restrictions. Fewer formatting restrictions means that a vendor, such as a web hosting company, has relative freedom to make the IDX the best it can be by using their programming and editorial resources.
All IDX searches are not created equal. Certain real estate web hosting vendors are better than others at bulding an IDX search that is optimized for prospecting purposes. I have yet to see an IDX better than that offered by Superlative in their Version 5 product. The Superlative IDX solution looks phenomenal, has lead capture integrated throughout, as well as a complete back-end lead management system. To top it all off, their IDX is fully customizable! Realtor and broker clients can include or omit whatever search fields they desire and specifically choose how the search results are displayed.
It wasn't that long ago (approximately three years) that a real estate web site wasn't expected to be much more than an extension of an agent's marketing portfolio. Not long ago, a successful realtor website was simply one that looked great and impressed visitors. Times have changed dramatically and now a realty web site is expected to serve as a primary prospecting tool. As I mentioned above, the key to online prospecting and lead generation success for real estate professionals is leveraging the property search. An unframed MLS search is preferred.
This, of course, begs the question: What is a good IDX search? The following are a few key elements to look for when making a decision on what IDX is best for your business:
That's it for this treatment of IDX. We're going to keep on rolling in the next lesson and delve further into the tactics of lead capture. Missing that lesson could actually cost you potential business so be sure to check it out!
Best of Luck!
Steven Meinking
Professional SEO and Realtor
Professional Real Estate Web Site Design