Daily Archives: July 15, 2012

Top 10 metros for foreclosures | Mount Kisco Real Estate

<a href="<a href=California image via Shutterstock.

The number of homes hit with foreclosure-related filings during the first six months of the year fell nearly 11 percent from the same period a year ago, to 1.05 million homes, according to public records aggregated by RealtyTrac.

Compared to the second half of 2011, however, foreclosure activity was up more than 2 percent, with 1 in every 126 U.S. housing units receiving a foreclosure filing.

Overall, foreclosure-related filings — including default notices, auction sale notices and bank repossessions — decreased in June for the 21st consecutive month. But foreclosure starts were up on a year-over-year basis for the second month in a row.

“Foreclosure starts began boiling over in more markets in the first half of the year, particularly in the second quarter,” said Brandon Moore, CEO of RealtyTrac, in a statement. “The increases in foreclosure starts in the first half of the year will likely translate into more short sales and bank repossessions in the second half of the year and into next year,” he said.

The report also shows that foreclosure activity continues to burn some of the same metros in 2012 — like Stockton and Modesto in California’s Central Valley and Riverside-San Bernardino-Ontario just east of Los Angeles.

Among metros with populations larger than 200,000, these metros rank No. 1, No. 2 and No. 3, respectively, for foreclosure activity through the half-year and for June. In the second quarter, it was the same triumvirate, but Modesto and Riverside-San Bernardino-Ontario switched places in the rankings.

They aren’t the only California metros facing the brunt of the foreclosure fire.

An 18 percent year-over-year increase in foreclosure starts in California in June left the Golden State with the highest foreclosure rate of any state for the month, a jump that landed nine of its metros in the top 10 for June.

Looking at the first half of the year overall, California metros took the top five spots, with Stockton, Modesto, Riverside-San Bernardino-Ontario, Vallejo-Fairfield and Merced collectively averaging a foreclosure rate of 2.5 percent, with about 1 in 40 housing units in those markets receiving a foreclosure-related filing. Two California metros — Bakersfield (No. 8) and Visalia-Porterville (No. 10) — made the top 10, too.

Atlanta-Sandy Springs-Marietta, Ga. (No. 6); Phoenix-Mesa-Scottsdale, Ariz. (No. 7); and Las Vegas-Paradise, Nev. (No. 10) were the non-California metros in the top 10.

Despite the heavy California presence in the metro top 10, Nevada, even after seeing a 61 percent year-over-year drop in foreclosure activity, tops U.S. states with about 1 in every 57 of its housing units having received a foreclosure filing in the first half of 2012. Arizona, too, saw a drop (37 percent) in foreclosures from a year ago, taking the No. 2 spot on the list. Georgia is No. 3.

10 states with highest foreclosure rates

AreaForeclosure rate (Jan. – June 2012)
U.S.1 in 126 housing units
Nevada1 in 57
Arizona1 in 58
Georgia1 in 63
California1 in 64
Florida1 in 65
Illinois1 in 71
Michigan1 in 98
Colorado1 in 103
Ohio1 in 106
Utah1 in 108

Source: RealtyTrac

See the pages below for data from the 10 metros with the highest foreclosure rates during the first six months of 2012.

Location: Stockton, Calif.

 

Foreclosure rate (Jan. – June 2012)1 in every 38 housing units
Percent change in foreclosure rate (July – Dec. 2011)-13.42%
Total housing units233,755
Metro population685,306

7 Must-Read Books for Marketing Agencies This Summer | North Salem NY Realtor

We’ve just finished compiling our Poolside Study Guide for Marketing Agencies, and we’ve got summer reading on the mind. So I surveyed some of the marketing fanatics in our office and our collection of amazing partner agencies to find out their best recommendations for marketing agency summer reads. You can’t live on gossip magazines and paperbacks alone!

Here’s what we came up with to keep you entertained on the beach or while you’re poolside. And as always, we’d love to gather your reading recommendations, too! Leave your favorite marketing books in the comments below so we can all pick up a copy for ourselves.

Our Favorite Summer Reads for Marketing Agencies

The Marketing Agency Blueprint: The Handbook for Building Hybrid PR, SEO, Content, Advertising, and Web Firms (By Paul Roetzer)

describe the imageWe’ve said it before, we’ll say it again. This handbook from HubSpot partner Paul Roetzer is one of the most forward-thinking books we’ve read on building a top-performing marketing agency. The handbook challenges today’s marketing agencies to leave behind the traditional agency model in favor of a hybrid approach that crosses channels and focuses on a more efficient marketing system.

Read Reviews of The Marketing Agency Blueprint

The Consulting Bible: Everything You Need to Know to Create and Expand a Seven-Figure Consulting Practice (By Alan Weiss)

51zielkxBlL. BO2,204,203,200 PIsitb sticker arrow click,TopRight,35, 76 AA300 SH20 OU01 If you’re on the consulting side of the agency world, The Consulting Bible is your best comprehensive guide to developing thought leadership and building your consulting practice. The book covers:

  • The origins and evolution of the consulting profession
  • The range of consulting methodologies
  • Developing proposals and setting value based pricing

Read Reviews of The Consulting Bible

The Art of Client Service: 58 Things Every Advertising & Marketing Professional Should Know (By Robert Solomon)

“A fast-reading, pocket-size, actionable checklist,” The Art of 412L2JSXLJL. BO2,204,203,200 PIsitb sticker arrow click,TopRight,35, 76 AA300 SH20 OU01 Client Service gives client service pros a set of essential ideas to live and work by.

We love the book for its creativity; I mean, how can you go wrong with a chapter called “What happens when I screw up?” But it also has a great deal of practical tactics to increase client retention and grow your business. 

Read Reviews of The Art of Client Service

Clients for Life: Evolving From an Expert-for-Hire to an Extraordinary Adviser (By Jagdish Sheth & Andrew Sobel)

51ztf5ZY3qL. BO2,204,203,200 PIsitb sticker arrow click,TopRight,35, 76 AA300 SH20 OU01 Featuring portraits of some of history’s most storied advisors, including Machiavelli, Sir Thomas More, and J.P. Morgan, Clients for Life gives consultants and agencies a reason to get inspired about the approach they take to client services. Reviewer Michael McLaughlin wrote, “An experienced consultant may find many of the concepts in this book familiar, but you may question how well you’re following the authors’ great advice.”

Read Reviews of Clients for Life

The Lords of Strategy: The Secret Intellectual History of the New Corporate World (By Walter Kiechel)

41ycvUWGvuL. BO2,204,203,200 PIsitb sticker arrow click,TopRight,35, 76 AA300 SH20 OU01 For the history buffs, The Lords of Strategy gives you a look back into how the consulting industry was born. This book “tells the story of the four men who invented corporate strategy as we know it and set in motion the modern, multibillion-dollar consulting industry.”  

We like this book for the perspective it gives on the forces that have shaped the industry and where it may be headed.

Read Reviews of The Lords of Strategy

Managing the Professional Service Firm (By David Maister)

describe the imageDon’t let the politics get you down. Managing the Professional Service Firm gives you the tools you need to deal with any management issues in your marketing agency. Drawing on 10 years of research and consulting, author David Maister breaks down complex organizational issues that are unique to agencies and gives you tangible approaches to becoming a more effective services firm. Despite the heavy topic, Maister manages to keep this reading light and interesting – so don’t be afraid to pack this one in your beach bag.

Read Reviews of Managing the Professional Service Firm

Clients from Hell: A Collection of Anonymously-Contributed Client Horror Stories From Designers (By Anonymous)

51VeclGLz0L. BO2,204,203,200 PIsitb sticker arrow click,TopRight,35, 76 AA300 SH20 OU01 Finally, enjoy a little light reading (and some serious catharsis) on your summer beach trips with Clients From Hell, a compilation of anonymously-contributed client horror stories from agency designers. Whether you’re a designer yourself, bear witness to clients who insist on using Comic Sans, or spend your days negotiating with clients who can’t stop huffing and puffing about their latest website redesign, this book will get you laughing but still keep you immersed enough in the agency world to come back from vacation ready and raring to go.

Read Reviews of Clients From Hell

We could go on for pages about thought-provoking marketing and consulting books. If you manage to plow through these, other books we’ve heard great things about include The Thank You Economy, by Gary Vaynerchuk, and The Introvert’s Guide to Success in Business and Leadership, by Lisa Petrilli.

Answers To Your Top 7 Questions From the Science of Inbound Marketing | Waccabuc Realtor

Yesterday, HubSpot hosted a one-time-only webinar on the Science of Inbound Marketing, hosted by Dan Zarrella, HubSpot’s social media scientist, and VP of Marketing at Hootsuite Ben Watson. As you might have heard, we tried to break the world record for the largest webinar ever, but missed the mark. So for now, that record is still held by, well, HubSpot… but we gave ourselves a run for our money 😉

Just because we didn’t break the record, though, doesn’t mean that the Science of Inbound Marketing wasn’t an epic success. And as always, you guys had some excellent questions to ask of our presenters, not all of which we could get to on Thursday. And since we’re not publishing the webinar or it’s slides, we’re more than pleased to answer a round of them here! Read on to get the answers to your top seven questions about the science of inbound marketing.

Answers to the Top 7 Questions From #InboundSci

1) Why do you consider email marketing to be inbound?

Inbound marketing is all about attracting people to your business by providing interesting, helpful, relevant content, instead of interrupting people who aren’t interested in your business by shoving your message down their throat. As such, email marketing, when approached in an inbound fashion, is one part of the entire inbound marketing landscape: SEO, social media, blogging, etc.

What do I mean by “inbound” email marketing? It means you’re only emailing people who have explicitly asked that you email them — you’ve done something to attract them to you so much so that they have asked to receive more communications from you. With an opt-in email list, it’s up to you as an email marketer to keep up that inbound approach by providing those contacts with the same kind of helpful, informative content that made them attracted to you in the first place. But if you start blasting an unsegmented email list with irrelevant content, whether they opted in or not, you’re no longer doing email marketing that fits into the inbound marketing approach.

2) How do you make a somewhat boring product or industry more interesting on social media?

First, it’s critical to remember that what you think is “boring” isn’t boring to leads who are looking for that exact solution! For example, changing your oil is kind of a boring topic to most people outside the auto industry … until they need to learn how to change their oil, that is.

That being said, it’s all about finding a relatable angle for your audience. If your social media content addresses your network’s pain points, it will be inherently interesting. If you haven’t defined personas yet, this will be extremely helpful in identifying those pain points so your content can center around them.

Social media is also a more laid back medium than, say, email. I mean, it’s right there in the name — “social” media. So don’t be afraid to be a little humorous! Use visual content instead of making people read! Heck, combine the two and do some memejacking! We’ve written an entire post on how to make “boring” content interesting if you’re looking for more ideas, but if you can center your social content around your audience’s pain points and lighten it up with a more colloquial tone, you’ll have a much more engaged social network.

3) Any thoughts on what makes people more likely to engage on social media?

Good question. Engagement is one of those fluffy marketing words that’s actually pretty important — if people don’t engage with your social content, you’ll have a mighty hard time growing your reach and getting that juicy lead-gen content out to the masses. But that doesn’t mean you should only post lead-gen content; that alone won’t get you social engagement. A mix of content is best — lead generation content, third-party content, news content, and particularly visual content for sites like Facebook, Google+, and Pinterest.

Dan also performed some research to determine not just what content types incite social shares, but what, on a higher level, motivates social media fans and followers to share. Take a look at what he found:

Science of Inbound Marketing - Why tweet?

So ask yourself — is the content you’re posting to social media novel, or is it just the same ol’ thing people are used to reading? Or perhaps you’re breaking some critical news; that would certainly play into your network’s desire to share relevant content. After all, everyone loves to be the first to break big news. Or perhaps you’re not unleashing anything groundbreaking via your social networks today, but you do have some thought leadership content in your arsenal. If you can make your network sound smart to their networks, you’re providing the type of content people will share.

4) What factors tend to influence an email’s click-through rate?

As Dan and Ben both highlighted in the webinar, the time of day that an email lands in a recipient’s inbox is a huge influence on your email’s click-through rate. While the best times to send emails will inevitably vary by audience, Dan’s data shows that sending an email out at 6 AM yielded the highest click-through rate.
The Science of Inbound Marketing - CTR time-of-dayThe lowest click-through rate, on the other hand, happened at 4 PM, just before the end of a 9-5 work day. People are likely paying less attention to their inboxes at this time, and are probably more focused on finishing the day’s tasks before going home.

5) If I send emails more frequently, can I get blacklisted as a spammer?

You certainly can, but getting blacklisted as a spammer isn’t typically dependent on just one behavior like increasing email frequency. The frequency with which you email should really be dependent on the size of your audience and your ability to appropriately segment them. You don’t need to include every contact in your database in every single email send you schedule — in fact, doing this will result in more unsubscribes and SPAM reports, because the content contained in the email message can’t possibly be relevant to such a broad audience. It’s that type of email marketing behavior that gets you blacklisted as a spammer. If you’re interested in increasing the frequency of your email marketing sends, it’s best to approach it scientifically; reference our blog post that tells you how to run an email sending frequency test.

6) How do audiences respond to command words in calls-to-action?

According to Dan’s data, pretty negatively, especially if that word is “submit.” In fact, using the word “submit” earned email senders a 14% conversion rate, while using a CTA without the word “submit” increased that conversion rate to 17%.

conversion rate by submit

When it comes to conversion rates, every percentage point matters. Dan extended his research to look at the number of clicks buttons received based on other copy, too. While “Submit” wasn’t the worst copy you could use, it’s greatly surpassed in performance by “Click Here” and “Go.”

clicks by button text

The moral of the story? People respond much better to certain command words in CTAs than others!

7) How can a company or brand increase blog readership?

Well, lots of things! But the key is to capitalize on each kind of traffic your blog receives — organic, direct, paid, email, social, etc. For example, do you know that email is an excellent source of traffic for your blog already? Perhaps you should put effort towards increasing blog subscribers, then, so your blog alert emails can help drive more traffic. Start putting blog subscribe buttons on more visible parts of your website, promoting your blog subscription in email marketing sends, and sharing it via social media.

Or perhaps you’ve seen that a lot of your blog traffic comes from organic search, but you haven’t really been putting much effort into SEO. That’s a big lever you can pull to increase blog readership if you’re already seeing some success with very little effort! Identify keywords you’d like to drive traffic for, and generate topics around them to start driving more organic traffic to your site.

Many companies also find success growing their blog readership by guest blogging more frequently. Not only does guest blogging — writing blog content for other websites — help you get access to a new audience that doesn’t know you yet, but the inbound links will help you with that SEO, too 😉

Sellers scarce as Twin Cities housing inventory hits 8-year low | Cross River NY Real Estate

Inventory and months of supply in Minneapolis-St. Paul dropped to record lows in June, with inventory dropping 31% since last year to the lowest reading since January 2004.

Months of supply dropped 44.6% to 4.4 months, well below the six-month supply indicating a balanced market, according to a report released Thursday by the Minneapolis Area Association of Realtors.

Cari Linn, president of MAAR, said the low supply is “already becoming an issue.”

“We’ve got a nice supply of buyers here, and they are looking for properties. So we are seeing more multiple offers this time than we’ve seen in a long time,” Linn said, mentioning instances where properties racked up multiple offers within a few hours of listing.

The Minneapolis area has long been an attractive place to live. At 5.2% unemployment, the area has the second lowest jobless rate in the country for areas with a population of 1 million or more, coming in just behind Oklahoma City.

“We’re hoping that all of this good news comes out and we get more traditional sellers to the marketplace, because they may now be on the fence and waiting for prices to go up,” she said.

The number of homes for sale in the area has dropped for 17 consecutive months, and is now at 17,103 active listings. Sellers introduced 6,359 properties to the market in June, 8.1% fewer than June of 2011.

With the small number of homes on the market, Linn said buyers are now jumping at distressed sales when they may have previously avoided them. This led to more buying of distressed properties than distressed properties entering the market, which Linn called “a good sign that the market is becoming more traditional-based.”

Distressed sales in the area accounted for 30.6% of all new listings and 34.6% of all closed sales, the lowest numbers since June 2008 and August 2008, respectively. For both distressed and traditional homes, June saw 4,917 purchase agreements in the area — 16% higher than June 2011.

The low inventory and heavy demand also means homes on the market are selling much faster than they were last year. According to the report, homes sold in 113 days on average, down 22% year-over-year, with cash buyers making up 19.3% of all closed sales.

This has caused prices to rise significantly over last year. The median sales price rose 10.7% to $179,500 — the second-largest gain since January 2004, and fourth consecutive month of year-over-year gains. Excluding only June of 2010, home prices are at their highest level since October 2008.

Traditional median home prices were up 3.4% to $215,000, while foreclosure prices were up 10.5% to $124,700. Only short sales saw a price decrease, coming in at 2.7% below last year at $126,500.

Affordable housing issuance set to drop even as demand rises | South Salem Real Estate

Falling mortgage rates and tighter credit may force state housing finance agencies to issue even fewer mortgages to low-income borrowers this year, according to Standard & Poor’s research.

State HFAs finance the purchase of affordable housing as long as the rate on their debt is less than the mortgage rates the agencies charge. The downgrade of U.S. credit — by S&P — and other factors drove up the costs on state agency debt. At the same time, mortgage rates continue to plunge to new lows thanks to the Federal Reserve.

The return between their debt and rates is still positive, according to S&P, but thinning.

“The low rates on borrowed money have made the spreads increasingly thin, leaving the agencies with reduced profitability and diminished debt service coverage,” analysts said. (Click on the graph below to expand.)

Issuance of HFA multifamily bonds shifted above $200 billion in 2011, more than doubling from two years prior.

Before the downgrade of the U.S. debt, S&P rated more than half all affordable housing issuance AAA, but as of July, only 8% of these bonds hold the gilded rating, because of the agencies’ link to the U.S. rating.

The loans themselves perform better than the average mortgage, even though borrowers generally have lower FICO scores and a small, if any, down payment. The delinquency rate on HFA loans was roughly 6% in the third quarter, less than the average rate across the entire mortgage space.

Some are already looking to the secondary market to fund future affordable housing loans, according to Moody’s Investors Service.

“Some HFAs have also diversified somewhat and receive revenues from other sources, such as servicing fees,” S&P analysts said. “As long as interest rates remain low, agencies that can exercise these options will remain more strongly capitalized and, in our opinion, have stronger credit quality.”

Housing Is Not Out of the Woods Yet: Former FDIC Chair Bair | Katonah NY Real Estate

A rash of better-than-expected housing data in the first half of the year has some economists and analysts saying that the home sector has hit bottom and that a recovery is not far away. However, we have heard this before, and so far the road has been uneven, at best.

Former FDIC chair Sheila Bair is among those who’s only “cautiously optimistic” that housing is on the mend.

“I think it is slowly healing,” says Bair who is now a senior adviser at Pew Charitable Trusts. “[But] we are not out of the woods yet. I think there is a risk of a double-dip in housing.”

While housing starts and home sales have improved, the rate of home foreclosures has picked up again. In the first half of 2012 more than 1 million properties were in foreclosure, up 2 percent from the previous six months, according to RealtyTrac’s mid-year report Thursday. In the first quarter, foreclosure starts were up for the first time since 2009.

“These properties that are starting the foreclosure process are mostly homeowners who likely have been missing their payments for a year or more and just now are officially starting the foreclosure process,” says Daren Blomquist, a vice president at RealtyTrac.

Banks held off foreclosure processing until the knew the outcome of The National Mortgage Settlement that culminated in February, which explains the recent increase in foreclosures.

In the accompanying interview, Bair notes that mortgage delinquencies are actually on the downtrend. Homeowners at least 30 days late on their mortgage payment dropped in the first quarter of the year to 7.4 percent compared to 7.6 percent the previous quarter, according to the Mortgage Bankers Association. The industry trade group estimates that 3 million homes are behind on their mortgage payments.

During her time at the helm of the FDIC, Bair was one of the first to warn about a potential mortgage meltdown. In the year since, she’s been very critical of President Obama’s handling of the housing crisis. She even has chided Obama’s administration for trying to fix the problem “on the cheap.”

To date, 13 million homeowners are underwater on their mortgage and more likely to be at risk of falling behind on payments.

Bair tells Aaron the best thing for housing right now is not additional programs, but to simplify and streamline the process for borrowers who no longer afford to live in their homes. The federal government currently has a mix of 14 various relief programs for homeowners — an alphabet soup of programs run by a handful of different agencies.

Chase mortgage profits swell on HARP, slower buybacks | Bedford Hills NY Homes

JPMorgan Chase ($36.07 2.03%) reported higher profits from its mortgage business due mostly to a major government refinancing program and slower repurchases.

The bank reported $604 million in profits from mortgage origination and servicing during the second quarter, compared to a $649 million loss in the year-ago period.

Including repurchase losses, revenue on its mortgage production line grew 62% from the year-ago quarter to $1.6 billion. Chase said it saw more gains from its involvement in the Home Affordable Refinancing Program.

The bank originated $43.9 billion in new home loans in the second quarter, up 29% from one year ago. Its retail channel netted a record $26.1 billion in new originations.

Its liability for repurchases dropped $216 million to less than $3.3 billion as of March 31, according to its financial filing. Chase also narrowed losses in the quarter to roughly $10 million from buying back faulty mortgages from investors.

“The net repurchase number should be approximately zero for the next quarter,” said Chief Financial Officer Doug Braunstein. “The real difference is our cure rates. As these demands go deeper into the securities they’re taking more mortgages that have been paying longer, and we’re decreasing the amount of demands.”

Unresolved repurchase requests from the government-sponsored enterprises dropped to $1.6 billion.

Braunstein added the bank saw “a modest increase” in demands from private-label securities investors.

“Much of that will make its way through litigation,” Braunstein said.

15 Android Apps Every Blogger Should Have | Bedford NY Real Estate

Blogging has always been about expressing yourself and sharing what you know on the Internet. Android as an operating system is growing fast thanks to its availability on a wide range of smartphones and tablet devices as well as the fast growing number of applications that are available in Google Play. With huge amounts of innovation spurring the technological advancement of mobile phones and the landscape of mobile apps, bloggers these days are offered the opportunity to not only blog on-the-go, but also to conduct many blogging-related tasks on their smartphones when they are away from their computer.

The following are 15 free Android apps that you should check out and download if you are an avid blogger who update multiple blogs regularly. They cost nothing so feel free to try them out on your phone.

1. WordPress

WordPress is undoubtedly the most popular blogging platform on the Internet. This app, made compatible with self-hosted WordPress blogs as well as blogs hosted on WordPress.com, allows you to perform many essential tasks such as creating, editing and publishing blog posts, moderating comments, checking on analytics data as well as publishing photos or videos taken with the camera on your mobile phone.

2. Blogger

Blogger is another popular platform that many personal bloggers use. If you have a blog on Blogger, then you should definitely give this app a try. However, the functionality of this app is still very limited as compared to the WordPress app, which is surprising as Google itself is behind this official app of their blogging service.

3. Tumblr

Many bloggers prefer to maintain a Tumblr blog, also known as a microblog, rather than a full blown blog. This is because posting short blurbs of interesting content such as quotes, videos and photos are less taxing. This app, made for Tumblr bloggers, has useful features for posting content, scheduling posts, viewing and replying to messages, and you can even manage multiple Tumblr blogs with the app. It will also show you Tumblr blogs of Contacts in your address book, so you can start following them.

4. Writer

Blogging and getting things done using your smartphone is not easy, especially when there are so many distractions on the screen itself. Apps and incoming notifications are the most common productivity killers. Writer is a stripped-down word processor that aims to solve this problem by providing a distraction-free writing environment within your smartphone or tablet so that you can focus solely on creating text content with peace of mind.

5. Google Drive

Google Drive allows bloggers to store all kinds of documents including Word documents, Excel spreadsheets, images, audio, videos and many others in the Cloud. Apart from just storing them, the app will sync these documents across multiple devices linked to your Google account. Once synchronized, bloggers can access their files wherever they are. If you have a blog post that is halfway done on your laptop, you can continue to work on it using your phone while commuting to work.

6. Dictionary.com

Not sure about the exact meaning of a word that you are going to put into your blog post? Eager to find an alternative word to use in your post? Want to know the meaning of a word or phrase used in comments posted by your readers? Well, Dictionary.com is the solution for all the above problems. The app is especially useful for bloggers that don’t speak English natively and the ad-free version only costs $2.99.

7. SwiftKey Keyboard

This is a dream-come-true app for those who are tired of typos and the small keyboard buttons on your tablets or smartphones. SwiftKey Keyboard does not only auto-correct your typos, it also offers word predictions based on your past typing activities. You can even personalize the word predictions by asking the keyboard to learn your choice of words on Facebook, Twitter, Gmail and blog posts.

8. Photo Editor

With a smartphone, we can snap photos on-the-go and attach them to our blog posts either immediately or in the near future. From time to time, we might need to do some minor touch-ups on the photos that we’ve taken and this is where Photo Editor comes in. With this app, you can crop, edit, and resize your photos as well as add effects, texts and drawings onto them.

9. Disqus

Many bloggers are integrating the Disqus commenting system onto their blogs because of the community features that bring blog commenters back and keep them engaged. With the Disqus Android app, you can moderate your comments, publish responses to comments that you receive and keep the engagement levels high despite being away from your computer.

10. Flipboard

Flipboard only launched its Android app recently. The app allows users to browse through their Facebook, Twitter and Google+ streams, as well as Google Reader feeds in a beautiful flipping manner. It also consolidates and curates a stream of important stories for those who are too busy to go through everything. As a blogger, using this app and browsing through interesting news content daily will give you fresh ideas on what to write about in your next blog post.

11. BeyondPod Podcast Manager

Bloggers who don’t have time or don’t like to read may prefer to listen to audio content or watch videos. BeyondPod allows you to subscribe, download, listen to audio podcasts and watch video podcasts on-the-go. This app is extremely useful for bloggers who are driving a lot because for them, there is very little reading time.

12. Pocket

As bloggers, we tend to browse the Internet a lot on smartphones, and will come across insightful articles and blog posts that we would love to read but cannot due to limited time. Pocket solves this problem by letting us save links that we wish to read later. The app will download a minimalist version of an article, blog post, video or just about everything so that we can come back to them later.

13. Evernote

Evernote is a very useful app to capture ideas that come to mind when you are out and about. You can capture an image, write text, do sketches (with Skitch), record an audio clip or create a to-do list with Evernote. All these materials will then synchronized across all your devices so you can be sure that all your notes are easily accessed via your phone, desktop and browser.

14. Tape-a-Talk Voice Recorder

An app that records audio is very important for bloggers. You can use this app to record an interview with an authority figure in your industry, or make note-to-self reminders. Apart from recording, Tape-a-Talk has the functionality of uploading your recording to several services once the recording is completed. The paid version, which costs $4.99, comes with basic editing features such as cut, repair and rename.

15. gAnalytics

The amount of traffic that you receive together with other site metrics like bounce rates are crucial if you are making any form of income from your blog. gAnalytics is like the mobile version of Google Analytics which basically allows you to bring site usage statistics wherever you go. With this app, you can stop worrying about the traffic performance of your blog the next time you travel.

Did I Miss Out Any Useful Apps?

Pound Ridge Homes | Are You Creating Disney Magic in Your Real Estate Business?

I have always been a huge Disney fan. I marvel at the magic that is created in their theme parks.

The devil is in the details, and Disney is a champion at the details.

Every night at Disney parks, the streets are power-washed and immaculately cleaned and the paint is touched up. You’ll never see a character from one land “accidently” in another land, and you can’t buy gum at Disney parks. Employees are referred to as “cast members,” and the list goes on and on.

This weekend I was doing some research about Disneyland as we prepare for a family trip later this year. I came upon the nostalgic site, Yesterland, which has photos and stories of rides from Disney parks from yesteryear. I was surprised to find out that the iconic letters that spelled “CALIFORNIA” and the Golden Gate Bridge were recently retired from Disneyland’s sister park, California Adventure Park.

As I did a little digging, I soon found out that California Adventure has just gone through a $1 billion (yep, billion with a “b”) remodel. They reportedly spent more remodeling it than what it cost to build it in 2001. Gone is a lot of the California nostalgia, and now there is more of that Disney magic that many felt was missing from the park.

Article continues below

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Before:

Photo Courtesy of the Disney Parks Blog

After:

Photo Courtesy of the Disney Parks Blog

As I read through an article on CNN and then The Huffington Post, I thought to myself, “They did it again. They continue to raise the bar.”

Disney undeniably sets the bar extremely high. Let’s be real — there is no park in the world that can match the magic that Disney has created.

But why?

There are hundreds, if not thousands, of parks across the world. Why has no one succeeded in this area? I go back to what I originally said: The devil is in the details, and Disney has mastered the details. Not only that, they refuse to rest on their laurels.

What can the real estate industry glean from this?

Details matter. They matter more than ever before.

Those listing photos taken with an iPhone? Not good enough today. Spend the money on a professional photographer.

Those black-and-white fliers crammed into a flier box that are damp from the sprinklers? Awful. Get rid of them and reconsider if it’s worth even having a flier box.

Speaking of fliers, those misspellings and odd capital letter placement (yes, “gorgeous” never needs to be capitalized in the middle of a sentence) are unacceptable. Have a second set of eyes read and edit every piece of marketing that gets published or printed with your name or brand on it.

An outdated website with links that don’t work? Unacceptable. When is the last time you went through your site and checked every link? Hire an intern to do this and you may be surprised. It’s easier than ever to change your site to something that works, that represents your brand and that gets you business! Here are a few of my favorite agent sites — each one of these evokes an emotion and clearly showcases the agent’s brand and style:

Details matter more than ever. As an agent, broker or anyone in the real estate industry, we can do better. We can do better with all the little choices we make every single day.

Of course, Disney has a multibillion-dollar budget and a rock-star team, but what can you do with what you have today to create that magic?

What can you do to capture the magic, emotion and exhilaration that happen when a client sells her home, or finds the home of her dreams?

Are you just handing your clients the keys to their new home, or are you taking the time to make the most of this enormous moment in their lives?

Are you sending out the same old marketing materials or are you connecting with your clients personally when you see on Facebook that their son won the spelling bee at school, or they just went on an amazing family vacation?

Isn’t it time we infused a little Disney magic into our industry?

Foot Traffic: California | Bedford Corners Real Estate

  • Foot traffic can provide great insight into the direction of future home sales.  SentriLock, LLC. provides NAR Research with monthly data on the number of showings.
  • Foot traffic in the area covered by the Mammoth Lakes Board of REALTORS® (CA) rose 28% in June of 2012 compared to the same period in 2011.
  • The 12-month growth in traffic eased 16% in May.
  • The late summer tends to be the strongest time of year for foot traffic in this market and showings have shown a pattern of consistent growth stronger over the last 3 months boding well for this summer’s trend.