Category Archives: Pound Ridge

Relevant is the New Black – Stop Sucking and Start Mattering | Pound Ridge Real Estate

This isn’t breaking news or an exclusive by any means.

If I did years of extensive research, analyzed data, built fancy charts, used 3-D graphs on my iPad, and touted inarguable, NAR homebuyer and seller survey-backed findings, it would lead to just five words.

Follow-up in real estate sucks.

I define “sucks” two different ways.

The first: It sucks that there is not more time in each day to follow up with people you have already built a good relationship with or helped buy or sell a home. If someone is not currently in the market to buy or sell, only so many minutes can be allotted to relationship maintenance.

Especially, I should add, if you actually produce significant GCI (gross commission income) or carry a lot of listings.

I wish there were a perfect world. One where all you did was chit-chatted with friends on Facebook all day whom you worked with previously, just calling your sphere to say hello and asking how the kids are.

Too bad you are busy as hell and reality is such an important thing to consider when running a business.

Bottom line? Past clients and referrals make or break your business, but you could likely receive more if you followed up effectively.

The other way follow-up sucks in real estate is that it lacks the most important thing in marketing right now: context.

As the social Web has evolved, experiences are becoming increasingly personalized. This includes ads and marketing messages that we are exposed to.

This change means you need to completely re-evaluate your follow-up marketing strategy with your sphere of influence.

Here’s why: When an ad runs in my stream on Facebook that says, “Are you 33? Do you love your iPad? Kids using it too?” The answers are yes and yes and yes. I actually welcome ads like that with open arms. I can’t wait to click them and see where they lead.

Meanwhile in the real estate industry I see marketing like: fajita recipe cards, sports calendars, set-your-clock-back reminders, open house invitations, emailed market reports, and just listed/just sold postcards.

These are things that lack context with 95 percent of people with a pulse.

You have to go deeper in 2012.

In fact, either dig deep or go to sleep (feel free to tweet that).

With everything you do moving forward, please take a moment and ask yourself, whether it is a post card, business card, Facebook update, tweet or phone call, “Is this RELEVANT to the recipient?”

Don’t bullshit here either. Be honest with yourself. It’s critical.

Relevant is the new black.

Contactually, a popular new social CRM (customer relationship manager), can help your efforts towards increased relevancy, both tremendously and immediately.

Money and Happiness

It makes staying in touch with the right contacts fun and simple. I especially enjoy the way it helps you segment your social and email databases into relevant categories. It happens in an interactive game called “The bucket game.” It’s a jovial and quick way to get your unorganized list of contacts into one or more categories (like buyer, seller, past client, Facebook friend, etc.) By approaching this tedious task with a gaming approach, it is actually really fun and you are done in no time at all.

Bucket Your Contacts

Contactually connects your email and social media accounts, analyzes your history with each relationship, and automatically prompts you in a daily email to re-engage with important people who are slipping off your radar.

By leveraging the social graph, anytime you call, email, tweet, Facebook or LinkedIn message someone from Contactually, you have what is relevant to them, in real time, in the form of their live social streams. If their latest tweet was about their kid’s baseball game, there is your reason to call.

The paid version of Contactually also brings integration into Gmail, Salesforce, Highrise, and many other popular and robust CRMs.

Increased context and relevancy with your sphere of influence, with a little help from a software. I dig it.

Of all the dings in your agent armor, an important person slipping off your radar should be considered a big, fat dent. Avoided at all costs.

If your current marketing efforts are extinguishing more interest in what you do than they are generating actual new business, time for a pivot.

You can learn more about Contactually or sign up for a 30-day free trial now.

Or you can reorder sports calendars for 2013. The choice is yours.

Knicks Star Carmelo Anthony & Wife La La Looking for New Digs | Pound Ridge NY Realtor News

Carmelo Anthony will soon be on the move.

No, not from the New York Knicks, whom he joined last year and signed a three-year, $67 million contact extension to become the face of the Big Apple’s NBA franchise. Instead, Melo and his reality TV star wife, La La, are out looking for a new Manhattan apartment to rent, now that their current pad at The Hit Factory has hit the market.

Carmelo Anthony and his wife, La La Anthony. Source: Zimbio

Melo rented the 3,800-square foot penthouse duplex at 421-429 W 54th St, New York, NY 10019 after his trade to New York from the Denver Nuggets last February, but there will be no lease extension now that the 4-bedroom, 3.5-bathroom condo is listed for sale for $5.75 million.

According to the New York Post, La La Anthony was spotted in the Upper East Side looking for the couple’s next NYC abode, which has to include room for their young son.

The Hit Factory is a 25-unit condo building in Columbus Circle that once housed one of the most famous recording studios in the world — a place where everyone from the Rolling Stones to Bruce Springsteen to John Lennon to Mariah Carey cranked out some of the greatest and best-selling music recordings in history.

But for Anthony, who actively sought to move his career to New York after refusing a contract extension with the Nuggets, it’s not music history he cares about. He wants to return the wayward Knicks to NBA playoff prominence, and with a contract that runs through the end of the 2014-2015 season, the All-Star knows his time in New York could be short and intense, if he doesn’t deliver.

Maybe that’s why Melo and his savvy wife, who stars on the VH1 hit “La La’s Full Court Life,” are not rushing to buy any pricy NYC real estate, but instead will continue to be renters.

Three Amazing Ways Social Media is Changing the World | South Salem NY Real Estate

The more I am immersed in the culture of the social web, the more I am certain that it will not only change the world forever, it will change it for the better. Specifically, there are three areas that energize and inspire me!

The democratization of opportunity

A few months ago I had the most uplifting talk with Xavier Damman, the mastermind behind Storify. As a teenager he started working on his idea for a new business by coding in his small apartment in Belgium. He didn’t have a formal education in building a business — in fact, he didn’t have any business experience at all! So he just got to work, teaching himself how to code through free resources on the web and “googling” himself through any roadblocks he faced.

After months of faith and hard work, he had built a meaningful business, attracted Silicon Valley funding and was making his vision come true at the age of 22.

To me, this is so wonderful and amazing! When I was young, to start a business, you had to actually make something. You needed assets, funding and some way to tap into the traditional business infrastucture. Those business barriers have been destroyed, unleashing an unbelievable amount of inspiration and creativity.

coder dojo

We’re in the first generation where our children are the experts. I recently visited a new free, global movement called Coder Dojo (post forthcoming!) that is teaching elementary school children how to create software and apps. This energy, this opportunity, can change the world. The future is something to be achieved, not just an inevitable result of your family’s economic conditions or the university you attended.

Economic power is shifting from those who control to those who share.

Social media as a global unifier

There are now close to 1 billion people registered on Facebook and half of them use it everyday. Research from The Social Habit shows in the sample surveyed, 80% of Americans between 12 and 24 have a Facebook account. Can you name any product in history that has that kind of market penetration?

global digitalSo the world is slowly being unified in one small way through these social platforms. No matter our religion, economic status, political beliefs, or the color of our skin, the Net Generation loves to share favorite apps, complain when Twitter is down, and debate the latest Facebook innovation.

Of course there are still pockets that are left behind. Some people may simply be slower adopters of technology. Some regions of the world may not yet have access to the Internet or oppressive governments limit their citizens ability to connect. But this is changing. The debate is now turning toward the consideration of access to the Internet as a basic human right. Think about the power of that! Could there be a day in our future where nearly every person on earth is united by this pulsing, creative, liberating beam of electrons?

Yes, the social web is filled with spammers and cat jokes but let’s not take for granted how far we have come in connecting global voices in such a short period of time!

The hive of solutions

The social web gives me hope for true, meaningful progress on difficult global issues and re-building a better world.

One only needs to look at the mess that is Washington DC to realize that millions of people are needlessly suffering because of political rancor. In general, our universities reward professors for consistency and longevity instead of flexibility and innovation. Many of our largest and most important companies are straining to remain relevant in a digital world through leaders who cannot open a Twitter account. None of these traditional sources of problem-solving and power can keep up with and respond to the pace of the world today.

network of ideasThankfully, there is another option — our collective, networked intelligence. Perhaps our most glorious hope is that the social web can self-organize to solve problems. The web is clumping into hives of experts who are organized by the problems themselves instead of company silos, national boundaries, or political appointment.

Innovation, education, solutions for urban decay, international diplomacy, health issues, cracking highly complex technical problems — almost every significant human problem is being debated and, and I believe, will eventually be solved by passionate experts wherever they live.

Civilization is being rebuilt through networked intelligence. We are being mobilized and we are all on the same side — a better world.

Obama’s second-term housing design | North Salem Realtor

On the afternoon of Aug. 20, President Barack Obama stepped up to a podium in the White House briefing room for the first time in two months. He had taken criticism from reporters and Republican political operatives for not holding a press conference while his GOP presidential opponent, former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney, took questions from his traveling press corps.

About nine minutes into the 22-minute conference, Obama received this question from Jake Tapper, ABC News senior White House correspondent:

“With the economy and unemployment still the focus of so many Americans, what can they expect in the next couple months out of Washington — if anything — when it comes to any attempt to bring some more economic growth to the country?”

Citing historically low interest rates and a “housing market that is beginning to tick back up, but is still not a all where it needs to be,” Obama, in response, urged Congress to pass a home refinancing plan he proposed eight months earlier.

“There are a lot of Americans still underwater because housing values dropped so precipitously and they’re having trouble refinancing,” Obama told Tapper at the press conference. “We’re going to be pushing Congress to see if they can pass a refinancing bill that puts $3,000 into the pockets of the average family. That’s a big deal. That can be used to strengthen the equity in that person’s home, which would raise home values. Alternatively, that’s $3,000 they can spend on a new computer or clothes for their kid going back to school.”

Two days later the administration dispatched Housing and Urban Development Secretary Shaun Donovan on a multistate trip to promote three Democratic Senate bills the secretary said would complete Obama’s refinancing initiative. (Back in May, Donovan predicted the bills would gain quick bipartisan support.)

Perhaps Tapper should have extended the timeline of his question and asked what homeowners should expect in not just the next two months, but the first year of a possible Obama second term  — considering the chances of his home refinancing initiative gaining passage-worthy bipartisan support in an election year are dubious at best.

HOUSING STRATEGY

Obama campaign spokesman Adam Fetcher tells HousingWire the president has a cogent housing strategy.

“The administration has put forward a plan to help more responsible borrowers refinance their mortgages while taking concrete steps to help families stay in their homes, revitalize the communities hardest-hit by the housing crisis, and reform the mortgage lending market to better protect both consumers and taxpayers,” Fetcher says.

Obama’s amalgamation of housing programs — Home Affordable Modification Program, Home Affordable Refinance Program, second-lien write-downs, forbearance, hardest-hit funds, Federal Housing Administration short refinance and loss-mitigation efforts — is a multipronged attack on the mortgage crisis. Although programs such as HAMP have not met expectations, the president’s overall game plan has fared better.

“The reality is collectively all of them had a very significant impact,” says David Stevens, chief executive of the Mortgage Bankers Association. “I think we have to look at the broad set of solutions that were provided and recognize that many millions of Americans have been helped. The housing market by most experts’ views stabilized, but we still have pockets of significant concern, particularly in those hardest-hit locations.”

The housing affliction is one of President Obama’s most difficult economic obstacles, represented by the $689 billion in second-quarter negative equity that has buried itself into the nation’s economic foundation.

The sickness, however, is contained. In its latest housing scorecard, the Obama administration touted an improving market, citing CoreLogic figures that show the number of underwater borrowers fell 11% from 12.1 million, or 25.2% of all homes with a mortgage, at the beginning of the year to 10.8 million in the second quarter, or 22.3% of homes.

The sideways trajectory of home starts, prices and sales since mid-2009 after free-falling for nearly three years is “attributable to the administration’s aggressive response and also the Federal Reserve’s quantitative easing, which has brought down mortgage rates,” Mark Zandi, Moody’s chief economist, tells HousingWire. “But it’s also fair to say the administration’s policies have fallen short of even their expectations.”

The Obama campaign points out that its push to expand access to refinancing is an idea with aisle-transcending support. In October 2011, shortly before the expansion of HARP, Republican Senators Johnny Isakson, R-Ga., Richard Burr, R-N.C., Scott Brown, R-Mass., and Saxby Chambliss, R-Ga., signed on to a letter in which Sens. Barbara Boxer, D-Calif., and Robert Menendez, D-N.J., urged federal regulators to eliminate loan-to-value limits and loan-level price adjustments. Even top Romney economic adviser Glenn Hubbard put forward a plan in March that is broadly similar to the ones Senate Democrats introduced.

SECOND-TERM PLANS

President Obama’s legislative housing plan heading into a potential second term builds on the HARP expansion, which led to nearly 423,000 Fannie and Freddie mortgages refinanced in the first six months of 2012, more than all of last year, according to the Federal Housing Finance Agency.

The administration was slow to embrace refinancing as a solution to the problem, eventually overcoming its reticence in late 2011. Zandi suspects a concern about mortgage rates rising because of frightened investors suffering from refinancing gave birth to the hesitation. That, he said, would defeat the purpose of a mass refinancing program.

Stevens sees an evolved and learned administration. “HARP 2.0, which has had extraordinary success, is a lesson that I hope the administration takes into the next term if they’re reelected,” he says. “The recognition that programs also need to be made in a participative way, collaboratively with industry. HARP 2.0 clearly reflected that collaboration.”

The president is working to transition foreclosed properties sitting on government books into rental housing, the Obama campaign says, to revitalize communities hit hard by the foreclosure crisis and meet the pressing need for affordable rental housing.

The FHFA launched a pilot program to sell about 2,500 Fannie Mae properties to qualified investors. “This marks the first of a series of steps that the FHFA and the administration will take to develop a smart national program to help manage REO properties,” the White House said in February when the program launched. Real estate investment firm Pacifica Companies is the program’s first winning bidder, purchasing 699 Fannie Mae properties in Florida. The FHFA will announce the winning investors for properties in other areas upon closing of the transactions throughout the rest of the year.

John Taylor, chief executive of the National Community Reinvestment Coalition, says the president needs to focus more on foreclosures going into a second term. “Foreclosures that are waiting in the wing are going to continue to haunt our economy,” Taylor says. About 1.3 million homes, or 3.2% of all homes with a mortgage, were in the national foreclosure inventory in July, down from 1.5 million a year earlier. “It wasn’t his fault, and yes, he made several efforts to address it, but I think he needs to get much more aggressive at keeping people who are still working in their homes.”

For homebuyers, Obama proposes a mortgage lending standard to curtail the likelihood of future foreclosure, transforming into reality his Homeowner Bill of Rights, a set of criteria he says will ensure borrowers and lenders play by the same rules. Topping the list is the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau’s crusade to create clear, straightforward disclosure forms that will be used in all mortgage applications to replace overlapping and confusing forms that contain hidden clauses and opaque terms. The bureau is accepting comments from the public until election day on “easier-to-use” forms scheduled to be released in January.

The bill of rights also requires lenders to disclose mortgage fees and penalties. The CFPB will release final rules in January. The administration, Obama’s campaign says, will “make sure that all those with government-insured loans have these protections and is working with regulators to expand them to all borrowers.

GSE REFORM

President Obama must address a variety of policy issues surrounding the future state of the mortgage finance behemoths Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, who back 90% of mortgages. The key is ensuring regulations are implemented in such way that allow the expansive inter-related network of domestic and international financial institutions to manage the new rules without impeding the steady flow of mortgage credit and capital to the nation’s housing system.

“The administration is working on the future of the GSEs,” Stevens notes. “Availability of credit for qualified Americans is going to be the greatest challenge on a go-forward basis if we don’t address this layering of risk on the financial intermediaries that we depend on to extend credit.”

The difference between Obama and Romney lies not so much with near-term housing policy, but with how they approach mortgage finance reform, specifically with what portion of the market would receive a government backstop. Under an Obama administration, Zandi says, about two-thirds of a normalized mortgage market would draw government backing, which is the average since the Great Depression.

“In a Romney administration, if you told me it was about one-third, I’d say that’s about right, maybe even lower than that.” And in that case, the mortgage market ultimately looks different as the 30-year fixed-rate mortgage becomes less common in the future.

The Treasury’s February 2011 white paper that describes three scenarios to replace Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac sits in neutral. The first option is a completely privatized system of housing finance, with government insurance limited to the Federal Housing Administration, the U.S. Department of Agriculture and the Department of Veterans’ Affairs. An Obama presidency would likely support the second option, which offers a plan similar to the first. In that plan, a backstop mechanism is in place to give homeowners access to credit during a crisis. In the third scenario, the government continues to leave the mortgage market to private players outside of the FHA and other programs, but offers reinsurance for certain mortgage-backed securities.

“We’ll get some clarity with respect to the future of the mortgage finance system in the next four years,” Zandi says. “That’s a key policy decision for the next president that has a high probability of getting done.”

However, absent a near-term requirement for more Treasury capital contributions to Fannie and Freddie, improved second-quarter financial results at the GSEs could ease pressure on Congress and the next administration to pursue far-reaching GSE reform in 2013.

Julia Gordon, director of housing finance and policy at the Center for American Progress, says continued inaction means decisions could be made by exigencies instead of with a coherent plan on how to deploy the government guarantee — including whether to deploy it.

“How will GSE reform look? Who will be advantaged by it? And how do we ensure access and affordability for a broad spectrum of potential homeowners?” Gordon asks. “To me, either administration needs to grapple with that immediately at the start of the new term.”

PROMISES KEPT AND BROKEN

President Obama followed through on many housing-related promises he made during his campaign.

He expanded the housing vouchers program for homeless veterans, provided homebuyers with clearer standards for understanding mortgages and increased the supply of affordable housing.

And under his presidency, 49 states agreed to a mortgage servicing settlement brokered with Bank of America, JPMorgan Chase, Wells Fargo, Ally Financial and Citigroup that the banks pay $25 billion for allegedly signing foreclosure documents en masse without a proper review of the loan file and evicting homeowners while in the modification process. The Obama administration, specifically Donovan, coaxed California Attorney General Kamala Harris, who was not satisfied with the original dollar amount, back to the negotiations committee. Without her, the total would have been closer to $20 million, says Iowa Attorney General Tom Miller, who led the negotiation talks on behalf of the AGs.

However, other campaign promises remain unfulfilled. Obama never implemented a mortgage interest tax credit for nonitemizers and never repealed provisions of the Chapter 13 bankruptcy code that prohibits bankruptcy judges from modifying the original terms of home mortgages, known as cramdown and something that Zandi said homeowners can forget about at this point.

Fetcher, from the Obama campaign, contends that Romney “has zero proposals to help responsible families refinance or stay in their homes. The president believes that responsible homeowners should not have to sit and wait for the market to hit bottom to get relief when there are measures at hand that can make a meaningful difference.”

Fetcher is referring to the Republican presidential candidate’s October 2011 statement to the Las Vegas Review-Journal that the national foreclosure process should be allowed to “run its course and hit the bottom.”

Analysts agree that the industry is now a tailwind for a weaker, broader economy. Housing economists from Joseph LaVorgna at Deutsch Bank to Michelle Meyer at Bank of America cite a better alignment of supply and demand. Several years of extraordinarily slow construction, slow processing of foreclosures and reduced housing turnover is significantly reducing the inventory of homes for sale.

“Housing turnover has fallen to a historic low, particularly for voluntary turnover (not due to foreclosure),” Meyer says. “Of course, a reduction in turnover not only translates to less supply, it also curbs demand.”

The MBA’s Stevens says the president, if elected for a second term, will try to make certain that his legacy reflects a recovering national economy, an accomplishment that can’t happen without a thriving housing market.

“That’s fundamental,” Stevens says. “And it’s something everybody recognizes in a greater way today than they may have four years ago.”

Social Media and Social Change | Pound Ridge NY Real Estate

Social Media and Social Change [INFOGRAPHIC]

Thanks to Social Media, individuals and organizations have been empowered to advance social change in education like never before. Check out this great infographic witch has some good statistics and ways how only one person could make a diffrence in social media.

Social Media Social Change 800 675x2503 Social Media and Social Change [INFOGRAPHIC]

Please, share this post

via dreamgrow.com

Final installment of Gary Keller trilogy a best-seller | North Salem NY Real Estate

The third and final book in Gary Keller’s “Millionaire Real Estate Investor” trilogy is the best-selling real estate-related book on Amazon.com today, and the other two books in the series are ranked in the top 10, despite having been published years ago.

Hold: How to Find, Buy, and Rent Houses for Wealth” debuted on USA Today’s Best-Selling Books list this week at No. 62, just behind singer-songrwriter Neil Young’s memoir, “Waging Heavy Peace.”

Published Sept. 13 by McGraw-Hill, “Hold” details strategies and stories from successful real estate investors for those who want to follow in their footsteps.


Gary Keller

“We wrote this book to share the models and strategies we’ve been using for over 20 years,” said Jim McKissack, a Keller Williams Realty affiliate in Denton, Texas, and one of the book’s five co-authors.

“Where else (but in real estate) can you invest money, get a high rate of return, have a tenant pay down your debt, write off expenses, depreciate over 27 and a half years, exchange it for more properties, and some day own it free and clear and have cash flow,” said Jennice Doty, a Phoenix-based investor and one of Hold’s authors.

The other two books in Keller’s “Millionaire” trilogy are also holding on to top 10 positions on Amazon.com’s list of best-selling real estate-related books. “The Millionaire Real Estate Agent” — published in February 2004 — is ranked No. 2 today.

The Millionaire Real Estate Investor,” published in March 2005, was listed at No. 6 today.

Austin, Texas-based Keller Williams Realty claims to be the second-largest residential real estate company in the U.S. Brokerages affiliated with the franchisor have 690 offices in the U.S. and Canada and more than 80,000 real estate agents.

12 steps to winterize your home | South Salem NY Real Estate

<a href=Autumn image
The leaves are turning, the mornings are getting chilly, and winter isn’t too far away. It’s time once again for my annual checklist of important things that I recommend you do to get your home ready for the coming change of seasons.

On the inside

__ Check smoke detectors: Change your smoke detector batteries, and check for proper operation. Also, check the date on the bottom of the smoke detector. Smoke detectors have a life span, and if yours is more than 10 years old, it may not work properly in a fire, so replace it with a new one. Also, make sure you have a smoke detector at each sleeping room, and one centrally located on each level of the home.

__ Install a carbon monoxide detector: If you have a furnace, fireplace, water heater, or other appliance that’s fueled by propane or natural gas, or if you have an attached garage, install a carbon monoxide detector. They just plug in, and you can get them inexpensively from most home centers and other retailers. If your existing carbon monoxide detector is more than 5 years old, replace it with a new one.

Article continues below

___ Check gas appliances: Speaking of gas appliances, consider having your utility company or heating contractor inspect flues, fittings, and other components of your natural gas or propane appliance and heating systems for potential problems.

___ Change furnace filters: Always put in new furnace filters in the fall. It’s a simple and inexpensive way to add to your home’s efficiency and your family’s comfort.

___ Check and seal heating ducts: Crawl a little, save a lot. Check the ducts in your attic, basement, and crawl space for gaps between ducts and fittings, and seal them with a quality metallic tape, not regular duct tape, which doesn’t last. Also, check to be sure that all of the ducts are off the ground and adequately supported.

___ Check insulation levels: Increased insulation can make a huge difference in both your comfort and your heating bills, so don’t put off having your insulation levels inspected. Call your local utility company or building department to learn what levels are optimum for your area. Check the attic, underfloor, kneewalls, skylight shafts and ductwork. Upgrade underinsulated areas as needed, either as a do-it-yourself project (home centers and hardware stores have all the supplies you need) or with the help of a licensed insulation contractor.

On the outside

___ Check the roof: A roof that leaks not only has the potential to cause significant structural damage, it also wets insulation, which causes a drop in the insulation’s ability to resist heat loss. Examine roofing shingles and flashings, and repair or replace them as needed. It’s much easier and safer to take care of these problems now than during winter’s ice and rain.

___ Seal masonry surfaces: Apply a sealer to concrete driveways and walkways, brick patios and other exterior masonry. Masonry sealers prevent water from penetrating into cracks and crevices where it can freeze and cause serious damage. You can find sealers at home centers, paint stores and masonry supply retailers. Apply with a brush, roller or sprayer.

___ Check weatherstripping: Gaps around doors and windows waste expensive heated air and create chilling interior drafts. Check and replace or adjust weatherstripping and door sills to create an airtight seal. Everything you need can be found at home centers, hardware stores and many other retailers.

___ Handle yard chores: Many plants require pruning this time of year, and lawns should be fertilized with a fall/winter fertilizer to feed them through the winter and get them ready for a fast green-up when spring returns. Clean up all your yard tools and put them away for the season.

___ Close foundation vents: You should have opened your foundation vents for the summer to allow any accumulated crawl space moisture to escape, so now’s the time to close them up again for winter freeze protection. Also, install exterior faucet covers.

___ Trim trees: Overhanging trees deposit debris on your roof, scrape and damage shingles, promote the growth of mildew, and, worst of all, have the potential for devastating damage if they snap during a wind storm. Consider having a professional tree service inspect overhanging trees, and safely cut them back as needed.

Remodeling and repair questions? Email Paul at paulbianchina@inman.com. All product reviews are based on the author’s actual testing of free review samples provided by the manufacturers.

How the Internet has Changed in the Last 10 Years [Infographic] | Pound Ridge NY Real Estate

lg share en How the Internet has Changed in the Last 10 Years [Infographic]

It’s time to appreciate how far we’ve come.

the internet a decade later How the Internet has Changed in the Last 10 Years [Infographic]

Here’s an interesting infographic that has been making the rounds across social media for the last two weeks. It visualizes the spectacular rise of the Internet in just 10 years. In 2002, the Internet boasted 569 million users, which translated to 9.1% of the world’s population. In 2012, that number has gone through the roof: There are now 2.27 billion users, or 33% of the world’s population.

Another formidable stat is the amount of time people spend online — in 2002, it was only 46 minutes a day (about the time it took to download four songs); in 2012, it’s four hours a day.

Also highlighted in the infographic are some companies that have paid a steep price for their unwillingness adapt to the changes:

  • Blockbuster refused numerous offers to buy Netflix and was reluctant to roll out subscription-based membership. The company filed for bankruptcy on 2010, and was bought at auction by satellite television provider Dish Network. Dish is closing a large number of unprofitable stores and has scrapped plans to make Blockbuster into a Netflix competitor.
  • Borders refused to create an online bookstore. It also declared bankruptcy and liquidated its stores in 2011.
  • Tower Records was slow to adapt to digital music. It declared bankruptcy twice, in 2004 and 2006. The brand currently exists as an international franchise and an online music store, a shell of its former self. I miss you, Tower Records!

the growth of the internet last 10 years 2002 2012 How the Internet has Changed in the Last 10 Years [Infographic]

pixel How the Internet has Changed in the Last 10 Years [Infographic]