The California Association of Realtors announced a new TV, Web, radio and print ad campaign today that highlights the positive impact its 155,000 members have on the state’s economy.
Two 30-second TV spots, featuring the “ripple” effect that the facilitation of home buying and selling has on the economy and families, will air on the ABC network in San Diego, Los Angeles and San Francisco from today through June 16. In addition, on April 17, a spot will air during the network’s hit show “Modern Family” in the three markets.
Tag Archives: Bedford Corners NY Homes
Good times are back for ranch land brokers | Bedford Corners Real Estate
Author’s note: Early in the year, I traveled to Missoula, Montana, for a winter vacation, but a contact put me in touch with a few people in the real estate industry and much to my surprise I came away with a couple of interesting stories. This column is the first of two.
For a while it seemed that anyone with a lot of money, from Hollywood stars to business moguls, wanted a piece — make that a very large piece of — America, and they came west looking to buy their own ranches. Many, following the lead of flamboyant media entrepreneur, Ted Turner, looked to acquire in Montana.
During the bubble years, investors couldn’t acquire Montana ranches fast enough.
William McDavid, who opened the Missoula office of Hall and Hall in 1996, remembers those years fondly.
“Before the recession, people were standing in line to buy,” McDavid says. “There were bidding wars for multimillion-dollar properties.”
Hall and Hall does a lot of different things as a real estate company, but to this day it is known as the premier brokerage for ranch lands with offices mostly throughout the west.
8 tips for buying in a tight market | Bedford Corners Homes
It’s always hard to predict how long it will take to find a home to buy. Given the current low-inventory environment, it may take you longer than it would in a balanced market that has enough homes for sale to satisfy the current buyer demand.
Patience needs to be a key component of your home search mentality. Even if a home you like a lot comes along quickly in your search, other buyers may have the same idea. You could end up in competition. If you aren’t the winning bidder, don’t let disappointment immobilize you.
To prepare yourself to buy in this market, plan to look at every new listing that comes close to satisfying your wish list. Accept that you won’t find everything on your wish list. Successful buyers make sacrifices. Just make sure to make intelligent compromises.
For example, don’t get so overwhelmed by the urge to buy now that you overlook that a home you like won’t work for you for long. Buying and selling is expensive; you don’t want to do it often. Make sure that a home you buy will suit your needs for years to come.
There are benefits to seeing a new listing that’s a possibility for you in person rather than looking at it only online or having your agent describe it to you. In a low-inventory market, it’s vitally important to become an expert on local pricing. Follow up with your agent on every listing you liked and find out how much it sold for and how many offers were made.
6 tips for international SEO and marketing | Bedford Corners Realtor
Imagine a wealthy Russian entrepreneur sitting down with her expensive laptop. She is looking to buy a vacation home in Florida. Which search engine does she start with?
If you answered “Google,” “Yahoo” or “Bing,” you’re wrong. In Russia, the number one search engine is not one of the American leaders. It is Yandex, which is as Russian as Stolichnaya Vodka.
Yandex operates in other countries, too. It is so popular that it has more users — not just in Russia, but around the world — than Microsoft’s Bing search engine. That’s embarrassing for the tech giant from Redmond.
The situation in China is similar. A search engine called Baidu dominates web search. There, the word “Google” hardly even registers a flicker of recognition with most web users.
This pattern is repeated in many other countries around the globe. Naver is number one for search in South Korea. Seznam leads in the Czech Republic.
If you intend to market property or services to overseas buyers, you must include foreign search engines in your search engine optimization and marketing (SEO and SEM) plans.
Yes, English is the most-used language on the web. But it only accounts for about 25 per cent of the total. Research shows that multilingual users place more trust in websites in their native tongue.
As one expert in the foreign language Internet, Christian Arno, puts it, “The greatest benefit of foreign language Internet marketing is the opportunity to reach new markets, or to penetrate further into markets that may already be partially catered for with English alone.”
Here are my six best tips for international search engine optimization and marketing:
1. Choose the right search engines. Know which international audiences you are trying to reach. Pick the search engines they use most.
2. Start with search engine marketing because it allows you to see much quicker results and control your budget. It is much better to test your strategy and keywords before you invest resources in rewriting your website’s content in foreign languages.
3. Reconsider your keywords. You cannot succeed by using the same keywords for international marketing as you use domestically.
Even if you are targeting English-speaking buyers, say from the UK, you will need to re-evaluate your keywords and probably select new ones. For example, someone in London is more likely to search for “property” than “real estate.”
When working with foreign-language buyers, your keywords need to be in their mother tongue. Keywords can’t just be translated from one language to another. That’s because they aren’t just words, they are short hand for an entire thought process.
4. Don’t let your foreign language-speaking intern do your SEO and SEM. Search engine optimization and marketing are sophisticated skills. Good practitioners can command salaries of $150,000 per year, or more.
If you let a junior staff member handle your international SEO just because they speak the language of your target buyers, you are inviting disaster. If you don’t have the expertise in-house, rent it from a legitimate expert.
5. Revise your site’s content to make it relevant to your international audience. Andy Atkins-Krüger is one of the world’s most insightful international online marketers. He believes the most common cause of failure is “allowing customers working in other languages to receive second best.” I will get into this in more depth in a later article in this series.
6. Integrate your international marketing into your business. Attracting clicks online is only the first step to converting an international prospect into a buyer with a signed contract. Think long term and make whatever other changes in your business are necessary to nurture these valuable leads.
Follow these steps and the next property you sell just might go to that wealthy Russian entrepreneur from the first paragraph.
Andrew Taylor is co-CEO of Juwai.com, a real estate portal linking Chinese buyers with property in the U.S., Canada and a total of 54 countries.
Inman Daily
One Email, All You Need to KnowRT @AgentReboot: We are VERY excited to officially announce our Ambassadors for #agentrb Orange County, CA! http://t.co/WPODNina5cAgents: Are you more likely to spend marketing dollars on your website or video marketing? Give us your input! > http://t.co/L8tWjiquNgRT @placester: Great post by @jeffnieto: “Paid vs. earned: What’s the BEST media strategy for real estate?” via @inmannews http://t.co/6m@retribedrum thanks for sharing! cc: @jeffnieto
Mortgage Accessibility, Meeting Housing Demand Among Top Priorities | Bedford Corners Real Estate
Bedford Corners Realtor | Will the new Twitter features affect real estate?
Foreclosure timelines reach record lengths | Bedford Corners NY Homes
Foreclosure timelines are growing more bloated, largely due to sustained government intervention in the housing market, according to RealtyTrac’s March U.S. Foreclosure Market Report. At the same time, foreclosure activity continues to subside, drifting closer to pre-meltdown levels, RealtyTrac reported.
“Although the overall national foreclosure trend continues to head lower, late-blooming foreclosures are bolting higher in some local markets where aggressive foreclosure prevention efforts in previous years are wearing off,” said Daren Blomquist, vice president at RealtyTrac. “Meanwhile, more recent foreclosure prevention efforts in other states have drastically increased the average time to foreclose, which could result in a similar outbreak of delayed foreclosures down the road in those states.”
Housing Is Back! Best Moves for Homebuyers | Bedford Corners NY Real Estate
Real estate has finally started to bounce back across the country — even roar back in some places. Low mortgage rates and pent-up demand have coaxed buyers back into the market, and homeowners who list their houses are seeing more traffic. That quaint relic of the bubble, the bidding war, has even started to re-emerge in some cities. Consider the mounting evidence that the long national real estate nightmare is over: During the past year, home prices increased in 92 of the country’s 100 largest metropolitan areas, according to data provider CoreLogic, with prices rising as high as 23 percent in Phoenix and 17 percent in San Francisco. Sales volume rose in 69 of the top 100 markets, and 35 of those showed double-digit gains.
Yet while most economists agree that the bottom is behind us and the five-year outlook for housing is on solid footing, the shorter term is shakier. “2013 and 2014 are going to be transition years,” says Mark Fleming, CoreLogic’s chief economist. “The market’s improving, but it’s not totally healed.”
Related: Find Homes for Sale in Your Area
Thinking about buying a home? For the first time in more than half a decade, the economics of the market are working against you in most places. Inventory is tight, and bidding wars are back in some parts of the country. To snag your dream home, you’ll have to pay up and contend with continuing strict loan requirements. The bright side: Despite rising prices and mortgage rates that are edging upward, buying a home is still cheaper than renting in the majority of the top 100 markets.
Don’t Waste Time With a Low-Ball Offer
Yes, home prices are still way down from their highs, but the days when you could scoop up a house for 20% less than the list price are long gone. The typical home sells for pretty close to what the owners asked for, and even in shaky markets, sellers have gotten more realistic about pricing. The median sales-to-list-price ratio in Detroit, for example, is 98 percent; the national number is 97 percent. (To find the figure for your market, go to zillow.com/local-info and click on “More metrics.”)
Here’s how to figure out how much to offer initially: In places where homes are still selling below list price but deals are being made in less than two months, come in no more than 2% to 3% below the asking price, says Michael Murphree, a realtor in Birmingham, Ala. Where homes are selling above the listing price, make your first offer the asking price.
Be the Winner in a Bidding War
In January and February, 73percent of agents with broker Redfin said their clients’ offers faced rival bids, up from 56% who said so in the fall of 2011. You win bidding wars, of course, by raising your price; it also helps to have few contingencies and to move quickly, since today’s sellers don’t want multiple go-rounds. “You have to give your best offer,” says Dallas real estate agent Mary Beth Harrison. “Step up to the plate or walk away.”
Be flexible about closing too: Quick deals — the median time on the market for homes is 71 days, down from 99 a year ago — have left many sellers scrambling for alternative housing. Leave the closing date blank on your contract for the seller to fill in, or negotiate a leaseback if the seller needs to stay put for a while.
Read the rest of this story on CNNMoney.
See more on CNNMoney:
Selling Your Home? The Cards Are In Your Favor
Own a Home? Take Advantage of Rising Home EquityMore on AOL Real Estate:
Find out how to calculate mortgage payments.
Find homes for sale in your area.
Find foreclosures in your area.
Find homes for rent in your area.Follow us on Twitter at @AOLRealEstate or connect with AOL Real Estate on Facebook.
Portugal’s Property Prices Down | Bedford Corners Real Estate
Bob Vila’s 5 ‘Must Do’ Tasks for April | Bedford Corners NY Real Estate
Spring is officially underway, and while our focus has swung toward outdoor projects, it’s not all daffodils and sunny skies for homeowners this season.
Avoid basement flooding
The past couple of years — certainly last November with Hurricane Sandy — we’ve seen that in order to undergo serious storm damage, a house does not necessarily have to be located in a flood zone. This spring, water issues are top of mind for many homeowners discovering leaks that developed over the winter. Snowmelt, in combination with seasonal rain showers, can result in overwhelmed culverts, backed-up sewers and flooded basements.
Of course, there’s little you can do about the weather, but you can take some steps to ensure your basement or crawl space remains dry. Having cleared your gutters of debris, position downspouts away from the house and foundation. The goal is to drain storm water at least 3 feet away, so consider running extensions or troughs. If you have below-grade basement windows, install window well covers made of a strong acrylic that will fasten securely to your home’s foundation.
Inspect the exterior foundation and your basement’s walls and floors. Use epoxy to fill any foundation cracks and if warning signs are detected, apply masonry sealer to basement walls. If the problem appears more serious, call in a professional.
If you haven’t had your sewer inspected or your septic tank cleaned, April is a good month to address those concerns. And if you’re operating a sump pump, be certain it’s free of blockage, correctly positioned and connected to a power source. Since a sump pump won’t run if your electricity goes out, a generator may be a long-term investment worth considering.







