Learn To Play The New Media Game Now: There Will Be No Rehearsal Time When The Gun Goes Off

Broker Business Development   Written by Jeremy Conaway on 10/2010 - Word Count: 1130
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required to address these two competing forces is the even crueler realty that it requires two totally different skill sets to meet the threats of the marketplace and the opportunities being created by the emerging consumer.

Combined, these forces are creating an internal conflict between those in the brokerage who are responsible for making sure the firm survives the next 23 months and those responsible for making sure the firm emerges as a relevant, competitive, and profitable entity configured to succeed within the new real estate transition.

While it is doubtful that this article will even begin to calm the internal conflict, it is hoped that it will provide some light on the critical need for brokerages to find the resources, innovative energies and creativity necessary to keep pace with the rapidly transitioning world of media.

Many, if not most, brokerages have significantly cut back on their marketing and advertising expenditures over the past few years. The assumption is that when cash flow returns, adequate marketing budgets will return with them. This is certainly understandable given the circumstances. However, what is dangerous is that firms have also cut back on their awareness of what is happening within the marketing world and, more specifically, what is happening with respect to media.

For the purposes of this article, the term media refers to the tools used to store and deliver information to end-users. In the case of the real estate industry, it refers to the tools used to deliver a firm’s value proposition and inventory to the real estate consumer. From a traditional perspective, this has meant newspapers, printed collateral and various items that could be snail mailed to the consumer or whispered in their ear. In anticipation of the human cry from those who would suggest that one must now include “on-line” media to the mix, one would have to say that it isn’t clear that the industry has yet to fully adapt in this arena. While it is true that most firms have some manner of web site, few are really Web 2.0 compliant and, in any event, the marketing world is currently affecting a shift to Web 3.0 compliance, which means that even less firms are really “connecting” through the Internet.

That being said, brokers must focus on what is currently happening in the world of media as it relates to real estate marketing. It is critical to understand that today’s transitioning media environment is an absolute reflection of consumer demands and expectations. The most powerful initiativions are now occurring in video. Channing Dawson, a key creative player with the Scripps Network, reports that the American video habit has now reached 200 billions hours per year and shows no sight of lessening. Deloitte’s current research suggests that American’s have added two additional hours to their weekly TV diet in the last year alone. Forrester Research reports that in the past eighteen months, Americans have added half a trillion text messages annually and 1.3 more hours on line each week. The Consumer Electronics Association reports that expenditures by the average family, to date in 2010, have increased to $1,380 up $151 from last year even before the up coming holiday season.

Americans now spend an average of 35 hours per week on TV. They spend another two hours watching “time shifted” programming using TVR and another 20 minutes watching video off of the Internet. Most interesting of all is the fact that the amount of time American’s spend exclusively watching TV is down in favor of the amount of time they spend on media “multi tasking.”

Interaction with the Internet is also increasing, with 78% of all Americans who have Internet access using that ability at least daily (the Pew Foundation). 38% of this group, increasingly across all age groups, are engaged in various social media activities.

As predicted, the newspaper and even their websites continue to lose ground as an effective medium. Only 31% report reading a printed newspaper and 62% of this group are over 65 years of age (not a real estate target group). Finally, one must take into consideration the new and expanding media like e-books, smart phones, social media and applications.

These shifts in media utilization are bringing with them support for entirely new ways in which to use video, television, cell phones and perhaps, most importantly of all, the exploding social media scene.

Note that this article is not about the future. These things are happening right now. So the decision to cut back on the marketing dollar should not include a decision to allow the firm to lose touch with the marketing environment. Brokers must take steps to make sure that their leadership and management resources are staying current with the transitioning media and marketing scene. Consider the following interim steps.

Assign responsibility to someone for reading Advertising Age. Thirty minutes spent reading this weekly publication, with a subsequent ten minute report to staff, will work wonders.

At least quarterly, create a marketing fantasy session that starts with the concept that “we just won a million dollars in the lottery, but we must spend it on marketing our firm.” What would you do, what creativity and innovation would you bring to the table? How would you spend the money?

At least quarterly, assign responsibility to folks on your team (including agents, managers and admin staff) to collect, evaluate and report on the marketing efforts of your competitors. In today’s increasingly competitive marketplace everyone must be on the marketing team. If you run out of players, tap some spouses, they have the advantage of being consumers too.

The entire industry should be increasingly concerned with the fact that financially surviving the five-year journey across the desert will not be enough to guarantee success. There will be no rest at the other end. Firms that have not reconfigured themselves during the march will find themselves aliens in their own marketplace. Use this time to prepare. We can do this.

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Jeremy Conaway is the President of RECON Intelligence Services. He is a recognized expert in the fields of brokerage and association design. His company is currently a leading source of strategic and tactical ideas and applications for the leading edge of the real estate industry. He is a nationally known lecturer, author and facilitator. For information regarding Jeremy’s speaking, consulting and facilitating,



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Copyright© 2010, Jeremy Conaway. All right reserved. For information contact FrogPond at email susie@FrogPond.com.