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The intersection of anyone and anywhere

Brokers, as you read this, if you’re thinking “he’s not talking about me,” think again.

Your websites need work.
Some require a lot of work.
Some should be detonated.

Kaboom.

Out of site, out of mind

In the physical world …

Does your letterhead contain misspelled words?

Is the front door to your office hidden behind bushes?

Does this door lead to a maze of more doors before finally bringing guests to an unattended reception area?

Do your employees and agents greet visitors to your office in a language they do not understand?

Of course not. That would be absurd. But that’s how your Websites, replete with broken links, old content, confusing navigation, misspellings, and buckets of pointless information strewn across pointless pages, present themselves to the world.

I know your web guy put it there for SEO.
The way he explains it, it sort of makes sense.
But search engines don’t buy homes. People do.

Some common issues are so glaring they blindside users, who end up finding it much easier to back out and scoot over to Trulia or Zillow.

Can you name ten truly great broker websites? Last year we couldn’t.

Here’s why:

1.    Brokers hardly ever spend time inside their own site.

2.    Brokers do not solicit user feedback from it and about it.

3.    They left all of it, from design to copy, in the charge of their IT department.

4.    Their IT department left it in the charge of their Ron Popeil vendor – the one whose slogan is “set it and forgot it.”

5.    Or they hired a great vendor but interfered in the process, not letting the designer design and the programmer program.

6.     They are more enamored by how little they spend on their site than how much they invest into making it great.

7.    They designed it themselves and can’t see beyond their paintbrush.

8.    They copied someone site foolishly believing it was great.

9.    They have no idea where to go or how to create a better site.

10.  They know better than everyone else and believe their site is amazing – a belief often wholly unsupported by data.

Did I leave anything out?

The intersection of anyone and anywhere

The Web is open 24/7 to anyone from anywhere, who no doubt have expectations about what a website should look, feel and act like. How many come away from your site confused? And leave unimpressed? Or maybe crazed because they can’t even find some simple as a property search?

So here your site sits. At the intersection of anyone and anywhere. Unattended. Misdirected. Mismanaged. Neglected.

Not your site? Think again.

The truth is every site has issues. From the best to the worst. None are perfect. I know, I’ve been down this path before – explaining, for example, that property search should simply be referred to as “Property Search” and need not appear as quick or advanced or referred by many other types of naming conventions.

So this time, join me as I take you through two sites using the eyes of a user (with some comments from my perspective thrown in along the way). These are my opinions. You may disagree. If so, I urge you to perform this sort of exercise on your own.

Site 1: ryanhillrealty.com

This is a site I had never been too before until I did research for this post. They seem like a smallish brokerage located in a Chicago suburb.

Let’s see what we’ve got:

Misspelling the town I’m searching in (“Napervile”) and what it is I am looking for (“Propety”) does not exactly increase my level of confidence.

spelling

More misspelling. This should read “Listings.”

rh-copy1

Under “Quick Property Search” on the home page, the site offers a drop-down for State when they service only one state, but no drop-down or auto fill for City, for which there are many. Odd.

city-state

If Quick Search below gets me 70% of the listings on the market and I sign up to view “twice as many homes” as the call to action indicates, do I get to view 140% of the listings on the market? That’s a lot of listings!

70
Read this copy below. This is their value proposition. Actually, it’s a pretty good one. But as you can see on the site, it’s buried at the bottom of the site in fine print. I’d shorten this up and move right up to the top of page for new visitors to gain a sense of their value and what their brand is all about.

positioning
The navigation on their home page has some serious HTML/CSS issues. Note the odd spacing between links.

rh-nav

One of the links has a question mark. That’s a new one.

question

This Contact us form is more accurately called a Don’t contact us form.

rh-request

Compounding the issues above are myriad display problems in Safari that make the site almost impossible to use with that browser. Also, the site sports a mishmash of  awkward colors (purple, black and beige) along with the dozens of other things that should have been addressed long ago.

I don’t get it.
It is what it is.
But it speaks volumes about how little they understand the Web or the user.

Site 2: Johnlscott.com

This site, unlike ryanhillrealty.com, is from a company known for technology leadership. Yet even leaders have issues on the Web.

Let’s take a look:

John L. Scott has been part of its community for 75 years. But you would not know that looking at the home page. There is simply no reference to its heritage anywhere and I think that is a big mistake.

Let’s focus on the navigation bar: Search. Property Tracker. Our Services. Office/Agents. Careers. Neighborhoods. In that order.

john-l-scott

Search.  Search what? Search the site? Search for Jimmy Hoffa? I’m not trying to be snide. I ask because there is no explicit reference on the home page that this site is about and for real estate search. The builders of the site know that. But not everyone else in the world does.

Property Tracker. What is that? Never heard that term before. I clicked into it. Wow, that is a busy page. I’m stumped.

Our Services. The first line here reads “For over 75 years the people of John L. Scott Real Estate have strived to provide an exceptional real estate experience, whatever our client’s real estate goals may be.”

Wow. That would make for a great welcome text and brand statement on the home page. Why is it buried here?

Careers. Not a great idea placing this on a consumer site. People want to view homes, not get recruited to sell them. I watched the video on this page, as I’m sure other consumers do. It begins with an agent referring to himself as a “top performer.” Does he do weddings and Bar Mitzvahs?

I continued listening. He refers to the brand as “an innovative leader in the high tech industry” and motors on about innovation, integrity and being debt free but never once talks about the parts of real estate that matter most, like to providing an exceptional real estate experience, whatever the client’s real estate goals may be. You know the stuff this brand is really about. Granted this is on a careers page. I get that. But a curious consumer could easily stumble on it.

Neighborhoods. Last link in the navigation. From all the analytics we’ve seen, neighborhood pages tend to be in the top 3 most visited pages on a site. Placing it further up the chain makes sense.

Here’s something called “JLSConnect.” It is labeled with something called “Beta.” Why is a real estate company using experimental programs to assist me in my house hunt?

beta

The copy within provides this call to action: “Get Connected” to Windows live? Does the user know what this is? I don’t and I’m somewhat tech savvy. People tend to not click on things they don’t know or understand.

The home page wants me to install something called Microsoft Silverlight and to download something they might not understand on their computer. In fact, to make matters more confusing, it’s unclear here why the site wants me to do this. I’m getting jittery. I think I’ll pass.

silverlight
What does the term “Interactive Map Home Search” mean?

interactive

I asked my wife, who spends hours each month searching for investment homes, what this means to her. She said “Isn’t that a map where all these little boxes are stacked on top of each other with odd numbers that make no sense? I hate that,” was her response.

map

Uh, as a matter of fact, yes it is honey.

Besides, what is so interactive about this map? I can’t even figure out how to select a neighborhood!

I’m not trying to insult anyone

Honestly. I’m trying to help.

When we analyzed hundreds of broker sites last year for our Top 10 list, we thought Johnlscott.com site would make the cut. They have been a leader in technology adoption for years. But it’s things like these held it back.

And maybe, it’s things like this, little things, many of them that add up and make your site 5, 10, 20, 50% less effective than it could be.

These are things users see and think when they look at your website.

So, before you are two sites: One that appears neglected by its owner and another so meticulously managed by a group of smart tech guys that they may have lost sight of the user.

Both have issues. Trust yours does as well.

So try this: Step outside yourself for an hour and peer through your site. Look at everything. You will be amazed at what you find.

Maybe marketing let things slide.
Maybe your vendor isn’t as on it as you thought.
Maybe your IT department shouldn’t be doing this alone.

Maybe you’ve been your own worst enemy.

- Davison
Twitter: @1000wattmarc



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13 Responses to “The intersection of anyone and anywhere”

  1. I almost can’t believe your giving out such good information and feedback for free.

  2. [...] This post was Twitted by MurphyLeeTeam [...]

  3. What great information to provide to anyone with a website! Thanks for taking the time to share this with everyone. Referrals are a great thing, but happen only after you have established a good reputation for yourself. People will not utilize your website, or any tools you are incorporating into your business, unless you market them.

  4. T says:

    Here are some notes, Marc:

    - signing in with “Windows Live” saves you time creating an account: check it out; it’s humbling to learn. (I think those, like you, who don’t know, won’t use it, but nice to have for those that do. Other example: OpenID)

    - Interactive Map Home Search sounded completely lucid to me. Those numbers on houses: probably the number of properties under each.

    - Unhappy with “Beta”? Consider that gmail just got out of one: know anyone who used it in beta?

    - Unhappy with “Silverlight”? You must also be unhappy with Flash… and Java… and Adobe AIR…

    Here is a note about *your* website: perhaps you should upgrade to 2.8.4 wordpress: you know with the worm and all… (meta name=”generator” content=”WordPress 2.7.1″)

    (Also, for truly balanced and unbiased website reviews, read Matt Cutts: THAT’s helpful!)

  5. I agree with you about “careers” tabs. It’s so easy to set up a unique site now for prospective employees, everyone should do it. At the very least, bury the link to the careers section and don’t display it so prominently.

    My advice to most agents that are taking strides to embrace new technologies is this: Don’t crowd your pages with gizmos and external links. If you do put gizmos on your page, make sure you feature them tastefully and that you update their content, routinely check their functionality (broken links, etc), and let go of them if they end up being of negligible value.

  6. Marc says:

    @T – Despite your witty remarks the issues I brought to the forefront regard a simple philosophy documented in the Steve Krug book titled – Don’t Make Me Think! A Common Sense Approach to Web Usability.

    The comments regarding the JohnLScott site may cause users to think by virtue of these elements not all that common to a real estate brokerage online experience.

    Indeed, it is humbling to learn. But should a brokerage subject users to a learning experience when searching for a home?

    My thought is no.

    BTW: Thank you for the advice to upgrade the 1000watt site. This proves my point that all site have issues including ours and anything we can do to make it better becomes priority one.

  7. Ed Kohler says:

    Marc, you raise some great points here about little changes that add up to making a big difference in a consumer’s experience.

    However, what I often see missing is any attempt to measure the effect of small changes like this. While typos are clearly bug fixes, some of the things you mentioned may or may not have an adverse effect on a traffic, user experience or lead generation.

    Unfortunately, too many design and layout decisions are conducted by teams of people from marketing, IT, consultants, etc. where the strongest opinions drive website changes over testing.

  8. Marc says:

    Very true Ed. The whole point of this exercise was to raise awareness to website maintenance and the continued discussion and evaluation our websites should undergo.
    Whether you are one of the most maintained sites (JLScott) or an ignored site, or anywhere in betwee, all of us, including me, need to stay on this constantly considering all ramifications that are at stake.

  9. M Realty says:

    Great notes here, I could not agree more. If I go to any company website (not just a realtor) and find a confusing FrontPage 97 looking site with animated gifs and mis-spellings, I am just going to leave assuming that this hobbyist is not a pro. We work on our website constantly trying to deliver the best experience. We are working on getting our map v2 out which is faster loading and easier on the eyes.

    -Tyler

  10. Keahi Pelayo says:

    I started reading and thought to myself, “Yes, I am guilty of that and that too…”, it was painful. Then your review of the web sites was brutal (people need that), hopefully they will take your advice and make the changes or corrections.
    Aloha,
    Keahi

  11. [...] The intersection of anyone and anywhere by Marc Davison at 1000Watt Consulting [...]

  12. Marc:

    Great post, love it!

    Some folks have trouble with criticism, I like it. I put it in two categories: truly helpful, or humorous. I have no “feelings hurt” category.

    So back to the sites, good observations.

    I’ve always designed my sites (which suck I know) as if I was going to them as a old NON tech savvy user.

    Real Estate web developers don’t seem to understand that the group called “homebuyers” represent the VERY generic consumer.

    They are all over the map, from grandma barely getting around in a browser with her grandson standing behind her helping, to the guy that thinks he’s a whiz but really isn’t, to some dood that can hack any kind of code with the best of em.

    So, I go for flat out simple, uncomplicated functionality that hopefully looks pretty – because at least it’s been proven that humans go for pretty. LOL!

    Check out my lame-o site. I know it sucks, but it works well. It’s a WIP.

    The 50+ pages down the right hand side are actually AdWord landing pages, which really work well.

    Rob in Atlanta

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