Posts Tagged ‘IDX’

Two NEW WolfNet User Registration Fields

January 2nd, 2013

Did you know that the form that your visitors complete to save favorites and searches on your property search can be customized?  The WolfNet BackOffice comes equipped with a “User Registration Fields” tool that allows you to choose the information your visitors must provide in order to create an account on your property search.  In addition to name, email address and password, you can request contact information, search criteria, desired property location, and more!

WolfNet is pleased to announce the availability of two new registration fields that allow you to determine whether a visitor requires mortgage or insurance assistance!  Now if you provide mortgage and/or insurance services, or partner with a company that does, you have the ability to find out whether a visitor requires those services.


New WolfNet User Registration Fields


The below image reflects all fields available for inclusion on the WolfNet property search lead capture form.  While name, email address and password are always required, all remaining fields can be set as either required or optional, or excluded from the form altogether.

 


New WolfNet User Registration Fields BackOffice Settings


All of these options are currently available in your WolfNet BackOffice to customize your property search lead capture form, so log in and start configuring TODAY!  For questions or assistance with the User Registration form, contact the WolfNet Customer Service Department via email at service@wolfnet.com or by phone at 612-342-0088.

Custom Search URLs Now Compatible with MobileIDX

October 1st, 2012

WolfNet is pleased to announce that custom search URLs are now compatible with MobileIDX.  Our customers have asked, and we’ve delivered!  Now, regardless of which device a consumer uses to access our customers’ property search URLs, he will immediately be directed to matching properties on that same device.

This enhancement is another great time saver for our customers and their consumers.  Custom search URLs help put properties in front of consumers faster, and this update only makes that objective more attainable.  In previous iterations of our MobileIDX, custom search URL variables for the full property search did not have a direct counterpart on the mobile search.  This latest iteration bridges that gap AND only makes it easier for us to develop both the desktop and mobile products in parallel.

For our customers, MobileIDX can be enabled via the Mobile Settings feature in the WolfNet BackOffice, so be sure to revisit that setting, switch detection to Enabled, and check out the new functionality.  Questions about MobileIDX and this enhancement can be directed to our WolfNet Customer Service Department via email at service@wolfnet.com or by phone at 612-342-0088.

Don’t forget that the WolfNet BackOffice includes the URL Search Builder that allows for custom search URLs to be built quickly and easily.  CLICK HERE to see how to build custom search URLs in a snap for websites, social media pages, community pages, etc.

Updated WolfNet IDX Platform Live in 25 Markets

July 21st, 2011

In May, we announced the new WolfNet IDX search interface, including examples and videos highlighting the new features and search options. As of today, WolfNet has successfully deployed this new platform in 25 of our more than 320 MLS markets, and is on pace to roll out an additional 15-20 markets every 2 weeks. Below are the markets that have been successfully converted to the new platform:

AL_BAMLS
CA_DAMLS
CA_GAVAR
CA_STAR
CA_TSBOR
FL_RAMB
KY_MSMLS
LA_RAAMLS
MD_MRIS
MN_RMLS
MN_SEMAR
NJ_GSMLS
NJ_MOMLS
NV_IVBOR
NY_GCAR
OH_CBR
OH_CRIS
SC_GGAR
SC_SMLS
TN_KAAR
TX_NTREIS
TX_SABOR
UT_WFRMLS
VA_CVRMLS
WA_SAR

If you are a WolfNet customer in one of these MLS markets, your solution should already feature the new search. If not, that may indicate some type of customization or other technical specification that requires additional attention on the part of WolfNet or your web developer. If  you have any questions about the status of your property search conversion to the new platform, please contact service@wolfnet.com or call toll free 866-WOLFNET (965-3638).

We Want Your Tips!

July 14th, 2011

WolfNet’s Tip of the Week blog posts every Thursday, and the majority of the content is written by our in-house staff. But we know the best tips come from our customers: agents and brokers who actually leverage the WolfNet IDX solution to provide additional search options to clients and prospects, and generate more business.

We want to hear from you! If you have a special strategy or action that helps your business that uses involves IDX and search capabilities, let us know. Maybe it’s special links or custom searches you set up on your web site. Or perhaps it’s something you look for regularly in the Back Office or Customer Behavior data that indicates a hot lead or triggers further action. Tell us what you do and how you do it, and we’ll feature you and your web site on our blog!

Email blog@wolfnet.com or call toll free 866-WOLFNET (965-3638) and share your strategy with us. We look forward to hearing from you, and greatly appreciate your business.

The Tip of the Week blog posts every Thursday. Each Post is labeled “Easy,” “Intermediate,” or “Expert” based on the concept being discussed.

Customer Behavior Basics

July 7th, 2011

Earlier in this series, we introduced you to Customer Behavior, a new and free feature for WolfNet IDX subscribers that provides tremendous insight into what has motivated a web site visitor to complete one of several online lead forms. If you haven’t enabled Customer Behavior yet, you’ll want to reference the link above for instructions, and enable it today.

Once enabled, when you receive a lead notification email you can now reference the customer behavior that comes with it. Today we will discuss a few key pieces of information that may help you better qualify your leads immediately. Consider the following:

Type of lead – Is it a listing inquiry/showing request, or is it a user registration? The former will reference a specific listing, which may carry greater significance given the additional data in the Customer Behavior report. The latter will enable you to see additional data on that visitor in the Back Office and also make her subject to your Authentication Rates. However, if you are forcing a more restrictive Lead Capture Setting, the registration itself may not indicate a hot lead. This is when the additional Customer Behavior data becomes more revealing.

Behavior Summary – This is the meat of Customer Behavior, where the rubber meets the road, if you will. Here is where you will get the best insight into how serious or motivated this particular visitor may be. For example, consider the following data:

1. Total Visits – an inquiry on the first visit might be whimsical, whereas a history of multiple visits, especially when coupled with a relatively recent First Access Date and Time may indicate someone with a sense of urgency, or who is doing their due diligence. Reference their Total Searches and Total Listings Viewed; an inquiry after extensive research could mean a very motivated candidate to buy or sell.

2. Average Price – Is this all over the map, or narrowed within a reasonable range? Someone looking at homes in the $2 – $10 million range may be doing just that – looking. Kind of like watching Lifestyles of the Rich and Famous on your web site. But a range like $275,000 – $325,000 may indicate someone who knows exactly what she can afford, perhaps someone who has prequalified for a mortgage. It may also indicate someone looking to put a property on the market.

3. Average Bedrooms/Baths – By themselves, these criteria may only indicate the needs of the specific visitor, such as family size. But taken with other data like cities and price range, you can tell if the homework has been done about whether the search criteria is realistic or not.

4. Registered on: – A listing inquiry from an already registered user may indicate a listing match in that day’s SearchSaver email. Reference the Saved Searches and Favorites in the Back Office to detect a match. You may also want to look at the login history; someone who is getting regular email updates on saved search criteria may be a pretty loyal web site visitor, and an inquiry after sustained visits to your search may indicate a readiness to take action.

Top Listings Viewed – If the lead notification has indicated a listing inquiry, this is a key section to review:

1. First confirm the listing that is the subject of the inquiry is one of the top five.

2. Look at the other top listings and determine if there is a pattern: same community, same price range, similar features, etc.

3. When you respond to the inquiry, knowing what other listings the customer has viewed and why will lend to your ability to showcase your expertise. Reference the listing that is the subject of the inquiry, and consider referring the client to other listings on the list that are similar properties. Likely a productive, intelligent dialogue will ensue.

Top Cities Searched – The relevance here seems pretty obvious – real estate is all about location. A visitor searching a specific city may indicate she knows where she wants to live. But there are more subtle nuances to this information that may reveal even more about a her motivation, and her understanding of the current local real estate market. Here are a couple of things to consider:

1. Are other search criteria in her Customer Behavior summary consistent with these cities? Look at the behavior summary data for price range, bedrooms, and bathrooms. Is it realistic to find a preponderance of listings in these communities that meet these criteria? If yes, you may have a very focused and motivated buyer or seller. If not, she may be dreaming, but that still gives you a potential opportunity to show your own expertise and advise on more appropriate neighborhoods that match her criteria.

2. Not all searches include cities as criteria. MapTracksSM users may not select a specific city, but rather use the map to draw their search area. In such a case, reference the latitude and longitude data in the Most Recent Searches section. For WolfNet clients with the new MapTracksSM version 3.0, searches may include more city data, as the map automatically locates and scales the view based on cities selected from a menu.

Most Recent Searches – Many agents requested this feature long ago; the idea is understanding exactly what the visitor thinking right before she decided to submit an inquiry. This may provide some insight into her motivation, as well as enable you to target future leads by creating custom searches based on the search data from past leads.

Ultimately, the purpose of the Customer Behavior data summary is to enable you to better qualify your leads, and facilitate a more educated dialogue with your prospects. This will hopefully better enable you to turn more of these prospects into clients.

The Tip of the Week blog posts every Thursday. Each Post is labeled “Easy,” “Intermediate,” or “Expert” based on the concept being discussed.

A Note on IDX Lead Notes

June 23rd, 2011

Earlier this year, WolfNet launched Lead Notes for all IDX customers as a free enhancement. Lead Notes is a simple application that lets you input notes on individual registered users in the BackOffice section of WolfNet’s IDX administration area. Included are a subject field for up to 110 characters and a note body of up to 1000 characters. If you are in the habit of reviewing registered user login behavior, saved search criteria or favorite listings, Lead Notes provides an easy way to include additional relevant information about your leads. It’s perfect for noting remarks from phone conversations, login patterns, email exchanges or other pertinent notes in a handy location.

To access Lead Notes, do the following:

1. Log in to your BackOffice at www.mlsfinder.com/admin and navigate to the Reports section.
2. Run a report, such as a search for an individual lead, or a lead group you define.
3. Select the lead you want to review.
4. Below the login history calendar, you will see User Notes (“User Notes” is consistent with the current BackOffice vernacular; the change to “Lead Notes” will come with additional enhancements to the BackOffice). To see an example screen shot, visit http://wolfnet.com/examples/user_notes.html.

Lead Notes are part of a more comprehensive suite of enhancements designed to help WolfNet IDX customers better manage leads.  More enhancements will be released throughout the remainder of 2011.

The Tip of the Week blog posts every Thursday. Each Post is labeled “Easy,” “Intermediate,” or “Expert” based on the concept being discussed.

IDX and Long-Tail Keywords

June 16th, 2011

In simplest terms, long-tail Search Engine Optimization (SEO) involves targeting keyword search terms that are more obscure and less frequently searched. For example, a generic search term might be “Real Estate,” whereas a long-tail search term might be “green homes for sale in Cornelius NC.”

According to online marketing specialist Alan Mitchell, targeting long-tail keywords on your web site can provide the following benefits:

1. While individual terms may be somewhat insignificant, en masse long-tail keywords can generate significant search volume (high impressions).

2. Long-tail keywords have less competition than generic keywords, providing a potentially higher Click-Thru Rate (CTR) and lower cost per click (CPC) for paid campaigns.

3. Long-tail keywords are more specific than generic keywords, so paid campaigns can be better tailored to match individual searchers’ needs.  This results in higher CTRs and fewer wasted click-thru’s from irrelevant searches.

4. People conducting long-tail searches are usually further along in the buying or selling process than those conducting generic searches. This results in higher capture and conversion rates.

5. The combination of higher CTRs, lower CPCs and higher capture and conversion rates leads to higher profits via a much lower cost per acquisition (CPA).

With these benefits in mind, consider creating highly specialized content areas on your web site. These may include community pages, but it goes far beyond that. Think of featuring highly targeted listings within individual communities. For example, Jonathan Osman in Charlotte, NC not only has community pages that feature content about various neighborhoods around Charlotte, he also features pages on green homes, luxury homes, golf communities and forclosure/bank-owned homes. Creating dozens of highly targeted pages like these is excellent SEO for a large number of long-tail search terms relevant to Jonathan’s market area. A Google search for a variety of long-tail terms related to these pages usually finds Jonathan’s site on the first page of results, often with multiple entries.

Furthermore, Jonathan has linked to relevant IDX search results  from these pages using the URL Search Builder and related documentation. So if a web site visitor lands on the Green Homes for sale page, links to individual communities pull up matching homes with a single click (such as “Eco-Friendly Homes in Cornelius”). In other words, the specialized pages generate the long-tail search traffic, while matching IDX searches capture the leads. This combination of long-tail keyword targeting using specialized content areas, coupled with specific matching dynamic IDX searches fuels a lead capture rate for Jonathan that is far and away among the best of agents nationwide.

Of course, while it’s not rocket science, it’s not turn-key either. There is no secret sauce here; Jonathan has achieved these results through a lot of hard work, perseverance and creative use of available tools. But the results are well worth the effort.

The Tip of the Week blog posts every Thursday. Each Post is labeled “Easy,” “Intermediate,” or “Expert” based on the concept being discussed

Using the WolfNet IDX Quick Search Builder

June 2nd, 2011

The vast majority of page views on a real estate web site are on the property search. Among WolfNet’s complete web site clients, over 97% of web site page views are contained within the IDX search pages. Therefore, not only is it important to review and modify your lead capture settings as needed, it’s also critical to provide intuitive calls to action on your home page to get your web site visitors to the IDX search in as few clicks as possible.

One effective way to direct your visitors to the property search is to present a Quick Search on your home page. WolfNet makes this easy with our Quick Search Builder utility in the IDX administration area. It’s easy to use; just do the following:

1. Log in to your BackOffice at www.mlsfinder.com/admin and navigate to the Quick Search Builder on the left side.

2. Select the Search Options you want to feature on your home page. Options include fields such as MLS Number, Min/Max Price, Beds, Baths, Zip Code, City, Address and Property Type.

3. Click Generate Quick Search Code. The HTML code you need to feature a Quick Search on your web site will appear, as well as a functioning preview of the widget showcasing your selected search fields.

4. Copy this code and forward to your webmaster for inclusion into your home page. Some of the basic look and feel elements can also be modified, provided the JavaScript and form field names are not edited or changed.

For a visual demonstration of the Quick Search Builder, reference this video.

If you use iFrames to feature the search, you may need to modify your display settings for proper IDX branding, or add some additional code to call the frameset for the search results. We will feature how to accomplish this in a later post; please contact us if you would like help with this right away.

The Tip of the Week blog posts every Thursday morning. Each Post is labeled “Easy,” “Intermediate,” or “Expert” based on the concept being discussed.

Reflections on IDX Mapping

May 26th, 2011

WolfNet pioneered map-based IDX search with the release of MapTracksSM on April Fool’s Day, 2005. MapTracksSM is now being released in its latest 3.0 version in select markets, and will be the version for all MapTracksSM subscribers nationwide later this year.

Looking back 6 years, it’s important to understand why WolfNet selected MapQuest as a mapping vendor. At the time, the Google Maps API was available and free to use, and we definitely considered it. Ultimately, our decision centered around making sure we could sustain quality service to our customers. MapQuest provided a Service Level Agreement (SLA) that included minimum guaranteed uptime, and promised no 3rd party advertising; Google made no such warranties. Even the remote possibility of interrupted service for our customers proved too risky.

We also anticipated someday Google might change its terms of service to include things like 3rd party ads in their maps. This would not only be a potential compliance issue with nearly every MLS in the country, but it also raised the possibility our customers would unintentionally feature ads on their IDX solution from competing firms. Neither occurrence would be acceptable.

Today, MapTracksSM 3.0 features mapping from 3 different leading map vendors: MapQuest, Bing and yes, Google. MapQuest still powers our primary map search interface. Bing powers oblique imagery on our Points of Interest “mini-maps,” found on all listing detail pages. These POI maps also feature Google Street View; while we do not anticipate ads appearing on these maps in the foreseeable future, this feature can easily be removed or modified without any interruption of service for the primary IDX search and mapping features.

Rich Bailey is the Director of Business Development for WolfNet Technologies. WolfNet’s Tip of the Week blog series will return next week.

Engaging Your Inactive Registered IDX Users

May 19th, 2011

Last month we talked about account activation, and the importance of engaging your registered users who have yet to authenticate their account via email. Today’s post will discuss how you might engage activated users who appear inactive on your web site and IDX solution.

Doylestown, PA agent Tom McFarland has targeted inactive users in his IDX BackOffice for years with a simple strategy. “I basically send a monthly email to anyone who hasn’t logged in to search listings in more than 30 days. I tell them I’m cleaning out my database, and noticed they haven’t been to the web site in a while. Then I ask if they are still in the market, or if I should remove them from my database.”

This tactic results in dialogue with potential customers. Recipients of Tom’s message often respond to request not to be removed, and a dialogue about where they are in the home buying or selling process ensues. “I’ve won business from these emails,” McFarland declares. “Once you’ve got them engaged, I can discuss their specific needs, and present the value I can bring them as their agent. Most do not expect any communication; by letting them know I am following up and paying attention, I am representing the type of service I can provide.”

Tom runs a simple report to isolate inactive users by doing the following:

1.       Log in to your BackOffice at www.mlsfinder.com/admin and navigate to the Reports section

2.       Select Only users that are: Authenticated (users who are not authenticated cannot receive system emails; Read this blog post for more on how to contact users who have not authenticated)

3.       For Only users who have not logged in within the last X days, type in the number “30.” Click Find Users.

4.       Select Email These Users, and complete the email form. Now you simply wait for the response.

Some emails are rejected because the address is invalid or no longer used. Others request to be removed from Tom’s mailing list. “That’s ok, too,” Tom says. “It saves me time knowing certain users are not potential clients, and lets me focus on the ones I can help.”

The Tip of the Week blog posts every Thursday. Each Post is labeled “Easy,” “Intermediate,” or “Expert” based on the concept being discussed.