Social media strategy. Social ROI. Influencer marketing. Social capital. Sometimes the head-spinning buzzwords that have come to define our usage of social media can make the simplest things confusing and frustrating. This is not one of those posts!
Whether your “strategy” is personal or professional, social media is the platform that blends our personal relationships and connections. In between the likes, comments, followers and friends, listings, open houses, birthdays etc, real life happens. Sometimes it’s not nice. Sometimes it breaks your heart. Sometimes it elates you. It’s in these moments where empathy, trust and care for one another really shows itself, and yet, sometimes, we feel ill-equipped to reach over the boundaries of “strategy” and just be ourselves. So this is just a few simple ways you can cross the boundaries and show someone you truly care
Category Archives: Bedford
Mastering Mobile Productivity in from Lead to Close | Bedford NY Realtor
I think it’s safe to say that we can all be a little “app” crazy! When it comes to real estate apps, it’s hard to really get down to the best ones for actually managing your business from lead to close. As an agent or broker, you manage your calendar, leads that come in from your website, inspection reports, files, paperwork, client communications, signatures in contracts and offers, the list goes on and on.
In this webinar Max Pigman from realtor.com and I demo the BEST apps actually used in the field by agents across the country. These are just a FEW of the apps, we didn’t even have time to make it through to the second half of the “day in life of a real estate agent” but that gives us more great information for another webinar which I look forward to!
Watch the recording below and give us your feedback! Do YOU have any apps that you can’t live without? Let us know below!
Housing starts hit highest level in five years in March | Bedford Hills Homes
Housing starts rose 7.0 percent month-over-month and 46.7 from a year ago in March, according to a monthly report from the U.S. Census Bureau released today.
At a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 1.04 million homes in March, the rate of new construction has gone up each month since November when it measured 841,000.
With tight inventory in many parts of the country, housing starts are critical to the housing market turnaround, according to Lawrence Yun, chief economist of the National Association of Realtors. There have to be homes available for those who sell their homes, he has said.
What demise of the PC means for real estate | Bedford NY Homes
I wrote a “post-PC-era survival guide” almost two years ago. The piece was inspired by Apple’s Worldwide Developers Conference (WWDC) in San Francisco where Steve Jobs declared, “We are going to demote the PC and the Mac to just be a device. We are going to move the digital hub, the center of your digital life, into the cloud.”
I discussed how Apple, Google and Microsoft were approaching the cloud. That summer, Brad Inman, founder of Inman News, discussed the post-PC world during his keynote address at Real Estate Connect in San Francisco. He discussed how the post-PC-era was going to reshape the real estate industry and how mobile devices were projected to outsell personal computers.
Fast forward to April 10, 2013. IDC (International Data Corporation) announced that PC sales plummeted 14 percent this quarter, which is the largest decline and worst quarter recorded since the organization began tracking sales in 1994. IDC was forecasting only a 7.7 percent decline. Obviously this is much worse.
“Although the reduction in shipments was not a surprise, the magnitude of the contraction is both surprising and worrisome,” said David Daoud, IDC research director for personal computing. “The industry is going through a critical crossroads, and strategic choices will have to be made as to how to compete with the proliferation of alternative devices and remain relevant to the consumer.”
Major Metros are Now Sellers’ Markets | Bedford Corners Real Estate
Most sellers are getting as much or more than they are asking for their homes in eight out of 24 major metros tracked by a new market report released yesterday, a sign that the metros have crossed over from buyers’ to sellers’ markets.
In a new market report, ZipRealty’s data shows that the ratio of sales to list prices reached an average of 98.5 percent in the markets it covers and in eight-San Francisco, Las Vegas, Orange County, Sacramento, Los Angeles, San Diego, Portland, and Seattle-the median sales price was equal to or higher than median list prices, a sign that the markets are now sellers’ markets as sellers are getting as much more than their list prices. A year ago only Sacramento had reached a sold to list ratio of 100 percent.
ZipRealty reported that homes are selling faster, especially in Western markets where inventories are low. The average median days on market has fallen 27 percent from a year ago. In the past year, median time on market is falling fastest in Orange Country (-70 percent), Sacramento (57 percent), Los Angeles (55 percent), and the San Francisco Bay area (53 percent). The percentage of homes sold after seven days on the market rose from 13 percent a year ago to 18 percent in the new twice monthly report. Las Vegas, Denver and during the period February 15 to March 15.
“In seven major cities that ZipRealty analyzed, more than one-quarter of the homes listied for sale are selling in less than seven days, though it looks like the supply of newly listed homes may finally start to keep pace with frenzied buyer activity,” said Lanny Baker, CEO and president of ZipRealty.
Median home prices increased 14.6 percent to $242,519 on a year-over-year basis, with the highest gains in San Francisco, where home prices shot up 38 percent as of March 15. Real estate prices in both Las Vegas and Phoenix jumped 31 percent during the same period, according to the debut edition of the ZipRealty Housing Trends Report, which will be issued twice monthly.
Total housing inventory in the 24 metropolitan areas declined 34 percent as of March 15, 2013, as did the level of distressed home sales. The report shows 35 percent of the homes sold in the 2012 period were either foreclosures, short sales or REOs, compared to only 23 percent in 2013, a decline of 12 percent.
Agents Demand Faster Closing Times | Chappaqua Real Estate
Most real estate agents want mortgage originators to close their home buyers’ mortgages in 30 days or less-50 percent faster than the national average closing time-according to a new national survey released today.
Real estate agents control or influence 45 percent of homebuyer decisions on lender choice, according to the “Home Purchase Mortgage Success Factors” survey, conducted in January and February 2013 by Campbell Surveys and Inside Mortgage Finance, and time of closings, lend reliability and costs are some of the most significant factors that lead real estate agents to recommend a lender for a home purchase transaction.
Two-thirds of the nearly 2,000 real estate agents that responded to the study mortgage closings in 30 days or less. Yet the survey found that the average closing takes longer than that. Ellie Mae reports average closing time for purchase mortgages in February was 47 days and the average for 2012 was 46 days.
“Real estate agents consistently tell us that the unpredictability of mortgage closing dates is a major problem, in addition to timelines longer than 30 days,” commented Thomas Popik, research director for Campbell Surveys. “Lenders like to blame appraisers for delays, but our survey results tell us that underwriters often cause delays, particularly when underwriters do piecemeal and last-minute requests for borrower documentation.”
According to agents, the three most common reasons that mortgage closings are missed or delayed are mortgage underwriting, appraisal issues and changes in underwriting policies. Real estate agents noted that uncertain closing dates are disruptive and costly for borrowers, regardless of time required to close
How to Find Secret Homes for Sale | Armonk NY Homes
The number of homes listed for sale today is lower than it’s been in a decade. Home buyers are scouring Web sites for property listings and when they find a home they like, they often find themselves in an expensive, stressful bidding war. What they don’t know is that they’re not seeing as many as 15 to 20 percent of the homes for sale in their markets.
This is a critical time for buyers. Mortgage rates may never be so low again in our lifetimes. Though home prices have risen ten percent or so over the past year, they are far from the peak levels of 2007 and relatively affordable. Like mortgage rates, home prices have only one direction to go: up.
However, inventories or home for sale are down 40 percent or more from two years ago. Selections of homes, especially homes in the mid-range or entry-level price brackets. Even foreclosures are experiencing price increases.
You might do all that you can to find out about homes for sale in your price range. You can sign up to be notified by email when new listings come on stream. What you don’t know is that you aren’t looking at all the homes for sale. You are still going to miss one out of seven homes for sale.
That’s because almost all listing sites rely primarily on one source for their information: the nation’s 900 multiple listing services. Multiple listing services are databases of homes for sale. Most are owned and controlled by local Realtor organizations and only members of MLSs can list properties on them. The first MLSs were established 125 years ago and they have become more powerful with the emergence of real estate listings sites that have made it possible for consumers to see their listings. Despite the dominance of the MLS system, tens of thousands of homes are sold each year outside of it.
There are four kinds of homes for sale that don’t make it onto the MLS: pocket listings, for sale by owners, closely held transactions and expired listings.
Armonk Leads in Highest Average Square Feet | RobReportBlog
Armonk, Bedford Hills Lead in Highest Average Size | RobReportBlogKatonah 3,531Pound Ridge 4,033South Salem 2,656Mt Kisco 3,004Chappaqua 4,103North Salem 3,622Armonk 4,801Bedford 4,416Bedford Hills 4,724
Bedford Runner Home Safe | Bedford NY Real Estate
Robert Laitman of Bedford crossed the marathon finish about 20 minutes before the blasts that killed three and injured 130 exploded in Boston.
But the person he planned to run with finished two minutes before the attacks went off—too close for comfort, but safely across the line, he said.
“My heart goes out to those people. I was high-fiving everyone at the finish line and I am thinking about them,” he said. “I think it’s a horrible, tragic event and I definitely could have been back there. The the timing of attack is terrible, it targeted all charity runners, groups finishing around the four-hour mark.”
Another Katonah runner, Jeffrey Welch, safely crossed the finish line, according to the Lewisboro Ledger. He completed the marathon about 15 minutes before the explosions, his wife, Carroll, told the paper Monday evening.
Click here for a list of local runners who were registered for the marathon. If you participated, were a spectator or have heard from runners, post your comments in the thread below.
Laitman said he was already at work on a project for his charity, Team Daniel—his runner’s group which raises money for mental health research—when he heard about the bombs.
Bedford Hills Leads Area in Highest Ask Price | RobReportBlog
Bedford Hills, Chappaqua Lead in Highest Ask Price | RobReportBlog Katonah $18,995,000.00 Pound Ridge $3,950,000.00 South Salem $3,200,000.00 Mt Kisco $4,500,000.00 Chappaqua $24,750,000.00 North Salem $18,500,000.00 Armonk $17,000,000.00 Bedford $14,500,000.00 Bedford Hills $30,000,000.00 Bedford Corners $11,250,000.00