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Bedford Real Estate

New metrics show website visits from mobile devices | Bedford NY Real Estate

Zillow’s dominant market share of desktop traffic to listing portals is even more pronounced among mobile users, according to new mobile Web traffic metrics from Experian Marketing Services.

Until now, third-party Web traffic metrics excluded measurements from mobile devices, which left a large chunk — about 25 percent, by some estimates — of traffic unaccounted for.

The new Experian data must also be taken with a grain of salt, because it doesn’t include mobile app usage — only website visits by mobile users who are surfing the Internet using a browser or Web app.

Desktop and mobile traffic data in January tracked each other with some notable exceptions, according to Experian, which surveys mobile data from Apple and Android smartphones and tablets over 3G and 4G networks, and from all mobile device platforms over Wi-Fi.

As is the case with the previously released numbers for desktop traffic, Zillow, Trulia and Realtor.com are the three real estate sites with the most traffic in the category. But Zillow takes a significantly larger chunk of traffic from mobile users (19.78 percent), compared with a 9.17 percent share of desktop traffic.

Redfin (3.69 percent of mobile traffic) and ZipRealty (2.77 percent) also fared much better on mobile than desktop, rising to No. 4 and No. 6 on list of most visited real estate sites from mobile. On desktop, they captured 0.83 percent and 1.13 percent of traffic, respectively, which made them the 18th and 12th most-visited sites in January.

Establishing a Client Relationship | Bedford NY Real Estate

There are some things you need to know about establishing a relationship with a client. First, the relationship with your client needs to be a dual one; professional and helpful.

Establishing a professional relationship with clients is particularly important since you’re assisting in one of the largest financial and emotional transactions people make.  However, being professional is more difficult than you may think. Your conduct and values are reflected in your professionalism. All client communications need to pass the “professional” test. To this end, you must determine what professional image you want to convey to your clients.

An agent/client relationship differs markedly from an agent/customer relationship. You serve a client for life. You serve a customer for the moment. Clients receive guidance and assistance on all matters relating to real estate whether they’re currently involved in a transaction or not.

By employing a longer-term view of client management, you increase your value during and after the property brokerage function. Aside from an actual transaction, you provide substantive guidance throughout your client’s life cycle. Everything you do with a client should reflect the highest level of professionalism.

For example, the contents of a client newsletter should reflect a client-first real estate agent. Rather than offering dinner recipes or landscaping tips, the newsletter should offer substantive guidance on real estate matters: an article on real estate planning or a report on local property tax initiatives within the clients’ communities. This establishes you as an expert; a trusted advisor. You’re more than just a salesperson brokering a transaction for a fee.