Tag Archives: Chappaqua NY
Tips to Improve Your Home’s Insulation | Chappaqua Real Estate
5 Reasons Why You Might Want to Change Your Facebook Cover | Chappaqua Realtor
Chappaqua NY Weekly Real Estate Report | RobReportBlog
Chappaqua NY Weekly Real Estate Report
Homes for sale 103
Median Ask Price $1,192,500.00
Low Price $429,000.00
High Price $24,750,000.00
Average Size 4122
Average Price/foot $356.00
Average DOM 106
Average Ask Price $1,523,524.00
Social Media Sites to Explore | Chappaqua Homes
When it comes to social media sites, there are so many options. Everyone knows the big ones: Facebook, Twitter, G+, LinkedIn, YouTube. So I thought it would be interesting to share some lesser known social media sites that are gaining momentum and that offer a new social twist. In some cases, I have noted how these sites could potentially be used by small businesses to engage with their customers in a new way and differentiate themselves in the increasingly crowded social media space.
1 – ArchetypeME
Through a short quiz, this site helps discover your archetype and proposes content that would be interesting to you based on your profile. You can connect with friends and learn about their archetypes and preferences. Provides a novel approach to both content discovery and socializing.
2 – RebelMouse
RebelMouse consolidates the various stories / photos / videos you share online across different sites into a single space simply called a page (not very original). This allows you to direct your followers to your RebelMouse page (or pages – you can have more than one) or embed the pages directly on your website – creating dynamic content that updates regularly based on your activities on the bigger social media sites. RebelMouse is hoping this fresh content will be appealing to both individuals, as well as businesses. For a small fee, you can use your own URL.
3 – Storify
Instead of using your content to create your page, Storify lets you find content to create your story. You can use keywords to search several social sites (Twitter, Facebook, Instagram, Flickr, G+, YouTube) and come up with content for your story. You would then pull in the most relevant content (tweets, stories, photos, videos), add your own text if you wish to narrate the story and publish it on any one of your social sites, web site, or send it by e-mail. As an example, businesses can use this as an original way to tell a story of what others are saying about their products or services, or report on an event they attended or organized.
4 – About.me
About.me is like your digital business card. It presents you (or your business) on one page with links to all your social sites, a short bio, a few buttons to interact (favorite, e-mail, share, etc.), and a big beautiful background image that you can create. It is a great alternative to a full-blown website for freelancers and solopreneurs looking to promote themselves and gain exposure.
5 – ListGeeks
If sharing is caring, then you can show you care by sharing lists of things with your friends. Enter ListGeeks – it allows you to create your own lists of things by adding your own content (from websites) or using content from other people’s lists into your own list and sharing this with others. Sharing. Geeks. Lists. It’s almost too much for the mind to take in. From a business point of view, it could be an alternative to infographics, for sharing data internally and externally (ie. top 10 products, or most popular colors, or countries to which we ship the most products).
6 – Storylane
Storylane is probably the most personal of these seven sites in that it asks its users to write their own stories to share based on questions Storylane asks. Other users respond by sharing emotions (was impressed, likes it, wants it, agreed, was moved, …) and their own stories to the same question. Definitely a site for the more creative-minded seeking to make meaningful connections.
7 – 43things
43Things is social goal-setting site. You set your goal and 43Things will show you how many other people are working towards that same goal. You can discuss the goals, share how-to stories, and monitor progress with each other. Business might consider setting shared goals with their followers (ie. weight loss for a dietician, or fund-raising for a charity, …)
Which one is your favorite lesser known social media site?
2013 Fair & Affordable Housing Westchester Expo March 9th | Chappaqua Realtor
2013 FAIR & AFFORDABLE HOUSING EXPO
SATURDAY, MARCH 9 201310:00 AM TO 3:00 PMWESTCHESTER COUNTY CENTERWHITE PLAINSThe Hudson Gateway Association of Realtors, Inc. is joining with homeownership counselingorganizations, the County government, and area banks and lending institutions to co-sponsor aprogram of seminars and exhibits to help moderate-income and entry-level homebuyers find a home in the Westchester-Putnam region.“Affordable” in the context of this Expo does not necessarily mean subsidized or low-income. Many attendees will have incomes around $70,000 or even $100,000 or more. Further, there will probably be sellers in attendance who are looking for a short sale or other work-around with their property.The role of the Realtors in this Expo is to demonstrate the more affordable possibilities in anadmittedly expensive market. The prospective buyers need everyone’s help, and it is part of ourmission as a Board of Realtors to try to create homeownership opportunities for everyone.The 2013 Expo is run as a non-profit public service enterprise, although we certainly expect you todo as much business there as possible!
Vine: Open for Business | Chappaqua NY Realtor
Today marks the one-month anniversary of the new mobile app Vine. Since its release, it has received a lot of buzz as well as dealt with a variety of issues. Businesses did not hesitate to jump onto the app for marketing purposes, while amateur users haven’t been shy about testing it out for…other reasons.
Introduced to the world by Twitter, Vine is a simple video capturing application that allows users to film quick 6-second looping videos by holding their thumb on the capture-frame. The looping quality of the Vines results in something very similar to a GIF, while the ability to capture and share moments on Twitter or Facebook makes the app very similar to Instagram.
In fact, Vine is considered to be to Twitter what Instagram is to Facebook. And as such, the snappy in-one-ear-out-the-other characteristic of tweets has been transferred into video form with Vine. The quick-snippet format is a great tool to have for stories that can be summarized simply in 6 seconds, but so far it has mostly been used for fun and games (and in one case, for a resume). Of the “Editor’s Picks” that top a users Vine feed, the best vids have made creative use of the loop-function, or the easy stop-motion capabilities.
Another result of Vine being an extension of Twitter is that while users can post Vines to their Facebooks, they can’t search for contacts through their Facebook friends. This is directly related to Twitter’s restrictions which disallow Instagram users to connect with their followers via Twitter. A statement from Facebook implied that Vine was guilty of replicating Instagram’s “core functionality.“ by stating in 1.10, “You may not use Facebook Platform to promote, or to export user data to, a product or service that replicates a core Facebook product or service without our permission.” A resolution is unlikely given the 2 mega social-media sites’ ongoing battles to top social site rankings.
Although Vine is still only available to iPhone users, the increase in the number of Vines showing up on Twitter feeds makes it something to keep an eye on. While it is still so new to the scene, most every creative Vine vid is getting recognition – but, that means so are all of the bad ones. If your business deems this mobile application’s capabilities fitting to your brand image, by all means, try it out! In order to get the most out of the platform, here are a few guidelines to get you started:
1. Promotion
If you’re going to use Vine as a promotion, it can’t be a straight sell. It has to be more of a tease. “Look what we’ve got in the works but aren’t going to show you, yet…” If you do show what you’re selling, make sure there is another point of interest, like…
2. Story
Use your 6 seconds to create and resolve a conflict. Keep in mind that your story will loop, so it needs to make sense to a viewer who could come in at any point. Don’t try to tell a story that needs more than 6 seconds.
3. Point of View
Make use of the motion and multiple scene capabilities. This is not the medium for Panoramas. If you can think of a creative way to splice your video to give it an awe-factor then this app was made for you.
Vine is an exciting new tool that can be leveraged to generate real results for your business, but if you are on the fence about it, don’t feel pressured to be an early adopter just so you can say you lead the pack. Like any mobile application, there will always be updates. Best just to wait it out until inspiration strikes and voila, Vine turns out to be the perfect outlet. When that happens I wish you a rainstorm of views and fruitful growth to your business. Pun intended.
January existing-home sales up slightly on tight inventory | Chappaqua Real Estate
PR people! Here are 5 ways to make tech reporters like you more | Chappaqua NY Realtor
Editor’s note: This is a guest post by Ed Zitron, the founder of EZPR, an east coast USA media relations firm focusing on consumer tech startups. He has been published by Forbes, The Wall Street Journal, Eurogamer, PC Gamer and PC Zone. His book, This Is How You Pitch: How To Kick Ass In Your First Years In PR, will be released in late Spring 2013.
PR is not a crazy methodological nightmare. There is no artistry. There is no grand secrecy. There is no black magic. It is not a complex mystery that needs unravelling. It is predominantly common sense mixed with knowledge, and an absence of one or both of these things has made our entire industry rather despised.
The truth is that it’s not that difficult to be good at the job. It just requires the smallest bit of dedication and interest. Oh, and common sense.
1. Talk like a human being in your pitches.
Leverage. Tech-savvy. Curating. Phenomenon. These are a few randomly-picked words that will make someone’s brain stop mid-sentence. In fact, just read a pitch and imagine you’re talking to a 12-year-old who might care a little about what you’re doing but owes you nothing. That’s about the attention span you can expect from a blogger or reporter who is getting 300-500 emails a day.
You get one shot if you’re lucky enough to even get your email opened, and if they’re reading your stuff and it comes out as a mangled car-crash of buzzwords, they’ll delete it. And then you are gone. That’s the best case scenario. The worst is that they now hate you. Which they might if you’ve sent 8 paragraphs about crowdsourcing.
Just say what your thing does. Is it a global on-demand crowd testing solution for small businesses to categorize potential customers’ engagement? Say it’s a way for small businesses to find out how interested their customers are.
2. Nothing You Have Is Amazing – Relish It
It’s one thing to be passionate about what you’re working on, it’s another thing to describe it in messianic terms and claim it’s amazing, revolutionary, magical or anything else that Jonny Ive would say. In fact, most likely it isn’t even that impressive. And that’s fine! Reporters will hate you for needless hyperbole, and will appreciate it if you’re matter-of-fact with what makes your product special.
Most likely your ad-based-analytics-for-marketers-with-funny-hair isn’t going to be making Walt Mossberg hot under the collar, but hey, maybe there’s a burgeoning industry there that’s worth talking about. Perhaps said analytics found something interesting. Or perhaps you’re truly the first to do it. If you can make a case in plain English, maybe you’ll stand a chance.
3. 175 words or less.
The horrible truth of your beautifully-crafted email is that it’s destined to be ignored. If you’re read, you probably have 10-30 seconds at best – so you need to keep it really, REALLY short. Make it so that if they skim-read it, they’ll get the just of what you’re doing without having to dig. You want comprehension. You do not need to tell the life story of the client. The client may think their life story is very interesting, but most likely the reporter does not.
Communicate the essentials – “It’s a thing that does X. It’s interesting because Y. It is live on Z. Need anything else?” That’s it.
Oh and never, ever, ever copy-paste the entire press release afterwards.
4. Read a lot more than you already do.
A lot of reporters’ casual advice is to read what they write before you pitch them. That’s great but a generalization. To really do this job properly and make them not hate you, you should read them. I mean all the time. I mean make it your job to go through the archives a bit. Even if you’re skimming what they’ve done, at least know what their history is. Know them. Read their Twitter. I’m not saying to stalk them, but know more than the first page of what you get when you click their name.
Here’s a really basic one: The Next Web has people all over the US, and all over the world. Your basic PR read-one-page-and-pitch might end up sending Matt Brian an invite to an amazing event… in New York, when he’s based near London. Not to say Matt wouldn’t be kind enough to send it over to Harrison Weber, who is based in New York, but there’s also a chance that Matt would get your pitch at 4pm EST, which is 9pm in London. Perhaps Matt has already left for the day. Your email will now be pushed down the ethereal trail of his emails into the darkness of obscurity, doomed to possibly not be read.
And as an aside, if a reporter writes a big fat piece on an overall subject, like payments processors or crowd-funding or venture-backed companies in France or what-have-you, don’t immediately pitch them your product. They took their time to research that and they most likely won’t be returning to it any time soon.
5. Don’t call them unless you’re asked to.
I know Cision has however many hundreds of thousands of phone numbers of reporters, but don’t call any of them. Don’t call them ever. Don’t call them unless they say “call me” and then give you a number. No, I know you sent them an email. No, I know you didn’t get a response to it. No, I know they didn’t respond to your follow-up. Don’t call them. No, I know your boss said to call them, don’t do it. Don’t.
99% of the time they will wish your telephone would break forever. In the same way you do not want a telemarketer calling you and talking to you about a timeshare, they do not want to hear about your social mobile what-have-you in a somehow more-annoying way than an email.
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You may read some of these and say “huh, that’s so obvious,” and then smirk knowingly. If these are all things that you abide by, congratulations! There’re many, many hundreds of “PR Pros” who don’t, judging by what reporters have told me. And I’ll occasionally get sent a 5-paragraph giga-flop of text, resplendent with meaningless buzz and a 6-line HTML signature.
In the end, self-education is the key. To be better we must be inquisitive, thoughtful and knowledgable before anything else.
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