Tuesday 2 August 2011

Apple announces new MacBook Air, kills MacBook


Apple has announced their new MacBook Air to great tech analyst fanfare, but in the announcement, it has been noted that the MacBook is no longer going to be in the Apple lineup. Additionally, the MacBook Pro was announced.
Apple confirmed to Engadget that the MacBook has been discontinued. It is unclear if it is because of sales or simply that they are moving on to bigger and better things.
According to AnandTech.com, the new MacBook air has some pretty amazing specs:
H: 0.11-0.68? (0.3-1.7cm)
W: 11.8? (30cm)
D: 7.56? (19.2cm)H: 0.11-0.68? (0.3-1.7cm)
W: 12.8? (32.5cm)
D: 8.94? (22.7cm)Thunderbolt, 2x USB 2.0, composite audio in/out jackThunderbolt, 2x USB 2.0, SDHC slot, composite audio in/out jack
AnandTech’s Andrew Cunningham notes, “The Sandy Bridge upgrade makes the Air lineup a reasonable alternative to the white MacBook or 13? MacBook Pro, especially if weight is more important than processor speed This is particularly true of the in the 13? model, where the speed of the SSD and the higher screen resolution might actually make it better suited for some production work. The Thunderbolt port can also (either through dongles or dedicated Thunderbolt devices) make up for the Air’s lack of FireWire and other high-speed connectivity.”
“If you were on the fence about the Air before, this healthy speed bump should make the thin-and-light laptops that much more palatable. If the lack of optical drive, FireWire, Ethernet, or hard drive space still put you off, though, this upgrade isn’t likely to change your mind,” said Cunningham.
Is this a good news or bad news scenario or is this really just Apple changing their lineup as a part of evolution?


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Facebook ad pricing up yet spending is down – digital ad trends

Facebook ad prices Facebook ad pricing up yet spending is down digital ad trends
Facebook advertising cost-per-click (CPC) rose 22% in the second quarter of 2011, as more advertisers have come online as was always Facebook’s plan for financial growth. The earliest adopters saw the lowest price when there were the fewest members and as the number of reachable members rises, so will the price.
Efficient Frontier’s 2011 Global Digital Marketing Performance Report says that Facebook CPCs are expected to reach 80% growth by the end of 2011.
Efficient Frontier notes that brands actively seeking fans on Facebook are “on course to double their fan base Year on Year (YOY) by October, demonstrating an increasingly competitive marketplace for consumers’ attention.”
That said, the dollars spent were up 8% in the second quarter but dropped 17% from the first quarter of 2010 with Efficient Frontier suspecting advertisers are focusing on their return on investment (ROI) over volume. We suspect an alternative reason could be that advertisers are diversifying their digital ad spends to include niche target sites rather than the standard Twitter/Facebook duo.
According to Efficient Frontier, comments on Facebook have a viral effect. “An analysis of 10 million fans managed by Context Optional demonstrated that for every brand post, there was an average of 100 comments in response. However, brands with more fans received additional interactions. For every 17,000 additional fans generated, the brand received one more comment per post. This demonstrated that there is a viral effect to having more fans as this creates more direct responses (from existing fans) and also indirect responses (from friends of fans).”
The study found that Facebook spends are mostly incremental. “Facebook constitutes approximately 5% of search budgets, though for some advertisers this can peak at 25% during time-sensitive, offer-led promotions.In the entertainment category there are some large advertisers who solely advertise on Facebook. This hints that there are new advertising budgets from the gaming and dating sectors going to Facebook, which would not have gone into Search otherwise.”
Lastly, the study revealed that Bing/Yahoo! gained a stunning 3.4% points of spend share from Google since Q4 2010. “Bing’s continued focus on higher quality and higher monetized traffic is paying off. Last quarter it was noted that the ROI on Bing/Yahoo! was better than Google. Bid management technology such as that used by Efficient Frontier has enabled advertisers to take advantage of that by moving budgets as appropriate.”

This article published on Tuesday, July 19th, 2011 at 12:03 am | Contact the editor Tags: facebook, facebook marketing, featured, real estate social mediaCategory: New Media
AgentGenius is a rapidly growing real estate social media, tech, news, and opinion site built and designed by and for the on-the-go agent. Our mission is to be a positive force in the industry, led by people inside of real estate. We aim to keep you up to date on trends that we study closely in order to forecast what’s next on the horizon.
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Wall Street executives crashed the economy says FCIC, DE, NY and now CA

wall street greed Wall Street executives crashed the economy says FCIC, DE, NY and now CA

When the Federal Crisis Inquiry Commission wrapped up their report last week, Wall Street executives came out as the culprit and news outlets went wild. We took a closer look and asked if it could be any of the many who were involved ranging from politicians to NAR to LPS.

The Attorneys General in New York and Delaware have pressed to seek criminal charges for Wall Street executives individually rather than continue the route of suing banks and corporations. Now, California’s Attorney General joins the ranks of those seeking to penalize those who allegedly knew of the risks involved yet chose to drive their companies and investors into the ground.

Because California represents a disproportionate number of homeowners harmed by the crash, the addition of this state strengthens the probe for political reasons but mostly because of the sheer number of individual cases they are able to point to.

Subpoenas have already been served by New York and Delaware to 13 financial firms, according to the LA Times, including Goldman Sachs and JPMorgan Chase.

The FCIC findings have not launched any official Department of Justice investigations and no charges have been made yet in regard to the report but analysts suspect they are coming which could potentially strengthen the states’ cases.

Bankers claim they are attempting to settle but with dozens of federal agencies, state agencies and individuals coming after them, they say settling is impossible as it could open them up to double or even triple jeopardy.

While this sentiment makes sense, some believe it to be a convenient excuse in light of massive governmental disorganization with no clear leadership. Perhaps the FCIC report will organize the movement to punish whoever is responsible for the housing crash, but for now agencies pursue bankers who say they want to settle but claim they cannot.



This article published on Monday, July 18th, 2011 at 6:00 am | Contact the editor Tags: featured, mortgage crisis, real estate economy, Real Estate News

Category: Economy

Tara Steele is the News Director at AgentGenius, covering real estate news, technology news and everything in between. If you’d like to reach Tara with a question, comment, press release or hot news tip, she frequently checks her email, simply click the link below.

Email Tara Steele

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Understanding touchscreens can help with your next phone purchase

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touchscreen technologies Understanding touchscreens can help with your next phone purchase

There are a lot of words that most people don’t know when it comes to technology and technology as complex as touchscreens is mystifying for many but knowing the difference between how each works could have a huge impact on your purchasing decision for your next smartphone.

Do you know the difference between resistive and capacitive abilities for a touchscreen? Do you know what infrared is? Take a look at this simple infographic that breaks down the differences between the features that make touchscreens work.

It’s one of the considerations people make when smartphone shopping and the information below makes it much easier to understand.

touchscreen infographic Understanding touchscreens can help with your next phone purchase



This article published on Friday, July 22nd, 2011 at 12:04 am | Contact the editor Tags: featured, smartphones, Technology, touchscreens

Category: Smartphones

AgentGenius is a rapidly growing real estate social media, tech, news, and opinion site built and designed by and for the on-the-go agent. Our mission is to be a positive force in the industry, led by people inside of real estate. We aim to keep you up to date on trends that we study closely in order to forecast what’s next on the horizon.

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Cycle of building trust online with real estate consumers – infographic

building online trust Cycle of building trust online with real estate consumers infographic

Although the infographic below outlines theory that has been in practice for several years now and the concept of online trust building is not new, it is still a theory that eludes many real estate insiders. Eight common components of building online trust are as follows:

Building Online rust infographic Cycle of building trust online with real estate consumers infographic

Most of the tone of the above infographic is reactive and somewhat defensive, starting right off with admitting mistakes, but what if you haven’t made any (yet)? Let’s break down these steps as they pertain to real estate.

Realtors can tell truths by making expertise clear and not making any false or misleading claims on their blog or website. Agents should not say they are the “#1 agent,” rather more specifically “Highest volume sold in 2010? so as to be specific and add trust. Avoid subjective terms like “#1 agent” that could leave consumers feeling lied to down the road.

Often, Realtors are held accountable for misdeeds of the entire industry which is when being honest in communications is a good idea. When it is found that a massive investigation penalizes local Realtors for involvement in a mortgage scheme, that is an opportunity to publicly note that illegal behavior is not tolerated at your brokerage and here are some steps you’ve taken to insure your team is on the up and up.

Old fashioned real estate involves writing down social security numbers and incomes and handing it to an agent which was not very scary because a consumer could see exactly where it is going. Now that most transactions are electronic, agents should make very clear to clients where their information is going and who has access to it. This can be done by phone or email if your client is filling out an application through the lender, or in a blog post created for new clients. Don’t assume they feel safe or already know.

Consumers should know when they are registering their email on your site that you will not sell their email and that they will (or will not) be getting email notifications from you. Always offer unsubscribe options (it’s the law).

Real estate is a world of negotiations and promises and a broken promise be it a simple failed return call or a brand promise, trust can be irreparably damaged by broken promises. To avoid breaking promises online, make clear your process and intentions on your site. Put your listing presentation online and make your pricing clear. Then stick with it. This sound simple, but promises by Realtors are broken all the time and could very easily be avoided.

Constance Freedman of the National Association of Realtors’ Second Century Ventures technology fund noted that 65% of all calls to Realtors go to voicemail and 80% of failed calls end up with competitors which amounts to major losses.

According to Trulia, “Agents who have instant access to their leads and respond to inquiries within the first five minutes have a greater likelihood of connecting with leads on the first call. Research has shown that the odds of contacting an online lead if called within the first 5 minutes versus 30 minutes drops 100 times, and the odds of qualifying an online lead if called within the first 5 minutes versus 30 minutes drops 21 times. Using Instant Leads and responding to online leads immediately can allow agents to catch the consumer at the peak of interest—while they’re still searching online and near a phone.”

It goes without saying that Realtors should be extremely responsive, but not just in the lead generation phase, but throughout the process. Use all tools available to help make this happen.

Integrity isn’t an option in real estate like it is in maybe other industries like entertainment. Every Realtor’s word online (and off) could potentially be documented and used in a lawsuit, so it is best for agents to always act as if in front of a judge. There isn’t much grey area in real estate, but when contracts are treated as such, integrity not only of that particular agent, but of the transaction, those involved and possibly the sector as a whole are impacted.

Years ago, when the transparency debate was hot, it was believed that an agent’s personal financial forms should be shared online, as it was a very extreme time. Now, transparency is expected in moderation as the web has gone mainstream, and your financial details are that of your own private home. Transparency in real estate pertains to practices and consistency and not offering better rates to some people and not others, it’s about being public with what you offer and what your process looks like, and if you’re really brave, what your stats are. Some agents choose to publish this on their own websites, others dodge it, but transparency these days mostly pertains to keeping professional promises and being clear with your offering up front.

In a world where repeat business is many agents’ bread and butter, establishing history is important. Doing so online involves soliciting testimonials from past (or current) clients and posting them on your website, or asking for LinkedIn recommendations. Building history online involves featuring sellers or buyers on your blogs and telling their story (to the extent that you legally can), and showing that you’ve done more than one transaction. Speaking at conferences is fabulous, but those credits are not the same as having done a side in real estate, so remember to focus on the client, their needs and making them comfortable via past transactions on display.

If you’re a dishonest person in real life, chances are that it will convey online, but if you’re focused on integrity and results, your natural desire to share that with others will come across in every tweet that you share as you provide value over fluff, and it will shine in your recommendations on Linked-In. Be honest, provide as much information as possible, and always keep consumers as the center of your web efforts rather than focusing on your ego (and your next conference) as the center of those same web efforts.



This article published on Saturday, July 23rd, 2011 at 11:30 am | Contact the editor Tags: featured, real estate social media

Category: Training

AgentGenius is a rapidly growing real estate social media, tech, news, and opinion site built and designed by and for the on-the-go agent. Our mission is to be a positive force in the industry, led by people inside of real estate. We aim to keep you up to date on trends that we study closely in order to forecast what’s next on the horizon.

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Monday 1 August 2011

Realty Executives International mega franchise in turmoil – speculation looms

realty executives website Realty Executives International mega franchise in turmoil speculation looms

Realty Executives International (REI) has been riddled with quiet troubles in recent years with little to no media attention or even knowledge by REI agents of the turmoil. Executives have been let go, headquarters have been dramatically downsized, a major REI office defected to KW, while others have stopped paying franchise fees.

REI is headquartered in Arizona and claims 10,000 agents across 600 franchises in 24 countries. International headquarters moved in 2007 from their multi-story corporate high rise and in 2009 ultimately moved in with a local franchisee claiming in a letter to franchisee owners that because times were tough, they needed to have ears on the ground, thus they moved in with a franchisee.

One of our sources told us that they were not buying that as their reason and was disappointed that in 2011, they have moved into the equivalent of a strip mall with no explanation or warning to agents and brokers, only an email with instructions on sending franchise fees to the new location.

One of our sources who is a franchise owner feels wronged by the corporate office not empowering their people by telling them what was going on in an honest manner, rather claimed they needed “ears on the ground.”

The REI brand was dealt a major blow in spring of 2010 when 13 year franchise owner Anthony Azar defected to Keller Williams overnight, allegedly taking REI executives by surprise. Azar left with most of his 375 Tucson agents while some chose to stay with REI. Azar said in a statement that research and other observations convinced him to make the transition and one of our sources said they believe this conversion to be a sign of things to come.

In spring of 2010, after over 20 years with REI, Realty Executives Phoenix President John Foltz’ allegedly nasty departure from the company was indicative of how one of our sources feels is becoming the culture of REI. Before Foltz left, his title was changed and was replaced as President by Dominic Scappaticci recruited from Sotheby’s.

REI President and CEO Rich Rector filed a lawsuit accusing Foltz of misappropriating corporate assets, Foltz countersued for libel, claiming REI failed to pay him and when he complained, they sued him and accused him of fraud. Franchisees, brokers and agents were aware of this battle as the continuing volley of lawsuits has been quite public.

But what most of the REI was not aware of is the company letting go of a large number of executives in December 2010 which did not get the same press as the Foltz/Rector battle. One source says thirteen people were let go at corporate headquarters, nearly half of the executive team including the COO and CFO due to REI’s claim of budget problems, with no one at corporate offering answers to the agents and brokers in the field.

Public relations begins from internally at any company, with all parts of the body being prepared to handle any inquiries be they from consumers or journalists. A source close to the corporation says the only notices being sent to brokers, agents or franchisee owners are good news emails with only mentions of positive news and no arming of franchises to handle the bad news of executives getting cut or battles between leaders. Some franchisees believe that REI corporate has a black out of information, often stating that they “will get back to you” to their agents and brokers; sources say REI is refusing to address any negative speculation which leads some inside the network to believe the company is in real trouble and potentially incapable of handling the fallout.

Bloggers went wild this April when multiple Phoenix REI agents arrived at their offices and were shocked that the doors were locked by the landlords. Realty Executives Phoenix is where roughly 10% of REI corporate executives hang their license, and the franchise’s filing for bankruptcy has made waves in the industry. The lockouts occurred when lease negotiations failed, but executives told press that they were surprised of any lockout, while our sources tell us they knew the threat of a lockout loomed over them.

Because of the financial troubles of REI’s flagship franchise, they are no longer paying franchise fees which has deeply upset other franchise owners.

In response to Realty Executives Phoenix’s franchise fees allegedly no longer being paid, several franchisees have halted payments of their franchise fees in response. A source told us that “brokers are dropping like flies” and that some are planning on leaving as their franchise contract ends while others are rumored to be considering dropping the REI name and paying the contract breach fee.

This is the crux of the entire falling of the REI dominoes is that franchise owners and brokers are opting out and in their own small network discussing how to jump ship, but of the agents (not brokers) we spoke with, none were aware of anything going on which means agents across America could be in for a big surprise in the coming year as their franchise owners change gears.

REI boasts technology and a superior referral network, but one franchise owner we spoke with said they feel nickled and dimed by conventions, meetings and cost per head. Rather than tuck tail, several former REI executives that were ousted have banded together to form an alternative brokerage model that contrasts REI and is likely based on the feelings of the franchise owner who feels nickled and dimed.

The competitor is called Professionals Realty Group USA (PRG) which they brought over from Australia. The company’s President is Glenn Melton, ousted CEO of REI, and their Director of Member Services is Meghan Hartman, former Director of Franchise Growth at REI. Scott Hurlock is PRG’s SVP of Franchise Development, formerly REI’s VP of International Franchise Development, and Mark Vost is now PRG’s Executive VP Membership & Business Development and was ousted as a well known Regional Developer at REI. These four are just a few of the handful of former REI leaders now at PRG.

The group offers a twist on the flat fee brokerage model that gets away from the traditional real estate split. Although franchisees tell us there is bad blood, they say the PRG team is focusing on their growth and looking forward rather than backward. Given the series of lawsuits between Foltz and Rector, it is possible other lawsuits will be forthcoming, but we were unable to locate any currently filed suits and REI has not responded to our request for information or comment.

Nasty legal brawls, ousting executives with no warning, franchisees not paying franchise fees, a corporation in a communications blackout with the largest franchise filing bankruptcy and agents arriving to locked offices does not spell for a franchise in good health. One of our sources says their biggest frustration is that no one is seeing what is going on at REI, no one is putting the pieces together, and people are just assuming that the isolated incident they might be aware of is a sign of a down economy, but from a macro perspective, this is a franchise in turmoil.



This article published on Sunday, July 24th, 2011 at 11:34 am | Contact the editor Tags: featured, real estate brokerage, Real Estate News, realty executives international

Category: News

AgentGenius Editor-in-Chief: Lani, named one of Real Estate’s 100 Most Influencial, as well as 12 Most Influencial Women in Real Estate, is a business writer hailing from the great state of Texas in the city of Austin. As a digital native, Lani is immersed not only in advanced technologies and new media, but is also a stats nerd often burried in piles of reports. Lani is a proven leader, thoughtful speaker, and vested partner at AGBeat. You’ll often find her on Facebook and Twitter, so feel free to reach out and get to know her.

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6.5 million Americans are over 30 days late on their mortgage payment

foreclosure home in america 6.5 million Americans are over 30 days late on their mortgage payment

Lender Processing Services is reporting the total American loan delinquency rate of mortgage borrowers whose loans are 30 days or more past due but not yet in foreclosure, is now at 8.15%, thus, the total number of homes in delinquency is 4,285,000 and with foreclosures, the number is an astonishing 6,452,000.

The home loan delinquency rate is up 2.4% from May but down 14.7% from June 2011.

Florida, Nevada, Mississippi, New Jersey and Illinois currently have the highest rates of delinquencies while the lowest rates of delinquencies are in Montana, Wyoming, Alaska, South Dakota and North Dakota.

Currently, the lending industry is in a very tight spot as recent reports reveal that not only is robo-signing still going on despite bank denial, thousands of loans that were packaged and sold to investors don’t even have promissory notes, and add to all that mess, courts across the nation are saying MERS doesn’t have the authority to issue foreclosure rights to a bank. (Read more on these topics here.)

All of these issues are potentially destructive to the foreclosure process and given that over six million homeowners are in danger of foreclosure are potentially looking at a different process altogether. Banks are questioning who has the authority to do what and homeowners are suing on technicalities and with no promissory note or proof that a bank even owns a loan, banks are losing foreclosure suits in rising numbers.

Although delinquencies are up a bit this month, they are down over the past year by a healthy margin, but will it matter if courts are not upholding foreclosures? How will banks respond? So far, the same problems plaguing the banks and have led to endless probes and even criminal charges and no changes have been made, so will courts denying foreclosures implement change? Time will tell.



This article published on Thursday, July 21st, 2011 at 12:06 am | Contact the editor Tags: featured, mortgage crisis, real estate economy, Real Estate News

Category: Economy

Tara Steele is the News Director at AgentGenius, covering real estate news, technology news and everything in between. If you’d like to reach Tara with a question, comment, press release or hot news tip, she frequently checks her email, simply click the link below.

Email Tara Steele

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