Archive for the ‘How to Find Renters’ Category
Tuesday, October 6th, 2009
U.S. consumer debt fell another $10 billion last month. Current predictions are the average savings rate for the coming decade will exceed 9%. Retailers believe spending has shifted long term to necessities and away from luxuries.
So, the question becomes how can we as owners squeeze more into less. I see a few areas we intend to act upon including:
- Bunking options with safes for valuables in properties with space for more tenants,
- Storage options for folks downsizing from homes,
- Fixed income rent plans with utilities built in (reimbursed by the tenant is our plan), and
- By the bedroom leases and roommate management.
Managing in this environment is challenging, but with some imagination, these type changes may offer higher occupancy and higher margins even as pressure on price is increasing.
For folks looking at new units, I believe smaller floor plans are likely to regain a great deal of luster as total cost of living including rent and utilities become more important.
Posted in Apartment Management, Apartment Marketing, Apartment Marketing Ideas, Apartment Marketing Website, How to Find Renters, Increase Apartment Occupancy, Increasing Apartment Occupancy, Marketing Apartment, Marketing Apartments, Obtain More Leases, Obtain More Renters, Obtain More Tenants, Receive More Renter Traffic, Receive More Renters, Receive More Tenants, Tenant Acquisition, Tenant Finding | 24 Comments »
Sunday, September 27th, 2009
I recently wrote an article highlighting some key points for lead generation online on ezines. The address is:
http://ezinearticles.com/?Online-Apartment-Leasing-Leads—How-to-Find-Them-and-How-to-Win-Them&id=2884453
You will find this article different because of the focus on what the process is in the prospect’s head while working with the Internet during the apartment search. I’d recommend checking out the UrbaneLab for some good ideas regarding how to further decipher this process. Their address is:
http://www.apartmentveteran.com/
Posted in Apartment Management, Apartment Marketing, Apartment Marketing Ideas, Apartment Marketing Support, Apartment Marketing Website, Apartment Rental Application, Find Good Tenants, Find Latino Residents, Find Renter, Find Renters, Find Tenant, Find a Tenant, Finding Good Tenants, Finding Renters, Finding Tenants, Get Good Tenants, Get More Renter Traffic, Get More Renters, Get More Tenants, Get Tenant, Get a Tenant, Getting Good Tenants, Getting Tenants, Hispanic Market, Hispanic Tenant Finding, Housing Demographics, Housing Market Facts, How to Find Renters, Increase Apartment Occupancy, Increasing Apartment Occupancy, Latino Prospects, Leasing Management, Leasing Support, Marketing Apartment, Marketing Apartments, Multi-family Renting, Obtain More Leases, Obtain More Renters, Obtain More Tenants, Online Property Management | 23 Comments »
Tuesday, September 15th, 2009
Is your sign a differentiator for your apartment property? Are you showing photos and discussing the items that set you apart?
I know this is an area we’ve often failed to do as well as we should. If you would like more good insights to this visit Lisa Trosien’s Apartment Marketing Blog. She offers some great specific insights we can all take advantage of on this subject area.
For communities we serve, convenience is a differentiator. Our online application and other services make it easier for resident prospects to sign up and the results are dramatic. In one market, having a phone number only produces 20% of the total results that having a phone number and an online application will produce.
Posted in Apartment Marketing, Apartment Marketing Ideas, Apartment Marketing Support, Apartment Rental Application, Find Good Tenants, Find Renter, Find Renters, Find Tenant, Find a Tenant, Finding Good Tenants, Finding Renters, Finding Tenants, Get Good Tenants, Get More Renter Traffic, Get More Renters, Get More Tenants, Get Tenant, Get a Tenant, Getting Good Tenants, Getting Tenants, Help Rent Apartments, Help Renting Apartments, Housing Market Facts, How to Find Renters, Leasing Management | 24 Comments »
Monday, September 7th, 2009
Introduction
Most multifamily resident prospects today come from the Internet. While we know this, what is the flow from interest to Internet search that leads a renting lead to contact your apartment complex and eventually rent?
In General
First, we can’t ignore how the prospect ends up in front of their computer searching for a new apartment home. This can and often does pay a large role in how the resident prospect finds your apartment community or ends up at your competitor. And, once they become a lead, we should consider how we assure that if they are a qualified tenant that we believe is attractive to our community that they sign our apartment lease. Or alternately, if our multifamily competitor wins the first look, how do we take advantage of the mistakes most will ultimately make, how do we position to become their replacement and the ultimate winner of this prospects signed lease?
Before the Internet Search Begins
Prior to the resident prospect beginning their apartment search, what is happening to this consumer that we hope will eventually rent our apartment? They are receiving many inputs that effect the choice that will ultimately affect their decision including:
- Distance from work
- Convenience to services and shopping
- Access to friends
- Minimum features, amenities, floor plan
- Recommendations from friends
- Community quality and area quality
The Well Prepared Apartment Community – Before the Internet Search Begins
The well prepared multifamily community is addressing the issues prior to the tenant prospect taking the first apartment search key stroke. How does an apartment community prepare?
The key issues include:
- Know who your prospects are. Identify the kinds of jobs they will have their probable age. Determine broadly sets of interests they will have.
- Based on interests, where do they work? Where do they play? Where do they eat? How do they relax? What do they drive?
- Based on where they spend their time, how do you put your apartment community in front of them in those environments? Should you be a sponsor on a local softball league? Are you active in the religious community and should you be? Have you established referral programs with the right employers?
- Have you set up partnerships with garages, dealerships, etc.
- Do you have partnerships with entertainment and dining to make your community more attractive through a coupon plan or discount plan that is mutually beneficial?
- Do you have right signage disbursed around the community? Can you establish more signage?
If these are in place, your community is significantly better positioned to be recognized in advance and potential to win the lease afterwards.
On the Internet
Once the prospective renter takes the first key strokes, what happens? You can be certain that there is little likelihood that they type in your website address. Many people aren’t even firmly aware of URLs as they have become entirely dependent on search engines and bookmarks to find an refind sites that are of interest. This means that if you aren’t well positioned on the Internet your access to potential renters will be sharply limited.
However, if you can position your community to appear first on search you have 2.5X the opportunity to gain the prospect’s attention than if you are second on the list and 3X than if you are third on the list. After that, one can argue you gain little even being on the page. Gaining this kind of position requires a combination of web posting, pay per click, and Internet Listing Service (ILS) provider support. In all likelihood, the three together are too expensive and you will have to make choices. But hey! That is ok because if you are before enough searching renters, your property will have plenty of prospects.
Most apartment communities know that Internet presence is enough, but few understand how damaging having to share space with other communities can be. Unfortunately, this is a trend that shows no sign of falling… All an apartment property can do is choose the best compromise of solutions.
What You Can Count On
Apartment Finder, Apartments.com, Rent.com, My New Space are paying for presence and have traffic and content enough to rank well. Choosing these services (with some attention to which does the best in your area) is effective. This may be enough to satisfy the needs of your apartment complex.
What You Can Do
If the third party sources are not enough, then you have to invest in creating a strong web page. By invest, I don’t mean pay thousands of dollars. I mean choose a low cost site builder, and develop the content to attract prospects. Then over time, you can develop a competitive edge that will put you at the top of the search list for a solid number of searches that the ILS will be unable to deliver on. How do you do this?
1) Set up a page using Wordpress, Typepad, or similar services. The cost is only a few dollars per month (less than $20).
2) Include lots of content:
- Floor plans,
- Amenities,
- Rates,
- Neighborhood descriptions,
- Directions,
- Shopping destinations,
- Entertainment,
- Government services,
- Lists of annual activities,
- Schools and school contacts,
3) The content needs to be tailored to use the search term you would expect consumers to use to find your apartment complex.
4) Finally, if the property wants to really get the most from the site, they should add weekly “blog” updates to apartment activities, events, etc. This is likely beyond what most property managers or property management staffs will or can undertake.
With these items in place, your community stands a good chance of performing better than most of the local competition attracting resident prospect calls, visits, emails, applications, and finally leases.
Posted in Find Renter, Find Renters, Find Tenant, Find a Tenant, Finding Good Tenants, Finding Renters, Finding Tenants, Get Good Tenants, Get More Renter Traffic, Get More Renters, Get More Tenants, Get Tenant, Get a Tenant, Getting Good Tenants, Getting Tenants, How to Find Renters, Increase Apartment Occupancy, Increasing Apartment Occupancy, Link Building for Apartment Communities | Comments Off
Friday, September 4th, 2009
In the course of our daily grind, we can easily become distracted by so many things… We need to collect rent. We need to have tenant files correct. We need to complete the repairs and maintenance. Unfortunately, leasing requires time every day.
Here at www.apartmentmarketingsolutions.com we’ve learned the hardway. Leasing requires careful attention everyday. We need to identify our apartment competition. Compare them on the basis of features, size, convenience, service, and other items that residents will consider. We must understand what other multifamily portfolio concessions look like. We have to ensure we compete on price for the same apartment unit features. And, that is a beginning.
We have to ensure our leasing collateral is accurate and ready to go. We must understand how to present our multifamily property characteristics. And, we have to be armed to successfully sell them as resident prospects call or visit our property.
Next, and a new complexity in today’s apartment leasing world, we have to a great website that tells about the community, the property, apartment amenities, and apartment features. The more we provide the better our opportunity to lease.
This is all great, but in my estimation these points are fundamental. The real key to successful leasing is careful attention each day to driving and closing traffic. As operators, we have a responsibility to find out what is going on in the conversations, where they fail, where they succeed, and so on. Single minded focus on all elements of earning a resident prospect and improving the opportunity to close with the prospect on a new apartment lease.
Posted in Apartment Marketing, Apartment Marketing Ideas, Apartment Marketing Support, Apartment Tenant Qualification, Find Renter, Find Renters, Find Tenant, Finding Tenants, Get Good Tenants, Get More Renter Traffic, Get More Renters, Get More Tenants, Get a Tenant, How to Find Renters, Marketing Apartment, Marketing Apartments, Obtain More Leases, Obtain More Renters, Obtain More Tenants, Property Management, Property Management Service, Receive More Renter Traffic, Receive More Renters, Receive More Tenants | 7 Comments »
Monday, August 31st, 2009
Great Article by Garland Pollard at BlackCow Press
So you have an apartment to lease. Either a weekly lease, monthly or yearly. And you’ve done all the things, including newspaper, CraigsList, local apartment guide, even a few fliers to neighbors. And you still have some un-rented inventory.
What’s next?
Make sure your web site and total online presence is where it needs to be, from email to website to Google Adwords to Search Engine Optimization for Google, Bing and Yahoo. A few ideas:
- Make your photos real. So often, websites show canned or old photos, and have non-descriptive language. If you can’t afford a professional photographer, get out there with a camera yourself and take lots of creative angles. You can hundreds of photos with a digital camera; shoot away. Be creative. Yes, you want images that show the room, but you want the images to POP out at the reader.
- Show floor plans. Potential tenants want to imagine what they will be getting.
- Make sure the right numbers are on your website. Yes, you want the office number on the site, but do remember to keep the rest of the telephone numbers on your website. A few minutes delay might mean you miss out on a tenant.
- Make it Melrose Place: No, we aren’t saying that Heather Locklear will need to be there. Instead, what we mean is that you need to “brand” the name and place as a community and way of life. If your clientele is just out of college, you want to play up the social aspect. If it is mid-life folks, then there is another approach to take. Go around and talk to the people who have lived in the apartments the longest, and like it. They will give you the scoop on what makes your place unique. Remember, outside of the signage and the architecture, your “brand” is the people who live and work at your complex. Consider having a web-page where you only list former tenants and what they loved about the place. “I lived there in 1973. Gosh those were some great days at Piney Apartments!”
- Meet the staff: Do you have a lawn company or maintenance man? Show them on the site. Not only does it give them a boost, it tells the potential tenant that this complex is a place where the staff is valued. That message will translate to the potential tenant as this is a place that will take care of me.
- Talk to Realtors. Realtors who do relocations might be a good source of referrals.
- Use Google Adwords. With Adwords, you pay for clicks, not exposure. That means that your apartment community or resort gets exposure even if you don’t pay.
- Use lots of noun-based copy. Search engines can only find your information through words, and adjectives are not as important as nouns. So use lots of words and descriptions for your apartments. Don’t use lots of descriptive words. Instead, use facts, such as size, color and amenities. For instance, you would say “oleander-lined walks” rather than “pretty” walks, or you might say “brick-lined paths” rather than just nice landscaping. This might sound extreme, but you can even mention paint colors, flower beds and the like. Read our tips on Search Engine Basics for ideas.
- Have faith! While the economy is in an awful spot, everyone’s in this mess so just keep at it and you just might even build up a waiting list.
- Know your architecture: At some point, someone designed your apartment buildings with a vision, however modest. Make sure you know that. For instance, if it is a complex built in 1962 by a local architect or developer or contractor, mention that on the site. People have confidence in other people; you are trying to differentiate yourself and every tidbit of information helps.
- What are the benefits? Find benefits where you don’t think there are benefits: If you have shaded parking, that’s a benefit. If you have a pool, make sure that it is an”intimate” pool or a “jungle” pool or a pool with “dozens of deck chairs and card tables where residents play chess every Tuesday.”
- Take advantage of Social Media. You can spend a lot of time in social media sites like Twitter and Facebook, promoting your apartments. Sometimes it pays off, sometimes not. But even a little bit of effort helps to get search engines like Google and Bing to find your name, and associate your apartment name with keywords.
- In the neighborhood: Don’t be afraid of old fashioned shoe leather. Yes, the web is powerful. But make sure you make yourself known to other nearby apartment communities and businesses that are near to your apartments. They will certainly be able to refer people if they know of someone.
- Post the rules but be flexible: When new tenants are hard to find, you need to keep the ones you have. Better to train an old tenant to be a good tenant than to have to find new ones. That being said, a person who finds your apartment over the web wants to know some of the expectations. For instance, are guests quiet at the pool after 9 p.m., or is there a Friday night pool party? How many parking spaces?
- Make sure your site is running properly. Look at your site on different computers and browsers. Does it load quickly? Do you have analytic software installed so you know where your traffic originates and what they are looking for? Do you have all the pages up that you need?
Posted in Apartment Marketing, Apartment Marketing Ideas, Apartment Marketing Support, Apartment Tenant Qualification, Find Good Tenants, Find Latino Residents, Find Renter, Find Renters, Find Tenant, Find a Tenant, Finding Good Tenants, Finding Renters, Finding Tenants, Get Good Tenants, Get More Renter Traffic, Get More Renters, Get More Tenants, Get Tenant, Get a Tenant, Getting Good Tenants, Getting Tenants, Help Rent Apartments, Help Renting Apartments, Housing Market Facts, How to Find Renters, Increase Apartment Occupancy, Increasing Apartment Occupancy, Marketing Apartment, Marketing Apartments, Multi-family Renting, Obtain More Leases, Obtain More Renters, Obtain More Tenants, Online Rental Application, Property Management, Property Management Service, Property Management Services, Property Management Solution, Property Management Solutions, Receive More Renter Traffic, Receive More Renters, Receive More Tenants, Tenant Finding | 487 Comments »
Sunday, August 30th, 2009
The responsibility of renting a property is critical, but simply generating traffic and having a trained sales staff will not rent units. We are operators in a commodity market. By definition, this implies that as owners and managers we have to provide some basic underlying conditions to rent.
First on the list, as operators we gain nothing by trying to sharply under price the market and if we over price the market, we will not rent. This is a delicate item because if we price too low we lose money and if we price too high we will not rent at all. Further, this means we have to be competitive on concessions as well as basic price. With all this in place, if as owners and operators, we can establish a position of greater value we will have a sustainable edge in the market.
Next, our property must be priced to compete with properties on amenities. Visits and calls are generally determined by bedrooms, bathrooms, and amenities. Pricing to fit against the competition in this area is critical.
A clean well maintained property is another basic point. Property management processes and procedures that assure this are critical to renting units. As always, customer service wins the day.
Finally, social condition will kill renting and can be a great rent enabler. If resident prospects see a clean area, late model vehicles, quiet and low key resident interactions, etc. Residents and resident prospects need to feel safe in the neighborhood. The probability begin increasing quickly that they will choose your community as their new home if safe, clean, and friendly conditions.
Blake Ratcliff – The apartment marketing guy
Posted in Apartment Investing, Apartment Management Service, Apartment Management Services, Apartment Marketing, Apartment Marketing Ideas, Apartment Marketing Support, Apartment Tenant Qualification, Find Good Tenants, Find Latino Residents, Find Renter, Find Renters, Find Tenant, Find a Tenant, Finding Good Tenants, Finding Renters, Finding Tenants, Get More Renter Traffic, Get More Renters, Getting Good Tenants, Getting Tenants, Help Rent Apartments, Help Renting Apartments, Hispanic Market, Hispanic Tenant Finding, How to Find Renters, Increase Apartment Occupancy, Increasing Apartment Occupancy, Marketing Apartment, Marketing Apartments, Multi-family Renting, Obtain More Leases, Obtain More Renters, Receive More Renter Traffic, Receive More Renters, Tenant Acquisition | 21 Comments »
Monday, August 24th, 2009
We’ve hit many times the fact that Hispanics are the fastest growing resident demographic. However, did you know that Hispanic Internet usage is growing 50% faster than the general market? Do you have a strategy for this market area?
If not, keep in mind that most Hispanic searches are in English. The fact is Hispanic marketing in fact any demographic marketing focus is a cultural item. For example are you aware that a Hispanic household is 3.5X more likely to respond to a direct mail item than a non-Hispanic Household. This is particularly important when you understand that they only receive 10% of the mail other households receive.
About 55% of Hispanics respond well to ads in Spanish. Also, Radio and television is generally the best mode of advertising based on selling results.
When you considers Hispanics are $860 billion dollar market segment, ignoring this segment is at your own risk. This will be an even greater fact as the segment is expected to grow to over $1 trillion by early in the coming decade.
Good sources for this post were:
MK Blog
The Latino Journal
Online Hispanic Trends
Posted in Apartment Investing, Apartment Management Service, Apartment Management Services, Apartment Marketing, Apartment Marketing Ideas, Apartment Marketing Support, Apartment Tenant Qualification, Find Good Tenants, Find Latino Residents, Find Renter, Find Renters, Find Tenant, Find a Tenant, Finding Good Tenants, Finding Renters, Finding Tenants, Get Good Tenants, Get More Renter Traffic, Get More Renters, Get More Tenants, Get Tenant, Get a Tenant, Getting Good Tenants, Getting Tenants, Help Rent Apartments, Help Renting Apartments, Hispanic Market, Hispanic Tenant Finding, Housing Demographics, Housing Market Facts, How to Find Renters, Increase Apartment Occupancy, Increasing Apartment Occupancy, Latino Prospects, Latino Renteres, Latino Renters, Leasing Support, Marketing Apartment, Marketing Apartments, Multi-family Renting, Obtain More Leases, Obtain More Renters, Obtain More Tenants, Online Property Management, Online Rental Application, Property Management, Property Management Service, Property Management Services, Property Management Solution, Property Management Solutions, Receive More Renter Traffic, Receive More Renters, Receive More Tenants, Tenant Acquisition, Tenant Finding, Tenant Getting, Tenant Placement Service, Tenant Placement Services, Tenant Screening, U.S. Housing | 81 Comments »
Thursday, July 30th, 2009
More traffic… more qualified traffic… better closing techniques are the name of the game for owners and managers.
However, achieving this is a complex task. A significant key is recognizing that the American demographic is a changing thing. Did you know that 72% of new tenants for the next 10 years are expected to be minorities and that half of these will be Hispanic/Latino? Also, did you realize that this year American schools will graduate the largest class in history? Or, what about the fact that seniors as a part of population will grow disportionately over the next 10 years.
What about economics? How does the loss of wealth from the recession impact you? Or, how will increased savings impact renting?
As owners and manager, studying our markets is critical. This implies studying our local market and market trends. This means understanding global trends. Finally, this implies coming up with techniques to capitalize on these factors once understood and quantified.
Blake Ratcliff – CEO of Pallaton Properties
Posted in Apartment Management Service, Apartment Marketing, Apartment Marketing Ideas, Apartment Marketing Support, Find Good Tenants, Find Renter, Find Renters, Find Tenant, Find a Tenant, Finding Good Tenants, Finding Renters, Finding Tenants, Get Good Tenants, Get More Renter Traffic, Get More Renters, Get More Tenants, Get Tenant, Getting Good Tenants, Getting Tenants, Hispanic Market, Hispanic Tenant Finding, How to Find Renters, Increase Apartment Occupancy, Increasing Apartment Occupancy, Obtain More Leases, Obtain More Renters, Obtain More Tenants, Online Property Management, Receive More Renter Traffic, Receive More Renters, Receive More Tenants, Tenant Acquisition, Tenant Finding, Tenant Getting, Tenant Placement Service, Tenant Placement Services | 80 Comments »
Thursday, July 30th, 2009
The Hispanic community in the United States has an incredible $800 billion worth of buying power, even in today’s economy, proving to be an incredibly lucrative investment for the multi-family units willing to tailor their marketing approach in order to meet the needs of the Hispanic renter community. Home ownership proves to be incredibly challenging among the Hispanic community, with lower average education levels, large family units, the general lack of Social Security Numbers for applications and background/credit checks, and a relatively lower average age of individual households deterring most from being able to possess their own homes.
The majority of the Hispanic community is of foreign birth, opting to make their way to the United States by way of major cities such as New York, Miami, and San Francisco. These densely concentrated metropolitan areas are generally home to few owners, and more renters, thus making home rental among the Hispanic population a popular option. The road to home ownership is often lengthy and bureaucratic—60% of United States Hispanic residents opt to rent their homes, and take pride in doing so. Studies show that Hispanics take pride in paying their rent on time and are often more eager to keep a clean living space and uphold tenant/landlord requirements within their homes. Because of this, many multi-family complexes are reaching out to the Hispanic community and adapting the general structure of their renting process and marketing approach to accommodate these eager renters’ needs. In a world where identity theft is happening all around us, a vast number of apartment applications no longer require Social Security Numbers, and many complexes are making concessions for large families. Apartment marketing efforts targeting the Hispanic market can bring you many qualified and eager renters.
At Occupancy100, we employ Spanish-speaking staff, ready and able to help you market your apartment to these thriving populations by translating and tailoring advertisements to reach your Hispanic target market. By talking to one of our staff members we can help you to customize your approach in order to gain this lucrative and profitable tenant population.
We have even created a Spanish/English Online Rental Application!
Tags: accommodate for hispanic tenants, Apartment Marketing, Apartment Marketing Ideas, getting hispanic tenants, hispanic tenant buying power, hispanic tenants are clean, hispanic tenants are great, marketing to hispanics, marketing to the latino market, Renting apartments to hispanics, the hispanic tenant market
Posted in Apartment Marketing, Apartment Marketing Ideas, Apartment Tenant Qualification, Find Good Tenants, Finding Good Tenants, Finding Tenants, Get Good Tenants, Get More Tenants, Getting Good Tenants, Hispanic Market, Hispanic Tenant Finding, How to Find Renters, Increase Apartment Occupancy, Marketing Apartments, Multi-family Renting, Tenant Acquisition, Tenant Finding | 32 Comments »