Multifamily Marketing Trends To Watch in 2019

Multifamily Marketing Trends To Watch in 2019

2018 is in the rearview mirror, and it’s time to look ahead. How are you going to implement a real estate marketing plan that works for both your property and the tech-savvy renters that will sign your leases?

 

Before you get too far into your apartment marketing schedule, take note of these important marketing trends for 2019. If you’re not implementing these new marketing tactics, you might be falling one step behind the competition.

 

Let’s dive right into the list of apartment complex marketing ideas, so you can get back to work.

 

  1. Spring for 3D Floor Plans and Virtual Tours

 

Your floor plan page is one of the most important pages on your website. In fact, it’s usually the second-most viewed page on property websites behind only the amenities page. If a huge percentage of your website users are going straight to your floor plans page, it only makes sense to make that page as engaging as possible. 2D floor plans don’t cut it these days, not when your competitor has virtual tours available on their website.

 

  1. Don’t skimp on quality photos

 

High-quality imagery matters, and it’s useful across all your marketing channels. Consider your budget for high-quality photos before you engage a marketing agency. The more high-quality photos you have, the better your marketing materials will look. We’re not just talking about websites and brochures, either.

 

Your property’s Instagram page will benefit from high-quality imagery, and that’s just the tip of the iceberg.  Facebook posts with quality images get more engagement. Digital ads do better when the feature pictures of amenities. Every piece of your marketing matrix will be more effective if you use up-to-date, high-quality photos instead of renderings or stale imagery.

 

  1. Zero in on hyper-local marketing

 

As marketers, we sometimes feel that we’re at the mercy of Google’s algorithm changes. The only way to build SEO, these days, is by staying up to date with algorithmic changes. One such change is Google’s preference for local search results. If you type “apartments” into Google right now, the results will feature apartment complexes closest to your current location. Even if you’re in a massive city like Houston, TX, the results will remain hyperlocal.

 

So, how should this affect your marketing strategy? It’s simple; make sure your local listings are up to date. We’re talking about your property’s Yelp page, its Facebook page and its Google My Business page. Take control of your local search results by verifying the info on these pages and responding to reviews. These local listings might show up ahead of your website on Google’s search results, so be sure to treat them like the customer-facing marketing materials that they are.

 

For more leasing ideas that can drive results for your property, get in touch with a Threshold team member today.

How to Turn a Condo into a Celebrity

How to Turn a Condo into a Celebrity

Twenty-seven stories. It’s hard to sell that twenty-seven stories of condominiums, especially in one of the most competitive real estate markets in Canada. One of Ontario’s largest high-rise condo developers came to us with this problem, and we solved it through distinctive branding and powerful apartment complex marketing ideas.

Located in downtown Kitchener and on the edge of the city’s stunning Victoria Park, this 27-story condominium would stand out visually whether we named it or not. Still, Threshold set out to attract certain kinds of buyers; young professionals and real estate investors. The high rise would need avant-garde branding that reflected the local art scene.

Turning a Condo into a Celebrity

One idea quickly emerged from brainstorm sessions as a winner; Charlie West. It would be a persona; a name that happened to be a nod to the building’s address on Charles St. West. Building on this persona, we created a campaign with actionable messages like – “Meet Charlie West.” The whole idea was to create a “celebrity” feeling around the new high-rise.

A buyer database that delivers results

Even the best marketing ideas for apartments are useless without a sound strategy. Our digital team quickly went to work getting the Charlie West persona in front of an audience that included real estate agents, brokers, investors and end users. Using Facebook ads and AdWords, we pushed our audience towards a landing page that collected leads and built a database of buyer info. Once the database was built, the digital team began sending out automated emails to do two things; provide registrants with updates and establish a relationship with prospective buyers.

The database built, Threshold went to work building out the physical sales center. That brand experience — which we’d worked so hard to create online — needed to extend to the real world. Through scale models, signage and touchscreen kiosks, we helped the sales team with their goal of closing the sale and hosting memorable events for people who’d registered online. The city was buzzing about Charlie West — the newest celebrity in town.

Sealing the deal with sales

When it came time to sell the condos, people came in droves. The sales event required entrance management due to the volume of attendees. Local media coverage drove even more buzz and awareness. In just four months, the digital marketing efforts delivered 1,000 quality leads. By the time the sales events were over, more than 80% of the condos were sold. That’s the power of celebrity.

Strong apartment marketing ideas can have this effect. If you’d like ideas that drive results for your property, get in touch with a Threshold team member today.

5 Keys to Success for Client Reporting

5 Keys to Success for Client Reporting

Reporting is massively important to maintaining client relationships, developing strategies and reaching client goals, especially as it pertains to marketing ideas for apartments. Reporting can seem like a daunting task when you consider the needs of clients and the sheer volume of data produced and consumed by modern agencies. However, that doesn’t mean reporting needs to consume an excessive amount of an agency’s time and resources. To help understand what makes for successful client reporting, we’ve put together a list of five critical factors that contribute to effective reporting strategies.
 

  1. Reporting must be timely

 
Reports should be issued on a consistent schedule that’s communicated ahead of time to clients. Clients may have internal reporting — which relies on data provided by the agency — and a consistent reporting schedule allows clients to better prepare for their own reporting. Reports should be issued as soon as possible after the end of the reporting period to ensure the relevance of the information. Delayed or inconsistent reporting can lead to missed opportunities and challenges when responding to changing conditions.
 

  1. Reporting must be consistent

 
Metrics and data can only be relied on when they’re consistent. Once key indicators are identified, they must be reported consistently. Any changes should be expressly disclosed through the reporting. If changes are made in the report but aren’t communicated clearly, you run the risk of a client walking away with an incomplete or even inaccurate understanding of the story you’re trying to tell.
 

  1. Reporting must be customizable

 
While some reporting can be automated, reporting must be responsive and capable of evolving to suit the changing needs and preferences of the client. Custom reporting is a necessity when the client has complex or unique needs. You might have to go through many iterations of a report before you reach a version that shows a complete picture. It can be frustrating to go through such an iterative process to make major changes to the report, but it’s necessary when clients are facing new challenges or implementing complex apartment complex marketing ideas.
 

  1. Reporting must be actionable

 
Provide suggested actions and tactics in the report that take advantage of opportunities exposed by the data. Reports should look forward while still showing historical data. Reporting should serve as a tool for establishing goals and strategies rather than just being a simple recap of past performance. A client should always walk away with an understanding of not only what actions you plan to take on their behalf, but also what actions they can take to help them reach their goals.
 

  1. Reporting must tell a story

 
Reporting that tells a story is the most important component of effective reporting, and should be the primary goal when establishing reporting processes. It’s your responsibility to provide the insight behind the metrics. The story behind the data is almost always more relevant than the data itself.
 
The factors that influence decisions — and the results of those decisions — are often qualitative and can’t be represented through data alone. The report should communicate how a client’s investment is paying off, and provide context for both failures and successes. Providing a detailed story of what’s working and what isn’t creates opportunities to work with the client to develop new strategies and refine current ones. Overall, the effectiveness of any reporting is reliant on a high quality and exhaustive narrative that ties together all the data.
 
Here at Threshold, we always report on the quantifiable success of our apartment marketing ideas. If you want to work with an agency that values transparency, get in touch with us today.

How to Launch Lease-Up Numbers into the Stratosphere

How to Launch Lease-Up Numbers into the Stratosphere

Every property manager hopes to fill their community as quickly as possible, but sometimes external factors put that goal out of reach. That was certainly the case for one community who came to us in need of apartment complex marketing ideas.
 
Alexan CityCentre is located in one of the most saturated markets in America — Houston, TX. Because of the incredibly high number of existing competitors, Alexan CityCentre wasn’t showing up on the first page of Google. It wasn’t showing up on the second page either, or the third, or the fourth. In fact, it was nearly impossible to find the Alexan CityCentre website unless you already knew the URL. You could type the property’s name in the search bar letter-for-letter and you wouldn’t be able to find the website until you reached the 4th page of search results.
 
As a result of the property’s lackluster SEO performance, Alexan CityCentre was 1% occupied and 3% leased when the owners came to Threshold/Carve in March of 2017. They needed help, and they needed it fast.
 

Canvassing the community with digital ads
 
The first order of business was to get the property’s digital marketing back on track with digital marketing ideas for apartments. Threshold/Carve launched search ads, retargeting ads and geo-targeted display ads for Alexan CityCentre. The geo-targeted ads were specifically targeted at competitor’s property’s; a strategic decision that was intended to encourage residents of other community’s to consider a new apartment. Supplemental digital marketing tools also included Waze ads to drive local foot traffic and Gmail ads to get the logo in front of potential customers.
 

Kickstarting the SEO strategy
 
Once those digital ads were up and running, it was time to kickstart the property’s SEO performance. After all, nobody is going to sign a lease at an apartment they can’t find. However, SEO takes a few months to go into effect because of the cumulative nature of Google’s search algorithm. That process can be sped up, however, with a branded search campaign. This branded campaign focused on getting the property’s website to show up even when potential residents misspelled the property’s name. The website’s click-through-rate went up, but conversions remained low because the website still needed to be conversion-optimized.
 
To address the conversion issue, the Threshold/Carve digital team created a landing page that provided potential residents with property information and a contact form. With these two new digital tools, Alexan CityCentre finally had a way to gather leads and drive conversions.
 

Digital marketing that drives results
 
So, what did all that digital marketing do for Alexan City Centre’s 1% occupancy rate? Within a year, it boosted that occupancy rate to 75%. The property was 3% leased when Threshold/Carve got involved, and 84% one year later.
 
Remember those conversion-optimizations we mentioned earlier? The new landing page and contact form helped Alexan CityCentre earn 178 conversions in April of 2018 after seeing just 3 conversion in December of 2017.  
 
If you want results like this for your property — and who wouldn’t — get in touch with a Threshold/Carve team member today. We’ve got more apartment marketing ideas than we know what to do with, and we’re itching for the chance to put them to good use.

The Relationship Between Website Design and Conversion Rates

The Relationship Between Website Design and Conversion Rates

You can have the best apartment marketing ideas in the world, but they won’t help you build any leads if they appear on an outdated desktop-only website.
The idea that mobile is king when it comes to web design isn’t a new concept. Mobile internet usage has been steadily increasing since the late 2000’s. As of January 2018, 56% of global web traffic came from smartphones or tablets.
What does this to do with web design? According to a study from Forrester, mobile-optimized websites have 200-400% higher conversion rates than those that aren’t designed for mobile viewing. Website design can have a significant impact on your business, so let’s explore some key design elements that will help you up your mobile website game.
Design Responsively
If you aren’t already using responsive web design, now’s the time to start. A responsive website uses flexible, fluid layouts to seamlessly resize, rearrange and optimize itself based on the environment and screen size.
Responsive design ensures your website looks good and is readable no matter what device it’s being viewed on. This matters because 38% of people will stop engaging with a website if the content/layout doesn’t display well on their screen.
 
With responsive websites, you can pour your resources into maintaining only one website as opposed to multiple versions for desktop, smartphone and tablet. Not only does responsive design make viewers happy, it also helps you cut costs. If we look beyond the aesthetics, we find that responsive websites have better SEO rankings because Google prioritizes search results to favor mobile-friendly websites.
Typical methods of rearranging a desktop site design for better viewing on mobile include:

  • Converting a multi-column layout to a single column layout
  • Changing linear menus to drop-down menus
  • Limiting the number of images being displayed (Studies have shown that having fewer images on your mobile site can actually increase conversions.)
  • Using collapsible elements like accordions to minimize the amount of information initially presented. Nobody likes a wall of text!

Adopting a cohesive “design language”
Have you ever noticed that a lot of websites seem to have a similar look? The web has an established visual language, and that’s even more apparent on mobile devices due to the crossover with mobile app design. People have expectations for how things should look and feel on the web, and you can leverage this expected “design language” to simplify navigation for your site’s users.
 
“Design language” sounds like a fancy term, but it just refers to a consistent, cohesive set of rules that your website design should follow. Think of it as a brand guideline for things like buttons, forms, menus, etc.Google’s Material Design is a great example of consistent design language. Let’s consider the issue in the framework of promoting marketing ideas for apartments. A person looking at your property’s registration form should immediately know what it is, how to fill it out, and that the button underneath it is what they need to click on to send it to someone in the leasing office.
Consider how people physically use their mobile devices
The physical limitations of mobile browsing should factor into the design of your website. Keeping text at a legible size is important if you want people to be able to read your content on small screens.
Another, less common thing to consider is the way a mobile user holds their device while browsing on the go. When considering the mobile design of your site, it’s important to remember that only approximately a third of a smartphone’s screen falls into the user’s natural “thumb zone”. Place navigation bars at the bottom of the screen, within this zone, and make sure that CTAs are “above the fold” (the space immediately visible on your phone’s screen when it loads), to minimize scrolling.
There’s a lot to think about when it comes to designing a good mobile website experience. These are just a few of many methods of tailoring your site’s layout and design. At Threshold/Carve, we have a wealth of experience when it comes to creating amazing mobile user experiences that enhance apartment complex marketing ideas. Get in touch to find out more!