Google Plus is a social media site that every Real Estate agent should be using as a tool to increase their online visibility. Not only is it one of the top social media networks but also a powerful SEO tool with claimed authorship. Google Plus for real estate is a must!
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Google+ For Real Estate Agents
1. http://www.maxrealestateexposure.com/google-plus-for-realtors-who-needs-it-you-do/ June 9, 2013
Google Plus for Realtors: Who Needs It? You Do!
Google Plus For Real Estate
Not long ago I was talking to a local real estate
professional about her social media presence. Of
course, she was active on Facebook, and had even
made a reasonable stab at Twitter.
Then I asked her about Google+. She looked at me
like I had just hatched a Twitter bird out of my
forehead.
“Why would I bother with Google Plus? I need to be
where potential customers can see me.”
I couldn’t agree with her more. That’s exactly why she
needs to be on Google+.
Google Plus is without a doubt the most
misunderstood social network ever introduced. And in
a strange twist, that gives you, the lucky readers of Bill
Gassett’s blog, the opportunity to break ahead of your competition and get in front of more
prospects they’ll never see.
But how can that happen with a network that so-called social media gurus have written off as a
“ghost town”?
The Hidden Power of a Google Plus Network
Most of you reading this blog are real estate professionals. Your lifeblood is in finding prospects
and communicating to them, before any of your competitors can, just how awesome you are and
why they need to engage you to buy or sell their next house. Let me ask you a question. If I gave
you a choice between having a tiny booth in a huge exhibition hall full of other realtors all after the
same prospects wandering around, or the ability to go right into the homes of every one of those
prospects, which would you choose? You’d be crazy to not choose the latter. And I’m going to
show you how to do just that.
The reason most business people and even social media consultants write off Google+ is that
they don’t really understand how different what Google has created is from every other social
network in existence. They assume that Google+ is just a too-late-to-the-game Facebook
wannabe. They couldn’t be more wrong.
Very Lively Ghosts
First of all, the ghost town rumors couldn’t be more untrue. The last numbers Google released (in
December 2012) claimed 135 million active users (users actually doing something on the Google+
interface). An independent global survey in January 2013 by Global Web Index claims over 300
million active users. Whatever number you believe, that’s a very impressive showing for a social
network only 1-1/2 years old.
2. Those of us active on Google+ have always scratched our heads at the ghost town perception. In
just 18 months I have over 30,000 followers on Google plus and more engagement than I can keep
track of. I’ve been on Twitter (and worked it hard) for over 2 years, and have just under 2000
followers there.
I think much of the ghost town perception came from users who never quite got how to work
Google+. Facebook made it easy to find and connect with your family and old friends. But people
came to Google+, set up profiles, posted a few things, and then got discouraged when nobody
followed them. Twitter had a similar problem in the beginning because it has a similar follower-
following model. On both networks, you won’t see anyone until you follow them (“circle” them in
G+-speak), and even if you do, they won’t see your stuff unless they follow/circle you. So on
Google+ you can’t just put your shingle out and expect people to show up. You’ve got to go out
and find them. More on why that’s an advantage later.
SEO Benefits
If people have heard anything positive at all about Google+, it’s usually the “SEO (Search Engine
Optimization) benefits” that are being touted. Very early on people noticed that public Google+
posts were indexed for Google search. Then webmasters found that if they created a new site
and submitted posts to Google+, their site could be indexed almost instantly (compared to the
weeks to months it usually took).
Being a social media consultant in an SEO agency, I was intrigued. I began carrying out experiments
of my own, seeing how far I could push this intriguing power to directly inject things into Google’s
search results. Unlike other social media posts like tweets, I found that some of my Google+ posts
could rank at the top of search results and stay there for months and months. For example. a G+
post I did about “Google+ Page Analytics” has been at #1 for that keyword in logged-out Google
search for over a year now.
Google+ even helped my agency claim 8 of the 10 first page results for a few days for a new
product we introduced!
But as impressive as those SEO tricks were, we hadn’t yet seen the real power of Google+ in
Google search. Not until January of 2012.
Introducing Search Plus Your World
In January of 2012 Google introduced a new version of Google Search: Search Plus Your World
(S+YW). This was Google’s personalization of search taken to the next level. Now if you are
searching on Google while logged in to Google (say, for using Gmail), your results by default are
strongly affected by your Google network. Your Google network is all your Google contacts plus
anyone you’ve circled on Google+. And there is almost certainly some influence from your
“extended network” (people who have circled you and people in circles of people you’ve circled).
3. What does this look like in the search results?
Let’s say I’m searching for “top real estate agents on twitter.” Here’s what I see if I search logged-
out of Google:
Fine, but not exactly what I was hoping to find. Now let me do the same search logged in to my
Google account:
4. Hey look! It’s Bill Gassett, owner of this blog! Bill and I are friends on Google+. I’ve come to know
and trust him, so his recommendations will be far more meaningful to me than those of some
strange web site. Without S+YW, I might not have ever known that my trusted friend Bill had made
a post relevant to my query, for it would have been much further down in the search results.
So here’s what really excites me: the larger your Google/Google+ network is, the more people
whose search results your are influencing. And that’s how Google+ can help get you in front of
more people who never would have found you otherwise.
Now most real estate agents work in a local market. Combined with localization, the S+YW effect
becomes even more powerful. That’s because in most cases Google can see the general location
of a searcher, or the location she is searching for. When localization is in play for your area,
Google will boost your search result even more for in-network users. Are you starting to see the
power of Google Plus for Realtors yet?
Using Google Authorship
Did you notice in the screen captures above that both Bill and I have our handsome faces next to
the search results? That didn’t happen just because Google likes showing off handsome men.
(OK, that’s not even in play). It’s because both of us have hooked into something called Google
Authorship.
Google Authorship allows content producers to connect all their content on the web with their
5. Google+ profiles. This qualifies us to get the “author rich snippet” on our search results. Not only
does this rich snippet show the author’s profile photo, but a series of important links are added as
well.
Notice the line in the red box above. From left to right, the Authorship rich snippet result adds:
1. A click-able byline that goes straight to the author’s profile.
2. The number of people who follow the author on Google+ (a nice trust mark if you’ve built up
a good following)
3. A “More by…” link that leads to search results pages that show just that author’s content.
There’s more! If someone clicks through an Authorship result and stays on the content for at least
two minutes, Google takes that as a sign that the searcher liked what she found. If the searcher
hits the back button to return to the search results page, the original result has now expanded to
show three more links to that author’s content:
Why would anyone turn down getting that much extra real estate in Google search? That’s
something people pay SEO agencies like mine thousands of dollars to get, and Google is giving it
out for free!
But as they say on late night TV, wait, there”s even more!
Google Author Rank: The Future of Search
6. Shortly after Google introduced Authorship, they released a YouTube video about it featuring
Google “spam czar” Matt Cutts interviewing Authorship project head Othar Hansson. Hansson
indicated that one of the things Google might do with Authorship is eventually use it as a ranking
signal. Savvy Google followers immediately made the association of this idea back to a series of
patents owned by Google going back to 2005 for something called “Agent Rank.” Agent Rank
would be the ability of a search engine to track the social signals around a particular “entity” and
score it by its authority in various topics. That score would be used to influence search results
associated with the entity. Among the entities named were authors (individual online content
producers). Google+ profiles and Google Authorship put in place what Google needed to move
toward Author Rank.
While there is no indication that Author Rank is yet in play in any strong manner in search results,
Hansson made clear in the 2011 video that Google would begin collecting data to be used toward
Author rankings. So anyone who has their content hooked up to Authorship now is accumulating
authority that will put them way ahead of their competition once Author Rank kicks in.
But there are benefits right now. Studies have shown that having an author photo next to a
search result can increase click-through rate (CTR) on that result by up to 30%. That’s because
the human eye is drawn to human faces. In addition, a face next to a search result probably
triggers a subconscious trust in the result. We like things that we think come from real people.
Those factors can significantly boost the CTR of a result down the page from the coveted #1
spot.
How do you get qualified for Google Authorship? Here’s Google’s basic instructions. If you need
more help, I recommend joining the Google Authorship and Author Rank Community I started on
Google+. There are lots of helpful people there who can answer your questions.
Building a Powerful Google+ Network
By now I hope I’ve convinced you that there is much more to Google+ and its effects on Google
than most people know. But what can you do to put that to work for you and your real estate
business?
Here’s a brief action plan to get you started:
1. Start with a completely filled out Google plus profile, including a good, clear face photo.
People will decide whether you’re worth following by the appearance and info on your profile.
Use your main keywords throughout your profile, as those will make your profile more likely
to be ranked for those things in both Google+ search and Google search.
2. Use the powerful search in Google+ to find people, pages, and communities talking about
your specialties. Use the drop down filter after you initiate a keyword search. Google+ allows
you to add anyone to your circles, whether or not they follow you back.
3. Begin to enter into conversations where you can contribute. This will start to get your name
recognized as a helpful authority, and people will start to follow you.
4. At the same time, make sure to keep good content regularly posted to your profile. Do this
even if you have few followers and not much engagement yet. Not only are you building up
posts that can be found in search, you make a better impression on potential followers who
are scanning your profile.
5. Join Communities relevant to your field and become a valued contributor there. Communities
are the best way on Google+ for people who like discussing the same topic to discover each