Friday, August 3, 2012

How Should Blogging and Real Estate Meet?

Society
Society (Photo credit: ultrakml)

Are you kidding?  Is this even a real comparison?  Ok, I admit that it’s a huge stretch, but as both a real estate investor and a blogger sometimes I wonder which one I should spend more time working on.
A lot of beginning real estate investors buy investments that yield negative cash flow betting on appreciation to make their investment worthwhile.  Many are happy that they just breakeven on a month to month basis.  In fact, cash flow $100 to $200 per month is considered a great investment by some.

If you consider the effort and capital required to squeak out a mere $100 per month it makes you wonder if you should just put all that effort into a blog.  After all, I contend that making $100/mo blogging ($3.33/day) is a very achievable goal within a month.

When purchasing a property an investor would put thousands of dollars down, pay closings costs, advertise the property, getting a renter, collect rents, etc… in order to make $100/mo positive cash flow.
As a blogger, startup costs are virtually nothing.  It takes about 3 minutes to get into this business.  Your main asset here is your brain power.  You are in total control of this business and your operating costs are just your time and brain thoughts.

With real estate, on a single family home you cannot increase your cash flow significantly.  You have to rely on market conditions and there is a lot more risk than blogging.
I’m not saying that you should invest in blogging rather than real estate.  However, I do believe that a person who is looking to gain some semi-passive income in the form of a few hundred dollars a month should looking into blogging.  Blogging is virtually no risk and is truly a work from home job.  Everyone has a hobby or passion that they can write about.  There are readers and advertisers for every topic.

Friday, June 22, 2012

Real Estate Links - What's a good number?


I like Mike Antoniak, and he has been good to me by including me in his story that appeared in the September issue of REALTOR Magazine. I also realize that he has a very limited space to work with in his columns that appear in the magazine.
So, let me fill in the gaps a bit on his article that is in the November issue of REALTOR Magazine.
Link building is a very important aspect to generating better organic search engine results. But the common perception amongst the REALTOR community is that the quantity of links is the only thing that matters.  The mindset has become that the agent with the most links pointing to their site wins the game. Nothing could be further from the truth. It is the number one measure of online popularity, and it is the reason why Google grew to be the most popular search engine. In a perfect world, it's the ideal measure of relevancy. We are certainly able therefore to try and make the websites we own more relevant than our competitors and beat them to the number one, or most relevant, item on the web.
In fact, if you follow the simplistic concept of "more is better", you may actually behurting your search engine rankings.  What you should be looking for is inbound links that make your site a hub of interest, with other, high quality sites in your line of business linking to your site. 
Think about these concepts:
Is your site considered a "hub" if all your links are reciprocal links - ie you've traded links between your site and others?  Instead of being a "hub", you are part of a network diagram of sites, with everyone being more or less equal.  I have a link to you, and you have a link to me. Generally this isn't good practice though. Google can catch reciprocal linking quite quickly, and a reciprocal link does not hold nearly the same value as a one way link.
Are the sites that are linking to you of high quality or are they average sites of average importance (or low quality sites with low importance)?  It makes perfect sense that one high quality link from a highly respected web site would hold more weight than several low quality links from average or low quality sites.  For example, is one link to your web site from Realtor.org better than several from link farms - sites whose only purpose is to create links to other sites (often for a fee)?  It's common wisdom in the search engine optimization crowd that link farms are considered to be nothing more than spam by the search engines, and the search engines don't like spam.
Personally, I try not to give out too many links to low quality sites, and I also don't really look for reciprocal links.  The basic theory the highly ranked web sites work off of is that if you provide good content and keep your site fresh with unique and useful information, you will naturally build a network of sites that link to yours without having the need to create a "spammy" reciprocal link in return.
Another great way to get some quality links is to write some articles about your industry, in our case the real estate industry, and then contact a lot of great real estate sites and see if any of them would be willing to host them. In the author byline, just add a link back to your site. Generating great content can be tough, and popular real estate blogs often look for ways to get free content without spending much time putting it all together.
Of course, this makes effective link building hard to do.  How do you get high quality sites to provide a one-way, non-reciprocal link to yours?
It ain't easy.

Thursday, December 22, 2011

Getting a real estate license

If you're looking to get a real estate license, it's important to know that you have to do it on a state level.  Every state license has slightly different details from one another, however I will only focus on getting a real estate license for Indiana.

Obtaining an Indiana real estate license requires completing real estate courses, totalling fifty four which can be taken online.  Following that, applicants must pass the Indiana real estate license exam.  Applicants must be at least 18, and must have a fairly clean criminal background.

To learn more details, take a look at these Indiana real estate resources to prepare yourself:

http://indiana.realestateschoolonline.com/
http://realestatelicensedirect.com/indiana-real-estate-license/
http://www.in.gov/pla/license.htm

Monday, December 19, 2011

Mountains of Oregon

One thing Indiana is not well known for is its majestic mountains.  It probably is the, if not one of the, flattest states in the country, and even the occasional hill is something Hoosiers can marvel at.  That is why I wanted to spend some time and write about one of the best mountain ranges in the country, that is fairly under-appreciated and unrecognized.

Known officially as the Oregon Coast Range, and sometimes the Pacific Coast Range, it extends over 200 miles from the Columbia River south to the middle fork of the Coquille River.  The range creates a rain shadow for the Willamette Valley that sits west of the mountain range making it an excellent place for agriculture.

There are many mountains with great hiking trails.  The tallest mountain in the range is Marys Peak standing at 4,097 feet.  The area is host to many large tree varieties, which brings in the logging industry in both private and government owned forests.  Despite that, black bear, elk, deer, beaver, and many species of birds are abundant in the region.

If you are ever considering living out in the area, take a look at Corvallis Oregon homes for sale, all of which are closely located in the Willamette Valley.