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Obeoman Glade Jones

AR MEMBER LANE BAILEY KICKS A$$!...just sayin'...

lane

Lane Bailey

...and is just a down-to-earth nice guy, to boot.

Readers of his blog here at AR "Looking Out from the Garage" already know that.

ANd he has definite marketing chops we can all learn from.

After taking a look around at his whole plan, I had to ask him how it works.

...And after reading this, you'll probably want to tap into some of his marketing kung-fu:

Hey Lane, how many sites and blogs do you have and how often do you update them?

I have two direct sites, http://LaneBailey.com and http://GarageHomesUSA.com . I also used to blog on blogger, and there is "legacy" address there, but the site is no longer updated. I also have a customer site at http://9010BrixhamCourt.com that is a single property blog. I write 10 posts a week for Active|Rain, 7 posts a week for LaneBailey.com and 5 posts or so per month for GarageHomesUSA.com. For this property blog, I produced about 20 pages of content in a week... and mostly kept up with everything else. I have also been asked to write for a couple of other sites... but haven't done much of that so far... but I will write for some others soon.


How long did you work on your Wordpress site for http://LaneBailey.com ? How long did it take you to develop the content and get the blog posted?

I started blogging seriously on Active|Rain back in June of 2007. I had written a few things before that, but not regularly. Shortly after I started with A|R, I also started on Blogger... I wanted to have more control over my content. A few months later I picked up WordPress and migrated Blogger to that. I actually used the address from my old "static" site LaneBailey.com as my blog. I have had a post almost every day since.

Building the site was actually pretty easy. I had the site up and running in a few hours with the content from Blogger. It took me a little longer to find Shifter (link: http://payloadz.com/go/jump?id=378910&merch_id=62241&aff_id=17201 ), which is the theme system I use. I wanted more flexibility than I was getting from free templates, so I picked up a premium theme.


Okay-now tell us what else you do-any traditional marketing? Postcards? Newspaper? Fridge Magnets?

The first thing I did was chip clips... I still have some, but have almost gotten rid of them. I have done postcards as well. In fact, I ordered postcards today. Those are specifically tasked, though. They are announcing an open house and there are 600 of them going out. They feature the blogsite for the house on the front, and my blog is on the back.

I also had an online ad on Autoweek Magazine online for April. I will be doing it again over the next few months. It is geo-targeted to the Atlanta and North Georgia area. That ad pointed to GarageHomesUSA.com and brought in a good bit of traffic.

Finally, I have been doing a monthly print newsletter for a couple hundred people in my database. It contains excerpts from LaneBailey.com and GarageHomesUSA.com. It points readers back to those sites for the rest of the story. I'm trying to get back on track with an eNewsletter based on that content, but haven't found the right solution yet... well, I did but it is having a compatibility issue with WP2.5.


How do you tie all these things together, track the results and use Obeo at the same time?

I use Google Analytics and Clicky (link: http://getclicky.com/29580 ). I can see where traffic is coming from, and that is a key. I'm not interested in being famous among agents, or even among consumers. I want to sell houses and enjoy my life. Knowing which avenues drive traffic lets me concentrate on what works. I'm always willing to try new things, but they have to give an RoI (Return on Investment)


What is the total cost of marketing a property like this?

Part of me doesn't want to know the answer......... (Click and Read on!)

lane bailey

Madison, WI and Middleton, WI: Two of the Best Places to live in the U.S.!

Dane County home sales

(Graph from www.city-data.com)

It is pretty easy to see by the peaks - and valleys-in this graph that

Madison and Dane Co has housing choices for every home seeker!

What it doesn't show you is the coming year.

With lower prices, good inventory,

and location, location, location:

Madison, WI and its surrounding suburbs like Middleton

in Dane county are among the top places to live and work in the U.S.!

-You should take a look at Wisconsin.

Okay, we just had a record winter -

But wait until you see Spring!

Steve

Obeo WI:262-325-8687

Obeo National:800-729-6236

Philly Gal meets Midwestern Guy and moves HIM to Madison, Wisconsin: A Short Fable

madison skyline
Madison, WI Skyline-
What a long, strange trip it's been.
And it ain't over yet.
Our journey continues:
Theresa, my wife, got a horrifically great job offer about nine years ago after looking around on the internet.
She was due.
The offer to become the design and operations manager for a start-up furniture company in Madison, Wi.
was the brass ring.
We were living in Quakertown, PA, then, about 30 miles from Philly, just far enough to be out of the worst of the traffic and still have easy access to the Eagles, tomato pie, cheesesteaks, Nockamixon state park
and Yuengling ale.
We were married in a colonial church in Dublin, PA.
She was partnered up, had two antique stores and a thriving furniture restoration business.
And there were the friends she had made over a lifetime in Philly and Upper Bucks county, and her family who looked on me as one of their own.
We had finished rehabbing our 115 year old rowhome-no garage, a back yard the size of,
well, maybe two ping - pong tables. (Recently sold for 189k - but I will get to that.) Her sons Ben and Alex were not as eager as she was, but came around when the realized the could always move back to PA later.
I could not have been prouder of her career efforts-and happier that we were going.
And she knew it.
But after nearly six years in PA, this Midwestern boy (ok-Minnesota native) was looking west at the sunset
more often that he cared to admit.
"I know you want to be closer to your family," she said.
Theresa had never lived more than a days' drive away from any of her immediate family.
Off to Madison, WI it was.
And what a great place to be.
We took our money from the rowhome and built a spanky new single home, on the east side of Madison
in Reston Heights, with a yard for her gardens,
-and a garage!
Go Figure.
The snow blower, fire pit, five gardens (one rose, one veggie and the rest flowers), weed whacker and lawn mower all followed.
So did Lake Monona cruises, Mallards baseball games, lotsa Leinies and brats, a little too much cheese,
Taste of Madison, the Farmers' Market, the Badgers, riding our bikes to wherever we felt like
and watching our neighbors homes go up, the families move in, becoming their friends drinking wine around the fire pit, Ben staying with us, Alex visiting from PA,
and success at her new job.
The greatest blessing of all-being with someone who loved where I had come from -
almost as much as I loved her.
That was five years ago.
Theresa and I both miss Madison, and manage to get there often enough
and host our old friends for the past three years at our new,
100-year old, restored A & C home along the Rock River in Ft. Atkinson.
She put the company on the map, and went back to school. She is on the honor roll.
She has one more year at UW-Madison.
She always manages to find a home with southern exposure, and doves.
Wherever I hold her hand, that will be home.
Steve

Fort Atkinson, Wisconsin-Love it and never leave it!

Fort Atkinson Sunset

..Just have a seat and watch the sun go down on the town and the Rock River; listen to the church bells ring the hour...

...after having a late lunch at Scottie's Eat-Mor, the best 16-stool diner and thickest cheesburgers in the state, not to mention better hash browns, pancakes the size of horse blankets and the greatest BLT around, after the cast from the play at the Fireside got up and gave you a spot at the counter... After you spent the day meandering along the Riverwalk, watching the kids fish,families picnic and boats drift by, slipping up to the dock and their crews having a cool Leinies on the deck at the Legion.

After you strolled through downtown, peering into Catfish Alley, where the largest articulated fish sculpture in the world stands, ducking into I Love Funkies to check out vintage motor scooters, greeting cards and stained glass windows. Arts and Crafts antiques at Five Star, live chickens in the window at Nest, dropping bread to the ducks under the bridge guarded by worn bronze statues of the Native American who put Fort on the map...

After you wandered pass the Cafe Carpe and hear the musicians getting ready for their gig, the guitars and voices blending in the breeze around the corner and down the street past Tuttle's Pharmacy, where everyone says Hi when you come in...

After you woke up late, the only reason being lawn mowing is OK after 10 a.m. on the weekends and sometimes the geese in the backyard are louder than the mowers, because there are more of them, of course,

...more geese than people, just over 11,000 thousand of them in this town-all quieter than the geese,

Except the baseball team after they win, the kids after dinner playing kickball in the back yard, their sound fading in the simple silence of the sunset after you have found your way home in Fort Atkinson.