Estate Agents In York

Sunday, September 2, 2018

Are you social media savvy? Use it to sell your home!

This month we’re talking about reviewing and refreshing where your property is at in the selling process. If it’s been on the market longer than it should have been, it is a great time of year to decide what your next stage is!

Today we’re revisiting the topic of social media, and how it can actually be used to help you sell your home. Read more…

Social media such as Facebook and Twitter is on everyone’s lips nowadays, from university students using it to network with their classmates, to businesses sharing their latest venture or new creation. Networking with people – from your own town to those across the world – has become the norm. With this is mind, could social media marketing be used to sell your home? It’s being used in much more productive ways than simple friend connection, and with just a few simple guidelines, your home could be reaching your target audience within hours.

Here are our Top 5 Tips to sell your house effectively using social media:

Do your research – Have others done the same in your area? Have a search around your local area via social media, and see if you can find any success stories. Ask them questions, and learn any helpful facts about your area and its social media selling potential from those with experience.

Lay the foundations – Set up a social media page for your house via Facebook and Twitter. Both have advantages: Facebook is great for imagery, and Twitter is ideal for networking locally. Create a page you would want to look at if you were a buyer. Have a strong cover and profile photo of the property, and details of its location in the text boxes.

Sell it! – If you want to attract potential local buyers, ensure your images are spot on. A professional photographer would come in handy here. Get rid of clutter, and make each room look homely. Facebook has the advantage of videos too; why not get a video made? A showcase or walk-through of your home is an ideal way to let people see more of the property. Make your home sellable through quality creative content. Is it near good schools, for example? Tell them so.

Share it – Share your pages via your Facebook and Twitter accounts with your friends, and ask them to share it on to their friends too. This immediately opens your network. Do you have a blog or a website? Share it on here. Put it on the footer of your personal emails. Network on Twitter too; search for people looking for property in your area, and comment on their tweets.

Be interactive – You hopefully will start getting likes and comments from potential buyers; ensure you check the page daily to answer these, or risk losing prospective viewers.

One of our favourite examples of how successful social media selling can be, is a woman called Betsy Talbot who was setting off around the world with her husband, and wanted a quick sale. By networking and running the Twitter account to sound like the house was doing the talking, the house was sold within two months. One of our favourite lines: “I love watching you stroll by me on the way to Fremont Sunday Market. If you lived here you could park in my garage!”

The page is still live for you to pick up some more ideas for your social media house adventure.

In the next few years we could well see more properties being sold through social media. With such interesting developments in the property market happening all the time, it’s worth spending a little effort seeing if you can make it work for you.

If you’d like my help to sell your home more effectively, please answer a few short questions her


What to read next: 
Raising the steps

What to do next: Sign up to my Selling Secrets http://www.home-truths.co.uk/selling-secrets

The post Are you social media savvy? Use it to sell your home! appeared first on Home Truths.



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Saturday, September 1, 2018

Epic renovation: remaking a home in Devon https://t.co/xqmSNTvP3i Solicitors & Estate Agents In One Just £899 + vat .. https://t.co/GmjoJxU3bM


Epic renovation: remaking a home in Devon https://t.co/xqmSNTvP3i Solicitors & Estate Agents In One Just £899 + vat .. https://t.co/GmjoJxU3bM (via Twitter http://twitter.com/conveyandmove/status/1036122642389106688)

It’s autumn already, time to slow down and save your seeds https://t.co/ZEOHoRfM7L Solicitors & Estate Agents In One Just £899 + vat .. https://t.co/GmjoJxU3bM


It’s autumn already, time to slow down and save your seeds https://t.co/ZEOHoRfM7L Solicitors & Estate Agents In One Just £899 + vat .. https://t.co/GmjoJxU3bM (via Twitter http://twitter.com/conveyandmove/status/1036122640598093824)

Houseplants: the gift that keeps on giving https://t.co/2oo1YlOgAz Solicitors & Estate Agents In One Just £899 + vat .. https://t.co/GmjoJxU3bM


Houseplants: the gift that keeps on giving https://t.co/2oo1YlOgAz Solicitors & Estate Agents In One Just £899 + vat .. https://t.co/GmjoJxU3bM (via Twitter http://twitter.com/conveyandmove/status/1036122638127702017)

Epic renovation: remaking a home in Devon

With stalactites in the cellar, a lot of hard work was required to turn a rundown townhouse into a home

It was while driving back from one of their frequent trips to Totnes, a medieval market town in one of South Devon’s prettiest corners, that Hianta Cassam Chenaï and her husband Matthias Peters first spotted the Regency townhouse they now call home. “We kept coming down to Devon for weekends to see his friends and family, then dreading going back to London,” she says. “Then we saw the ‘For Sale’ sign.” Following their Provencal wedding in 2014, the couple traded their 1970s Hoxton flat for the handsome four-storey property first built for the Duke of Somerset (owner of the nearby Berry Pomeroy Castle) in 1830. Even on dull days the neighbouring River Dart beams in its watery light, lending the Grade II-listed house an airy, seaside quality. “It still feels like a holiday home,” she says, to the sound of seagulls.

Though the site had lain empty for a few years following its previous incarnation as offices, the couple were instantly attracted to its grand proportions and closeness to town. Smitten, they didn’t realise how bad a state it was in. “We naively thought we would just give it a lick of paint,” she says. Little did they know that they were embarking on an epic renovation that entailed replacing the stairwell, the roof and windows as well as reconfiguring the layout at the top and bottom.

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It’s autumn already, time to slow down and save your seeds

Summer’s mayhem is over and it’s time to take stock, tidy up, do a little weeding

Fall back. It’s official. The second day of September, the first days of meteorological autumn. It is the equinox this month. The sun is closing on its winter low. Sap’s slowing, returning to soil. It’s the time of the first frosts, time to stop feed. We are leaving the months of growth.

Time, though, to save seed. I am prone to the sexy allure of a seed packet but to sow food or flowers you’ve saved yourself is a special kind of joy. So leave the last peas to dry on the stem, the same with beans, select a few fat pods and resist the urge to eat them.

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Houseplants: the gift that keeps on giving

Three good reasons why a potplant is a much better gift than a bouquet

Now don’t get me wrong, I love cut flowers. I even worked in a flower shop to put myself through university. But recently I have fallen head over heels in love with something that I feel simply beats most of them hands down in pretty much every way: flowering houseplants. Despite the massive renaissance of houseplant love, the flowering ones seem still to be languishing behind the trend.

If you are considering buying a bunch of cut flowers for a date/house visit/birthday present, here is what swapping it for a flowering houseplant could give you. First, cut flowers have a far shorter shelf-life than houseplants. We are usually talking a week tops. Then you have to chuck out the slimy, smelly vase water and wash everything up. I really loathe that job. Houseplants, however, can remain in flower not just for weeks but months, even years if you get the right species and lavish on the care. Even if totally neglected, houseplants take quite a while to die.

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