apartmentratings.com
Apartment Reviews – Reimagined
Looking back
Back in October of 2007 we wrote about participating in the conversation via rating sites and even suggested incorporating a mechanism into your property management website to make it easier. Here is a bit of a revised excerpt from that post;
“If you are still of the mind that dismisses the value of sites like apartmentratings.com, listen up. The feedback outlined in the brief above [Deloitte] should move you to action as soon as possible. I truly think we should all open up our company websites to include a consumer and resident feedback mechanism. Instead of internal score keeping, make it completely transparent. My only suggesting is that you have an editor just for the sake of carving out names and character attacks as we know they will come despite our best efforts. Even with that in mind you have to be courageous enough to leave the meat and more importantly act on it.”
Two years later
Here we are nearly two years later in the midst of the conversation marketing buzz and while a good many of us are participating there is still a hesitancy to move that conversation to our websites. Even those that have don’t really have a great deal of participation in terms of consumers reviewing them.
Two years from now
Not only is the writing on the wall but the ink is dry and the conversation is going on with or without you. And, the benefits are immense when you bring the conversation to you;
- You have the ability to increase your credibility
- You have the ability to participate
- You have the ability to influence
- You have the ability to increase your Google Juice
- You have the ability to innovate with your consumer
- You have the ability to create evangelist
- You have the ability to generate further participation
- You have the ability to create loyalty
- You have the ability to create an environment where people feel they are part of something larger than themselves
- You have that ability to respond in lieu of react [there is a big difference]
The more important point here is: how do we increase participation to an Amazonish or iTuneish type level? Do we ask former potential, existing or former residents to review their experience relative to their specific unit such that every unit takes on its very own unique rating? Would that allow us to price higher rated homes differently than lower rated homes. I see it as a great mechanism to allow us the opportunity to really maximize our rents. Maybe the lease rent optimizers out there employee a unit rating lever into their pricing algorithms. The ideas are endless – acting is the key.
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Open Conversation
It’s 5:00 am and I am thinking about open conversation with prospects, residents and vendors. Just this week, to speak to the point, we had some great dialog with Jeremy, the GM from apartmentratings.com. It’s this conversation that got me thinking about the next feedback medium.
The sites like Yelp.com and apartmentratings.com and blogs in general are great places for starting and carrying on conversation. Would it not be even more engaging to carry that conversation to a real time platform like Twitter? You think company heads are scared of social media just wait until that conversation goes live. It’s one thing to do customer service over the telephone or even in person. What happens when a resident, prospect or vendor prefers to have that conversation over Twitter for the whole world to see? It’s not like you can say no. If you do they will start the conversation without you. And, the conversation will likely be an adverse one. Talk about game changing. It will require a whole new level of professionalism and tact. It jazzes me to think about it.
If marketing really is a conversation and expectations are rising all the time then suffice it to say Twitter or something like it is the next avenue. Maybe there is a day where apartmentratings.com or a site like it employees a real time conversation platform. What do you think?
apartmentratings.com, yelp.com, apartment marketing, multifamily
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Apartmentratings.com: Update
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ApartmentRatings.com Strikes again
Mike Brewer · · 1 Comment
"Now renters can see what other residents are paying at thousands of apartment communities. This is an important tool that helps renters find and choose the best apartments," said Jeremy Bencken, president and general manager of ApartmentRatings.com. "Our goal is to build services that focus on providing renters unique and hard-to-access information about apartments. Ultimately we believe our apartment ratings and apartment reviews, and now pricing survey information, drive more informed, more serious customers to our advertisers." [Read the full story here]
Let me get this straight Jeremy , the renter is going to give you the information that you will publish on your site? And, you are going to validate that in some way, I trust? I mean what is to stop the user from reporting a less than true rate not unlike some of the simply untrue reviews on the site.
Maybe you should back up and think about driving a more informed, more serious consumer to good quality communities, not to the advertisers. This important tool helps renters choose the best value, not necessarily the best apartment. It’s seem a bit disingenuous to suggest they would get "the best," don’t you think? And, I’m not convinced that it is hard to get this information. I did an anonymous shop of my market just about a week ago and it took all of 8 phone calls and about 25 minutes of my time.
I say all that and I am a fan of the site and consumer reviews believing that the astute apartment searcher would negate the many exaggerated comments that are posted.
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Apartment Review Sites; Friend or Foe, it’s up to you
Consumer Online Reviews Strongly Influence Purchase Decisions
According to a recent survey by Deloitte’s Consumer Products group, consumers are
turning to online reviews in large numbers, and those reviews are
having a considerable impact on purchase decisions. 62 percent of
consumers read consumer-written product reviews on the Internet, says
the report, and of these, more than eight in 10 say their purchase
decisions have been directly influenced by the reviews, either
influencing them to buy a different product than the one they had
originally been thinking about purchasing, or confirming the original
purchase intention. [Read More Here]
If your still of the school of thought that dismisses the value of sites like apartmentratings.com, listen up. The feedback outlined in the brief above should move you to action as soon as possible. I truly think we all should open up our company websites to include a consumer and resident feedback mechanism. Instead of internal score keeping, make it completely transparent and thus authentic in nature. I would suggest that you have an editor just for the sake of carving out names and character attacks as we know they will come despite our best efforts. That in mind you have to be courageous enough to leave the meat.
I would speculate that over time the likes of For Rent and Apartment Guide will have a feedback component. Sound crazy? At the end of the day, traffic is king and if traffic goes to the consumer feedback site more often then something will have to change. I think the likes of For Rent and Apartment Guide will have no choice but to become even more “potential renter-centric” than they are now. I would love to be a fly on the wall in those strategic planning sessions.
I will be keeping an eye on this topic. Have an amazing Monday. M
Related post: Apartment Reviews – Reimagined
Just a quick update from yesterday’s post about apartmentratings.com.
Jeremy, the GM from apartmentratings.com took the time to comment on the post and I really want to thank him for that. I think it really speaks well of leadership when they take the time to do so.
For those that might have missed his comment, here it is:
Hi
Mike, I’m the GM of ApartmentRatings.com and I can address this. We
monitor blog comments strictly for link spam. Our blog, owing to the
fact it went live in 2005, is on a very old platform and we get
hundreds of spam comments each week for pharmaceuticals and worse. To
keep the comments clear of link spam, we have to manually cull
everything before allowing the regular comments to go live. Thankfully,
we do not have this problem on our main site’s reviews engine, which is
why automatic posting works there.
As you can imagine, this is an annoying (and expensive) problem and
we’re currently in the midst of moving the blog to a platform which has
an automated spam filter like Askimet which will hopefully allow us to
turn on automatic posting.
Thanks,
Jeremy
I applaud the response and look forward to the day we can give unadulterated and seamless feedback.
I am still curious as to why an owner/operator need pay to participate. Forgive me but it does seem a little disingenuous. That being said, I recognize the platform must be monetized somehow. I wonder if there is a way to create a replacement income stream as to open up the ability of owners/operators to participate. As it is now many people choose to game the system by posting under alternative names with false feedback. I would never advocate that and in the same respect I think it happens.
Jeremey, thanks again for taking the time.