1. Smile at your prospects, current residents and vendors2. Make Eye Contact with them3. Share Your Name First and then ask for theirs.4. Explain What
“A development’s name has to tell a story,” explains John Uzee, AIA, a principal with ADD Inc, an architecture and interior design firm based in
Gen Y men, according to Lynn Russo in a story titled; Behind the Numbers: Taking the Pulse of Younger Men, want transparency, personal expression, experience,
"Martin Luther King Jr. didn’t change the world by saying, ‘I have a complaint.’ " — Artist Chris Jordan… I think questioning the sacred cow’s
By Kelly Sheehan, Online News Editor Portland, Ore.—Guardian Management LLC, a Portland, Ore.-based real estate firm specializing in multifamily housing and investment opportunities and property
Maybe a little over the top, or is it? Apartment marketing seems to follow the hotel and or the condo market so the following take
Did you see that game on Monday Night? I am a die-hard Dallas Cowboy fan and have been for as long as I can remember
By Alex Frangos From The Wall Street Journal Online When the music stopped in the residential-real-estate market, speculators who got caught with unsold houses and
Cool Question: What’s not going to change in our business over the next ten years? With so much focus on what is going to be