First Ever Rental Migration Report

Published: Aug. 8, 2019, 6:54 a.m.

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On today\\u2019s show we are going to reveal information that could dramatically alter your rental marketing. This is all about knowing your customer. You wouldn\\u2019t advertise pencils to someone searching for a fountain pen. If you know what your customer is looking for, connecting them with the right product is relatively easy. Sending the right message to the customer who is looking for what you have to offer has a 36 times greater chance of success than blind random advertising. The vast majority of paper flyers that come in the mail at my house are wasted. They\\u2019re all promoting things that I\\u2019m not interested in. And if there was something of interest, it\\u2019s so buried in the noise of things I\\u2019m not interested in, I\\u2019m not willing to go through the effort to check and see if its there.

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Website Apartment List recently published something called the Renter Migration Report. This report analyzes millions of searches to see where users are preparing to move. So why does that matter?

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If you have apartments for rent, and you are competing with all the other apartments in the market for attention from prospective tenants, you are stuck in the sea of sameness. You are in the same pond as everybody else. But what if you knew that for whatever reason, 7% of people moving to your city are coming from New york, and 5% are coming from Washington, and a similar number from Miami, that\\u2019s useful information.

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How is it useful you might ask?

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In today\\u2019s world of digital advertising, users compete for ad placement with the search engines, whether it\\u2019s with Google, Yahoo, Facebook, or Bing. All these search engines treat the process like an auction. 

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Now imagine if you were, say, in Atlanta and you are competing for ad placement for apartments for rent. You would pay a lot to have that keyword search present your advertisement. In the world of pay per click advertising, you bid for each keyword that you want to present an ad for. Let\\u2019s say for example your keywords are Atlanta Apartments for Rent. You select your audience to be people in the Atlanta and surrounding area. You usually exclude everywhere else. There\\u2019s no reason for people in the Philippines, Russia or in India to be presented with an advertisement for Atlanta Apartments for Rent. It doesn\\u2019t make any sense and it would be a waste of money. Conventional wisdom is to exclude those advertisements from outside the local geography. 

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In the Atlanta area, there are hundreds or even thousands competing locally for those precious keywords. 

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But if you knew that 7% of the people moving into Atlanta came from New York, then it would make sense to present an advertisement to New Yorkers for Atlanta Apartments for Rent, when that search term appears. Instead of paying a really high price for those keywords, you would pay mere pennies per click. Why because there aren\\u2019t a lot of people bidding for those keywords in the New York market. New Yorkers expect to see ads for other New York apartments for rent, not Atlanta. There\\u2019s very little competition for those Atlanta keywords in New York, so they are very inexpensive. 

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You can use this information to better optimize your ad campaigns. 

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Advertising that is targeted at a specific customer is always more effective than random ads that don\\u2019t speak to a specific individual. 

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You wouldn\\u2019t present an ad to locals from Atlanta that says \\u201cEscape the snow\\u201d in this beautiful swimming pool. But it makes complete sense to present that to a New Yorker looking to relocate to Atlanta. 

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