Facebook Page Marketing Training
April 3, 2011 by Stacey Harmon · Leave a Comment


Realtors: Are you interested in learning what it takes to have an effective Facebook business page? Learn what you need to know, live and in person from Facebook expert Stacey Harmon. She is teaching a comprehensive Facebook page marketing curriculum on Wednesday, April 20th in Costa Mesa, California. **Also, just added – repeat of this course in Glendale, CA on Thursday, May 5th, 2011**
Check out these testimonials from Realtor’s who have attended Stacey’s prior Facebook training:
- Great stuff – I always take away so much to market my business – You’re the best!!” – Mike Didelot, Keller Williams, Dana Point, CA
- Great job. Lots of meat. Great tips. Lots of concrete stuff - loved it. - Heidi Brown, First Team Real Estate
- “Stacey is articulate and more importantly, engaging and dynamically informative. I love to learn and Stacey really makes it fun.” – Nick Segal, Partners Trust Founding Partner & President, Beverly Hills, CA
The curriculum is broken up into two 2.5 hours courses. You may sign up for both, or for one class or the other, depending on your Facebook page education needs. Full details about the two courses and registration can be found here.
Google Your Way to Discount Code Savings
December 27, 2009 by Stacey Harmon · 1 Comment
Sometimes it is the simple ideas that make using the internet fun and bring about those “ah-ha” moments. Harmon Enterprises constantly works to illustrate these opportunities for Realtors. In the case of today’s post, Realtors certainly can benefit, but so too can anyone who uses the internet to buy anything.
This is a little nugget that I’ve been using for years, and I recently casually shared with a friend. Her enthusiastic tweet response a few days later made me think it might be worthy of a post:
So, the tip is simple. Anytime you are shopping on line, and in the purchase process you see a box that says “Discount Code” or “Coupon Code” or “Promotion Code”, open up a new browser tab or window, go to Google, and search “the name of the site you are on” + “discount code”.
So, for example, when you notice a “Promotional Code” field as part of the process to sign for a credit monitoring service (a great service by the way, particularly for people who are shopping on the internet):
Leave the screen up that has the promotional code field, open a new browser tab, go to google, and type in “MyFico.com discount code” and see what comes up:
One of my favorite sites that often comes up is RetailMeNot.com which is a “coupon community” where users can post coupons and discount, and report on how reliable they were. The coupons are presented grouped into “Current Special Offers”, “Active Coupons”, and “Unreliable Coupons” For MyFico.com, you can find up to 30% off!
Jot down the code you find, go back to the window where you are purchasing, and apply your savings coupon. Cha-ching! It works more often than not and saved me a bundle over the years. And, who isn’t happy to save a buck or two…especially this time of year?
Keep in mind, if you don’t see the coupon code box, you can still to google the product or service you are trying to purchase. Often times there are affiliate marketing programs out there and you can find a link from a blog or 3rd party website where you will pay less by clicking through from that origination point.
For those of you who are looking to buy a domain name, or looking for web hosting (any Realtors out there looking to start a blog?), be sure to apply this technique. It has always worked for me with GoDaddy, and hosting companies like Blue Host and Host Monster get cheaper than their already affordable rates.
Happy on-line shopping!
Dinosaurs Are Alive and Well. Sigh.
July 5, 2009 by Stacey Harmon · 2 Comments
Eric Stegemann tweeted this the other day: “Thinking about how dinosaurs relate to real estate – the nimble and adapting ones survive, but the big ones did not. Took years for extinction.”
It is the “years for extinction” part that really caught my eye. This weekend I had had a conversation with a friend’s neighbor that made me wonder if real estate really is ever going to evolve. Will agents who are doing business in the “old way” ever adapt or go extinct? As someone who is enthusiastically in favor of industry evolution, the following conversation put a dent in my zeal.
I saw a for sale sign in front of his condo and asked the seller how it was going. He said, “great – it sold in the first week!” Wow, I thought.
I asked, “What did it go for?” He responded, “$370,000. It went for $10,000 over asking price, and I also had a bid for $20,000 over asking price.”
When I asked him why he picked those buyers, he said “because they had a down payment, and they loved the house”. I know from my real estate sales days that putting together a deal that will actually close is an important part of the Realtors job, and it appeared that this seller received some good coaching from his agent in this regard, especially since the financing on the higher offer sounded weak.
But here is where the conversation got alarming for me:
Me: “How long is the contingency period?”
Seller: “I don’t know, what is that?”
Me: “How much of a deposit did the buyers put down?”
Seller: “Don’t know, my agent never discussed it with me.”
Me: “What was the commission?”
Seller: “5%”
Me: “How did you pick your agent?”
Seller: “She sold the house next door. I gotta tell you, she is one high energy woman. There are times she calls me and she just yammers. It’s all I can do to get off the phone with her.” (his tone was annoyed…I didn’t get the impression he liked her much).
Then, at the end of our conversation, totally unsolicited by me, the seller concludes our chat by saying: “Let me tell you, she is an outstanding agent. I’ll go out of my way to recommend her to anyone who needs a great agent.”
WTH? This seller would give his agent a 10 on the Net Promoter Score that Rob Hahn of 7DS Associates evangelizes. A 10! Unbelievable to me.
I went to the agent’s website. When I go to the “About Us > My Background” page, it has her name, a broken image (which I assume is her photo), and nothing else. She has a navigation item for “Featured Properties” but none of her listings appear. It then defaults to a search for property in Alabama (to be clear, we’re in California).
What exactly is this agent’s real estate talent? Finding uninformed buyers and keeping them in the dark? I understand that the client signed the paperwork, but I can’t imaging representing a seller and not even discussing the deposit amount, nor the contingency period with them. This is astounding to me.
I just have to throw my hands up in the air and ask – how does one compete with this? There is much talk about internet buyers, and leads, and Realtor professionalism, and a new model of real estate. But, NONE of that played a part in this agent getting this listing, this agent selling this house, or this client’s level of satisfaction with the deal. Where is the motive to change? Why on earth would the agent, or client, look for a new way?
I think it is going to take a VERY long time for the old dinosaur to become extinct.
This is It! Twitter is FINALLY going mainstream.
March 1, 2009 by Stacey Harmon · Leave a Comment

I’m pretty sure this week is the turning point. I’ve been on twitter since May 2008. I talk to Realtors on a weekly basis about technology, social media and new ways of communicating with their clients. Rarely has one of them even heard of twitter. And if they have, they do not understand why anyone would use it. But, I’m certain that is going to change. What I and other avid twitter users have know for a year is that twitter is revolutionary. It provides a new way of communicating that fills a need we didn’t know we had. Twitter is awesome (even though it is really hard to explain why)! We twitter-ers knew it would just be a matter of time before it reached mass public awareness. And, in the last week, I’ve seen 3 signs that twitter is poised to go mainstream.
1. Gretchen Benes is on Twitter. I have 700 people following me. Many of them I know from my RE.net journeys and interactions. Many of them I have met, and several of them I consider friends. But, for the most part, we all met through some connection to an interest in social media, both on, and off-line. Gretchen is the very first friend from my immediate social circle who is actively using it and “gets” it. And she isn’t at techie. She isn’t addicted to her computer the way I am. She can still live without texting. But, she is loving twitter. I predict her addiction will arrive soon…
2. Evan Williams, co-founder of Twitter, was on Charlie Rose . When my Dad, who lives in the sticks 40 miles outside Spokane calls to tell me about this interesting twitter application he saw on Charlie Rose, I know it is reaching a broader audience.
3. CBS Evening News did a story on how Congress is Twittering. They point out that the 75 year old Congressman is an unlikely poster child for new technology but that he and his colleagues recognize twitter is an outstanding way to reach interested constituents and anyone else who wants to listen. It provides an great “gut feel” for what the congress person is thinking right in the moment vs. the sanitized press statement that may go out days later. Of course the public is eating this up. How refreshing to have some brief direct real time glimpses into Capitol Hill! The story also pointed out that the Repbulicans have 58 twitterers vs. the Democrats 34 and that both sides finding it an interesting way to cut out the middleman (the press) – no camera crew is needed to get your voice out to interested parties. Finally, they noted that John McCain is the biggest twitterer on Capital Hill (with some help from his team), although he recognized that his tweet about Steve Nash’s knee injury received more feedback than most of his more “weightier” tweets.
So, these three events in the span of the last 7 days, indicate to me that twitter is going to be reaching the masses…soon. I’m excited to watch it evolve. I’m particularly interested to see how they monetize it and how that affects the experience that I so love now. Twitter is by far my favorite social community. I’m guessing a few other people are going to fall in love with it soon too. And, I’m particularly interested to see how Realtors apply it effectively to their business. I know it has been invaluable in keeping up with and establishing myself in the RE.net community, but I have yet to hear real success stories from Realtors who use it to sell or use it as a tenant to reach their clients. I’m sure they are out there though, and I believe it is an essential part of the Realtor of the future’s networking and marketing plan. I just think the exact application of it is still being sorted out for the Realtor. I am however certain that lots of opportunity and success exists in this evolving place called twitter.
Please follow me if you aren’t already (www.twitter.com/staceyharmon). I look forward to tweeting with you!






