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Web Site at Your Service

By Mark Jarasek
Publication: Professional Builder
Date: Monday, January 1 2007

An online concierge named Kim takes center screen when online visitors arrive at the Web site for Tampa, Fla.-based home builder Smith Family Homes. Judging from industry accolades and the increase in traffic the site has experienced, this virtual concierge is doing her job well.

Frustrated by what had been an underwhelming amount of visitor traffic to their Web site, Smith Family Homes decided to take action. "We asked our Web developer to create a Web site for us that would make an online visitor want to stay and find out more about what Smith Family Homes has to offer them," says Marcus Smith, regional vice president for Smith Family Homes.

The result is a Web site with a concierge and other interactive elements that has not only significantly boosted online traffic but has also garnered awards. "Ever since the new Web site launched, we have been thrilled with the number of closings resulting from it," says Smith. The Web site recently won the 2006 Southeast Building Conference (SEBC) Gold EXCEL Award for Best Website for a Builder. The re-design of the Web site has also improved page dwell times and is attracting more than 8,000 unique visitors every month, according to the firm.

"Kim helps people feel comfortable," says Rob Neumann, president and CEO of Customer Velocity, a Web development firm based in The Woodlands, Texas, that has been working with Smith Family Homes for several years. "Kim is approachable. It's like having a friendly conversation or seeing a familiar friendly face as you navigate through the Web site," says Neumann, adding that the concierge was designed to appeal to a target market of 40- to 50-year-olds who may be thinking about retirement or looking for a second home. "We wanted to make things interesting enough that visitors would stay and come back to visit again," says Neumann.

Created utilizing green screen technology, Kim appears in other areas of the Web site and offers guidance to visitors. Interactive elements allow visitors to click and view variations of home elevations, floor plans and lot locations offered throughout the Smith Family Homes communities.

The firm's resting on the laurels of success the concierge concept has brought to the Web site; an upgrade has already been created. The upgrade, which allows Smith Family Homes home buyers to view construction progress photos of their homes and send construction progress photos to their family members and friends, is currently in the beta testing stage.

Designed with a Woman in Mind

Who would have ever guessed that storage areas could be a girl's best friend? All these years we thought it was diamonds.

Research conducted by Women-Centric Matters, a division of Omaha, Neb.,-based home plan design firm Design Basics, has shown certain things can capture women's attention more than others. That's where women-centric design concepts offer a blueprint.

At last year's International Builders' Show in Orlando, consulting firm Smith-Dahmer Associates revealed that "women directly purchase or have controlling influence in the purchase of 91 percent of all new homes." So it stands to reason that it would benefit home builders and designers to pay close attention to the details that wow women.

The firm's market research, surveys and focus group activity that has been ongoing since early 2003 taught Women-Centric Matters that certain aspects of a home's design can really capture the hearts and minds of women. More specifically, research told the company that women evaluated designs through four primary filters: how the home entertains, how the home helps her de-stress, the flexibility of the home's design and the home's storage.

Women-Centric Matters maintains that focusing on these areas can create a powerful potion that causes women to fall in love at first sight. "If builders can clearly illustrate and communicate the woman-centric design of their home plans to the all-important woman buyer," says Linda Reimer, president of Design Basics, "then they have a better chance of making a positive impression that can help them make their competition irrelevant."

In addition, make sure to read these articles:

Leadership: How to Create a Family Company Culture
Host Hattie Bryant of Small Business School interviews Ebby Halliday, Petey Parker, and Leonore Bergert of Ebby Halliday Real Estate, a real estate agency based in Dallas, Texas.