AgencyLogic Support Series – What Is Included in a Single Property Website?

A single property Website helps agents, brokers, home owners and others involved in real estate to market a single home using the highest form of personalized marketing. The Websites are used in listing presentations and serve as the single richest source of information about one home online.

single property websites

Each single property Website is accessible via a unique domain name that traditionally reflects the properties street address, a feature that is included with the product.

Also included:

  • Custom Domain Name
  • Sophisticated Lead Capture
  • Integrated QR Codes
  • Unlimited High-definition Photos
  • Full Screen Slideshow with Detailed Captions
  • Custom Photo Banners
  • Video, Blog, Podcast and Audio Integration
  • Unlimited Property Description Text
  • Automated Property Maps & Area School Links
  • Unlimited Custom Links and Custom Pages
  • Email and Print Flyers
  • Facebook integration
  • HTML Flyer
  • Apple iPad/iPhone Compatible More
  • Unbranded MLS Link
  • Enhanced SEO and Free Syndication
  • PowerSite Showcase: Seamless Integration with your Website
  • Facebook Business Pages Listings and Landing Page
  • Direct post to Realtor.com
  • Social Sharing via Facebook, Twitter and hundreds more social networks
  • Track & Share Website Statistics
  • Google Analytics Support
  • Professionally Designed Templates
  • Open House Announcement
  • Unlimited Changes
  • The Activity Center
  • Free Training

Example single property Websites can be seen at:

www.1234orchardroad.info

www.123AnySt.com

Americans Are Losing Billions Due To Internet Crime

Source: Statista

The FBI’s Internet Crime Complaint Center (IC3) has released its 2019 Internet Crime Report which found that 2019 was a record year for both victims of internet crime and dollar losses in the United States. 467,361 complaints were logged by IC3 in the last calendar year – 1,300 per day on average. The most frequent internet crimes recorded in 2019 were phishing, non-payment/non-delivery scams and extortion. Individuals and businesses lost $3.5 billion in total, an increase on the $2.7 billion lost in 2018.

The costliest complaints of the past year involved business email compromise, romance or confidence fraud and spoofing or mimicking the accounts of people or vendors. Donna Gregory, the chief of IC3, stated the FBI did not see an increase in new types of fraud in 2019 but rather criminals deploying new tactics and techniques to carry out existing scams. She said that “criminals are getting so sophisticated” before adding that “it is getting harder and harder for victims to spot the red flags and tell real from fake”. The FBI has logged 4,883,231 complaints since it first started compiling internet crime statistics in 2000.

Infographic: Americans Are Losing Billions Due To Internet Crime | Statista