If you want to build a powerful brand on the web, then blogging can be a critical part of your overall strategy. Attend this session with leading technology expert Amy Chorew and walk away with a clear understanding of how you too can use your well strategized blog as a powerful marketing and communication tool to drive business.
Just some of the things you’ll learn in this jam-packed session are:
1. Why and how good blog posts work to bring you leads
2. How these posts can get people to trust you, link to you and bring you business
3. Why a good blog site makes your website irresistibly magnetic
4. 7 types of posts you can easily use for your blog - even if you are not a writer
You’ll leave this webinar with proven ideas you can use to effectively blog to generate profitable business.
About Amy Chorew
An exciting leader in real estate training, Amy Chorew has been teaching REALTORS to use technology for over 15 years. As an experienced salesperson and successful Marketing Director for some of Connecticut's most prestigious brokerages, Amy puts her talents to use by creating fun learning environments for her students. Amy's straightforward approach to education is backed by real field experience that brokers and agents appreciate as they learn new technology skills. As a widely respected and approved instructor in many states, Amy teaches a variety of CE, GRI and skill-development courses for REALTOR® Associations and large brokerages internationally. Amy's skills and credentials include:
- Skilled Social Networking Expert – Facebook, LinkedIn, Twitter and more
- Strategic Social Networking Consultant
- Experienced GRI Instructor
- Experienced Continuing Education Instructor
- HTML Web Development Expert
- Top Producer
- Certified Instructor
- Senior Microsoft Office Instructor
- Certified Home Marketing Specialist
Amy has been in real estate since 1981 and some of her credentials are:
- GRI Instructor
- Continuing Education Instructor
- HTML professional web development expertise
- Top Producer Certified Instructor