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Rental homes in Sunningdale

Barton Wyatt provides some of the most amazing rental homes in Sunningdale and the surrounding areas of Berkshire and Surrey.

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They have been established for over 50 years in the Virginia Water area and provide a wide ranging portfolio of property services: sales, concierge  and rental services in Virginia, Windlesham and Sunningdale.

They also have some luxury property near 2 of the most famous international schools in the country as well: ACS Egham and TASIS England.

Get a property MOT: Barton Wyatt’s top 10 tips on how to sell your house this spring

Multi award-winning Barton Wyatt estate agents Surrey has been selling homes in the Virginia Water area, where house prices regularly top £15 million and the average price is over a million, for over 50 years. Half a century’s worth of experience has certainly taught the team a trick or two and there is not much they don’t know about buying, selling and letting mansions in Surrey’s prime territory.
The Barton Wyatt team is trusted by Surrey’s vendors to achieve premium process for their homes, being appointed time and time again by clients both at home and overseas, who leave the sale of their homes in the custody of the long-standing, loyal team.
Byways lobbyProperty experts are, in general, predicting a bumper year in 2016 but it will be a bumpy ride for the prime market with increased stamp duty levies hitting this sector the hardest.
With this in mind your home needs to be in the best possible shape to sell. Barton Wyatt’s expert team encourage all vendors to undertake a ‘MOT’ on their propertybefore selling and here are their top 10 tips:
  1. First Impression – “This can be make or break” says Sales Manager Oliver Clarke. “If a potential purchaser is put off before the entering the front door then we are doomed. So take a look at the outside of your home as a stranger might see it. It might be winter and very wet but for a small sum or some time and energy you could tidy the garden and plant a pretty pot by your front door.”
  2. Odour – It may seem minor but the aroma of your house is really very important when you are selling. A simple diffuser discretely hidden in the lobby could do the trick. Some people proffer the advice of coffee and home baked bread but we are realistic, it could take a few weeks to sell your home and you cannot be there ready to turn on the bread maker at the drop of a hat.
  3. Tidy – Be obsessive about this, as it is a make or break to a prospective client. Our advice is to have a seriously good clear out before you put the house on the market– even if you bundle up your prized possessions and take them off site. Prospective buyers want to see clean lines and uncluttered work surfaces that create a feeling of space.
  4. Byways bathroom Clean – Fresh, sparkling and inviting would be perfect. Hard to achieve when you have an active life with pets and children running amuck we know, but the cleaner your house is the easier it is to sell.
  5. Temperature – Heating houses is an expensive business. However, taking a client into a house that has sat empty for the weekend without the heating on is going to put them off instantly – keep your house ticking over at a pleasant 15° C – it will stop your pipes bursting and mean that we don’t shiver round the viewing!
  6. Animals – People’s pets are much loved by the owner but very often just the owner and not necessarily the person that is going to buy the house. Pets also can have quite a strong odour, not to mention the litter trays, food bowls and paraphernalia that goes with having an animal in the house. Try to keep pet evidence to a minimum.
  7. Bathrooms – Generally we don’t advise sellers to refit a bathroom prior to sale – unless it is really ghastly. Do the obvious instead – re-grout, re-silicon, fluffy towels, pleasant scent, clean and spotless please!
  8. Kitchen – Spare a thought for the poor estate agent as you dash out of the house without loading the dishwasher! We want to take pride in your house when we show clients around and leftover breakfast is not the first thing they want to see as they enter the kitchen.
  9. Byways sitting Problem areas – It is possible that you have a part of your house that you would rather not draw attention to, perhaps somewhere that is mid repair. Our recommendation: don’t put the house on the market until it is in tiptop condition. Make it your problem, not the client’s.
  10. Brief the agent – The more we are prepared to answer questions about your house the easier it will be to sell it and allay any fears that prospective buyers may have. As an estate agent we dislike not having the answers. And we particularly dislike not knowing how your gadgetry works so please do show us how to use the iPad entry system, the drop down cinema and the fancy lighting system! If we make it look easy the clients will love it. If we don’t know how it works, then they won’t.
These are tried and tested tips – they will make a difference and the Barton Wyatt team are here to help, so give them a call on 01344 843 000.

Build Your Online Reputation with Effective Off-Site SEO

Everyone is aware of the fact that SEO (or Search Engine Optimisation) is booming day by day with latest and advanced techniques and inventions. Today, the off-page SEO or off-page optimization is ruling the online arena. So, you should make use of some effective off-page optimisation strategies to stay ahead in a competitive market. Here is the list of a few advanced off-page optimization SEO strategies that you may use to promote your business and get higher ranking on search results.

Community Creation in Social Networking Sites

It is also known as online reputation management and it is the first step to initiate the process. You must sign up with some popular social platforms like Linked In, Facebook, Twitter, Myspace and much more. Creating an account with these platforms will allow you to extend your network online and get linked with friends to share information about your brand and products. These platforms also enable you to promote your business, brand, products and services, thus allowing you to build an online reputation.

Content Submission

It is always good to create content by your own and submit it on popular directories available online. There are many popular content submission directories like Ezine, Now Public, Forbes, Go Article, eHow, Article base and much more. Content submission can help you drive more web traffic to your website, whilst you can get some more links to your website through other websites dealing in similar products and services.

Photo Sharing

If you have any pictures or images on your website then simply share them on major photo sharing websites like Photo Bucket, Picasa and Flickr. Other users will see your pictures and comment on them this will help you to create a reputation among the users who will be redirected to your website for more information.

Video Marketing

Alike photo sharing, you can also share any online videos by using video sharing sites like Vimeo, YouTube and much more. Submitting videos online will enable you to get more traffic to your website, especially the traffic who wants to gather more information.

Social Shopping Network

If you run online e-commerce website then you can easily advertise and market you products and services for free through online shopping networks. You can submit information about your products and services on social shopping sites which will increase the likelihood of people finding the products you deal in.

Conclusion

You must always bear in mind that you should be careful while implementing these off-page optimization SEO techniques as you may simply overdo or spam it. So, it is better to seek assistance of professional SEO expert who have right expertise to handle your SEO campaigns successfully.

Google results inconsistent

Recently, I have been witnessing the bizarre behaviour that I had never seen before.

When I am logged into Chrome, I see 1 site ranking on the 2nd page.Then I log out, and it magically shows up on the 1st page.

I then go to the Internet Explorer, and the same site is ranking on the 2nd page again.

I repeated the same thing with Firefox, and it behaves like the Internet Explorer.

I suspect it is to do with some sort of a cookie or Chrome setting. But I intend to get to the bottom of it.

FF InformEnter contender for Chrome

Can a little extension/add-on tie millions of browser users into sticking to 1 browser religiously over all others? The answer is absolutely. Just as the users of a little FF add-on with the name of InformEnter.

A lot of Firefox users will tell you that they will not switch from Firefox even though it does not feel as streamlined as Google’s Chrome, and InformEnter is one of the main reasons why.

I have been one of the few who made the jump. I won’t go into the details why. And, have been searching for a suitable alternative in the Chrome extension library without any luck.

Eventually I came across a Google discussion forum where a little extension called FormBox was proposed.

One contributor commented: “‘FormBox is the chrome equivalent of InFormEnter. Although it is not as efficient as InFormEnter but it does basic things.”

The creator of the extension acknowledged the inspiration from IFE as well.

I have tried it immediately, and was pleasantly surprised. Even though it has a number of optimisations to take care of, it automates most of the mundane stuff.

A big thumbs up from me.

If you’re interested search in the Chrome extension library, or click here: https://chrome.google.com/webstore/search-extensions/FormBox

November 2012 Google updates (aka Panda 22)

Google is moving the SEO goal post further away, and, in my opinion, for the good of the “human” users of the internet. Penguin and Panda have been the latest versions of the Google algorithm updates. Panda now has 20+ versions.

As a result, Google is now clamping on the “unetchical and spammy” tactics:

1. Aggressive use of the anchor text: In other words, Google now wants you to use different anchor text or different variations of it) in the back links for the same page.
2. Exploitation of exact-match domains: A lot of people were buying several domains that contained the exact keywords they targeted (for example, car-servicing-in-London.com for “car servicing in London”) and then not actually using those domains to host their websites, but rather re-directing visitors from there to their main site, or just using those domains to link to their main site
3. Low-quality article marketing & blog spam: attempting to get backlinks from the low quality article farms and the blog comments.
4. Keyword stuffing: loading up your targeted page with lots of different versions of the keyword without any context. In some cases, overdoing it!

At the end of November I saw some sudden drops in especially one of the sites I look after even though I follow these guides very closely.

What I found out, in addition, is that Google is now putting more weight on the size of the site as well. It thinks that sites with bigger number of pages (with quality content) are more likely to be authority compared to sites with a handful of pages.

Now, this creates a big problem for the SEO work if you don’t have any influence on the site’s content and how frequently it gets refreshed.

The bigger sites seemed to be almost unaffected.

Food for thought…