Now Windows Vista users can resize their photos too
Even though I prefer to work on a Mac, some real estate work simply requires me to operate in the Windows world. One thing I have noticed is that Vista does not have a quick and easy way to resize a picture like you can when using the Image Resizer PowerToy for Windows XP.
Enter VSO Image Resizer for Windows Vista.
With this free resize image software, you can create e-mail friendly versions of your images, load them faster, move them easily from folder to folder, change their format, edit large numbers of image files/batch image resize and thus save space on your hard drive. Using high resolution 1600×1200 for creating wallpaper or file-sharing you can save your memory. VSO Image Resizer can also change file names using a template and you can add your own watermark with transparency support.
VSO Image resizer is integrated into the Windows explorer shell, right click on your pictures and start working on your pictures !
Key Features
- Convert between different graphic formats
- Configurable compression/resolution ratio
- Support file formats: Jpeg, gif, bmp, tiff etc
- Support Digital Camera RAW formats: Canon .CR2, Nikon .NEF , .MRW Minolta
- Handle single picture or batch mode
- Customizable templates for renaming files
- You can add your own watermark file
- Reduce size photos perfect for web publishing/share photos by email
- Integrate in windows explorer or works as a stand-alone application
- Fast processing
- Import directly from your memory cards
- Save history of destination folder
- Variable options and settings for advanced users
- Multilingual support (available languages…)
- Optimized for Windows 2000 / XP / Vista
$1 Tripod Substitute for Better Photos
Calling all real estate agents. Take note and redeem your MLS photos for less than $1 in materials.
In my last post about bad real estate photos I noted:
I can’t help but be amazed at the substandard work which agents and sellers seem to be prepared to accept when it comes to photography. If you’ve spent any amount of time looking at homes on the internet, you’re already aware that there are far too many lousy and useless images out there.
If investing in a good tripod is not on your to do list then please consider the following option - take minute to view this video and learn how to get similar results for less than $1:
All This For 6% Commission!?
Is it just too much to ask for a real estate agent to spend a couple hundred bucks on a decent point-and-shoot digital camera and a basic tripod? Common now! On the average house ($175-$199K) a real estate agent stands to gross about $6000.00.
I can’t help but be amazed at the substandard work which agents and sellers seem to be prepared to accept when it comes to photography. If you’ve spent any amount of time looking at homes on the internet, you’re already aware that there are far too many lousy and useless images out there.
Just for fun, here’s a video I found on YouTube featuring some really bad real estate photographs:
There is just no excuse for that kind of laziness.
Not when there are so many FREE resources to learn the skills necessary to do a professional job. Here’s one that might help:
This tutorial from the Photography For Real Estate website describes the 10 most important principles of creating effective real estate marketing photos.
We take the “spin” out out of internet marketing
TourTheTriad has done the homework for you. As a leading provider of Full-Service real estate photography and virtual tours, you can trust that we know what works and what doesn’t. We take the “spin” out out of deciding
how to effectively market your properties and your self on the internet.
A recent post in the RealEstateShows blog reads:
Consumer confidence is down. Home sales are declining. Inventories of unsold homes are at record highs. Realtors are depressed and so are their earnings.
This makes no sense to me.
Here’s why. The forecasts that I have seen for home sales say that roughly 5.9 million homes will be sold this year. It’s down from 6.4 million homes last year. So the real estate world is going to hell in a hand basket because only 5.9 million homes will be sold? I don’t think so.
The strategic challenges for you are these:
1. To develop an effective marketing plan to make sure you get your share of listings.
2. To educate your sellers to bring their expectations in line with the current reality of the market (that
applies to pricing and time on market).
3. And to strengthen and broaden your marketing approaches to selling listings – especially everything having to do with the Internet.
Photo Quality Attracts Buyers
A recent article by Dana Mattioli at the Wall Street Journal’s Real Estate site offers tips for taking home photos that will draw buyers.” Mattioli introduces the idea of “pix appeal” that is fast replacing curb appeal in marketing real estate. Since most real estate buyers are beginning their search online, the quality of the property photos play an important role on whether the house is added to a person’s “favorites” list. If a house is not marked for later reference, it surely will not get seen in person and another sale may be lost.
“Without pictures I am much less likely to go see a house,” says house hunter Dan Dillbeck of Grand Rapids, Mich. In most cases — 85% of the time — online photos are his first view of a home, he says, adding that poor pictures tend to turn him away.


