• Cory von Wallenstein 9:44 am on May 16, 2011 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: find a tenant, landlord, marketing, rental   

    How To Rent a Property in Eight Weeks for $42.50 

    After many years of commuting from Hopedale, MA to @DynInc in Manchester, NH, we were finally able to make a move up North. The commute went from 1 hour and 15 minutes down to under 20 minutes, and has been a most welcomed change.

    When we made the decision to move back in December 2010, we decided to try our hand at renting out our 3 bedroom townhouse. Our goal? Find a tenant by May. Man did we overachieve.

    We had our tenant moved in by March 2011. Our rental property was only vacant for 2.5 weeks. How’d we do it? Quite simply really… by figuring out what was the problem with nearly all apartment and rental listings as-is:

    They didn’t help you envision what it would be like to call a place home.

    Our solution? Hop over to http://DynDNS.com, register a domain, fire up an instance of WordPress running on a server in the basement, and launch http://liveinlaurelwood.com dedicated to helping you envision what it would be like in your new home.

    Based on our experience, here are the 4 lessons learned in renting out a property as first-time landlords.

    Lesson One: Be Different

    We chose to be different. We didn’t list the townhouse on a rentals web site; we dedicated an entire web site to the single townhouse.

    This really made us stand out from the rest. Where others were trying to cram a whole description into two sentences in the newspaper and then hope for a phone call, we told everyone to visit the site, peruse around, and let us know if they wanted to see more in person.

    Lesson Two: Photos, Photos, Photos

    Every rental listing I looked at had the same old boring, over-hyped description with a single photo of a generic looking apartment. How are you supposed to decide whether or not that’s the place for you?

    To help our prospective tenants, we uploaded 72 photos to the site, showing the whole property (inside and out) in beautiful detail. In the end, our tenant said she chose our property because of the photos, and how well they helped her imagine what life would be like living there.

    Lesson Three: Promote, Promote, Promote

    We promoted in three main ways:

    1. A flyer hung up in the post office of the development (not to mention local pizza shops)
    2. A Craigslist rental posting pointing users to the web site
    3. Leveraging our networks via Facebook and Twitter

    The flyers were a big hit. We went through six sheets in the post office alone.

    Pro-tip: When using flyers with tear-away tabs, always tear away one of the tabs before you hang up the sheet. People have a hesitance to be the “first” one to tear off a tab from a fresh sheet, but seeing one already removed provides social proof that it’s OK to remove a tab.

    Ultimately, it was our Craigslist posting that drove our tenant to the site, but we did get quite a few hits from other sources:

    Lesson Four: Do Not Print Pricing

    Being first time landlords, we weren’t really sure where to price the unit. To give us maximum flexibility, we didn’t print a rental price anywhere, and only discussed pricing one-on-one over the phone or via email with prospective tenants. In the end, we came to a fair negotiation on price that worked well for both parties!

    Summing It Up

    We launched the site in mid-January, and had a tenant moved in by early March.

    Total time? Eight weeks, with only 2.5 of those weeks with the townhouse empty after we moved out.

    Total cost? $27.50 for Custom DNS on http://DynDNS.com, and $15 for the domain registration on http://DynDNS.com as well. We already had the server in the basement for hosting WordPress, as well as the printing supplies, bringing our total out of pocket marketing expenses to $42.50.

    Happy renting!

     

  • Cory von Wallenstein 7:31 pm on May 14, 2011 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: , opscode, velocity   

    Adam Jacob from OpsCode at Velocity 2010 

    Probably one of the best presentation I’ve seen in the last year was given by Adam Jacob @adamhjk at #Velocity last year. Adam touches on his insights on #devops, and how to progress through your technical career or startup in his “Choose Your Own Adventure” talk.

    Adam Jacob – Operations

    Your job is two things. Are you ready?

    1. System Availability. Is the system down? BRING IT UP. That’s it.
    2. Efficiency. Of everybody in the entire organization.

    It’s your job to make it so everybody else has an easy job. If they have a hard job, you’re screwing up the only other thing you’re supposed to do, and that means you’re doing a bad job.

    Adam Jacob – How Web Sites Fail

    CAP Theorem

    Consistency, Availability, and Partition Tolerance. Pick two.

    Adam Jacob – Infrastructure as Code

    Enable the reconstruction of the business from nothing but a source code repository, an application data backup, and bare metal resources.

    Adam Jacob – Cloud Bursting and Other Magical Unicorns

    You probably can’t. At least not how you think.

    Adam Jacob – Startups

    Obsessing over the details can lead to disaster. Find out what really matters to the success of your startup.

    And perhaps my favorite of the series, on #devops:

    Adam Jacob – DevOps

    Cultural and Professional Movement.

    Traditional operations? That shit does not work on the web!

    Adam will be delivering round 2 of Choose Your Own Adventure this year at Velocity 2011. DO NOT MISS IT!

    http://velocityconf.com/velocity2011/public/schedule/detail/19912

     

  • Cory von Wallenstein 7:05 pm on May 14, 2011 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: cloud camp, dns, dyn   

    Cloud Camp Lightning Talk 

    A quick 5 minute intro to @DynInc, and how valuable DNS is to those venturing into the clouds. Given at many @CloudCamp events, from Boston to Seattle to Chicago to Silicon Valley to New York.

    A quick video from @CloudCamp #Boston:

    Another from @CloudCamp #Toronto:

     

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