By: Emile L'Eplattenier
In reply to <a href="https://theclose.com/real-estate-infographics/comment-page-4/#comment-324580">Katty Marshel</a>.
Hey Katty,
I hear you, but the main reason anyone makes infographics in the first place is because they expect people to share them. That said, just posting infographics alone is not a great strategy and we think agents should offer their analysis as the value add when posting them.
By: Katty Marshel
I think using copyrighted material for your marketing campaigns is not a good idea. it's not good morally nor even ethically. the problem is most of the new comer's don't have budget and it is an expensive task if you get it from designers. So my suggestion is if you can take benefit from free recourses then it would be great. like I have done on <a href="https://coachken.com/" rel="nofollow ugc">Coach Ken</a>
By: Emile L'Eplattenier
In reply to <a href="https://theclose.com/real-estate-infographics/comment-page-3/#comment-236614">Linda Giannosa</a>.
Linda, I hear you. It's a tricky problem though as PDF is kind of an antiquated format and modern webpages can sometimes get mangled when you convert to PDF. We are working on it though, so stay tuned!
By: Linda Giannosa
In reply to <a href="https://theclose.com/real-estate-infographics/comment-page-3/#comment-211493">Maryann Bledsoe</a>.
I agree with Maryann. If you had a 'Print' option that automatically created a pdf or other printable format then we could easily save in our digital library. I don't actually print on paper but like to have access later on in my files. Thank you for excellent content that we actually WANT to refer back to....
By: Emile L'Eplattenier
In reply to <a href="https://theclose.com/real-estate-infographics/comment-page-3/#comment-211493">Maryann Bledsoe</a>.
Hi Maryann, we hear you, but printing pages from a website is actually weirdly complicated. We would need to reformat the HTML into a format that the printer can understand. You might try using a plugin to turn the article into a PDF, and then printing that?
By: Maryann Bledsoe
I love your articles and industry insights however, I often want to go back to a particular article and your website design allows sharing on social media sites but....you do not have a "print" option like other sites. This is very frustrating when I want to visually go back and re-read information. Most of the agents in my market are older, have difficulty with technology and saving to a computer file or other method is very difficult for them.
By: Emile L'Eplattenier
In reply to <a href="https://theclose.com/real-estate-infographics/comment-page-3/#comment-44191">Michael Peron</a>.
You can just download them and use them. That said, we did not create these, they are mostly from other sources. Of course since the whole idea of infograophics is to get people to share them, I don't think any of the original creators would get mad if you shared them on social media.
By: Emile L'Eplattenier
In reply to <a href="https://theclose.com/real-estate-infographics/comment-page-3/#comment-45128">Esther</a>.
Hey Esther, most of these infographics are from other sources so theoretically you would have to check with them to use one. That said, the entire reason companies create infographics in the first place is in hopes of people sharing them. If you do end up using one, maybe reach out to the creator and ask them or just provide a link back to their site so you can properly credit the original creator.
By: Esther
Are the 97 infographics free so they can be used? I found them informative.
By: Michael Peron
why is it so hard to find out how to get the infographics? do you have to purchase or is a membership?