Julie McCollam represents the non-legacy end of the Knoll/Meier Realty Group, run by the mother-son team of Justin Knoll and Pam Meier through Coldwell Banker in Denver. McCollam recently earned her designation as an "EcoBroker," which makes her specially trained to help clients find homes and properties that are "green," and to help make already existing properties more ecologically friendly, from low-flow toilets to low-energy heating and cooling systems. If I'm to understand certain regional stereotypes, that's an advantage well befitting of the Denver community. McCollam describes herself as the "go-to" member of the Knoll/Meier team, and it makes sense considering she was the first realtor who mother and son brought on board. To McCollam's credit, she has a pretty strong Internet presence, which serves as a huge boon to her ability to market both herself and to expose her client's listings to the home-searching world, nearly 90% of which turn to the Internet as their first step of the process. This seems almost in contradiction to both Knoll and Meier, whose Internet presence I find lacking. Maybe McCollam's the right touch they need to bring the team fully into the technology age of real estate.
Julie McCollam represents the non-legacy end of the Knoll/Meier Realty Group, run by the mother-son team of Justin Knoll and Pam Meier through Coldwell Banker in Denver. McCollam recently earned her designation as an "EcoBroker," which makes her specially trained to help clients find homes and properties that are "green," and to help make already existing properties more ecologically friendly, from low-flow toilets to low-energy heating and cooling systems. If I'm to understand certain regional stereotypes, that's an advantage well befitting of the Denver community. McCollam describes herself as the "go-to" member of the Knoll/Meier team, and it makes sense considering she was the first realtor who mother and son brought on board. To McCollam's credit, she has a pretty strong Internet presence, which serves as a huge boon to her ability to market both herself and to expose her client's listings to the home-searching world, nearly 90% of which turn to the Internet as their first step of the process. This seems almost in contradiction to both Knoll and Meier, whose Internet presence I find lacking. Maybe McCollam's the right touch they need to bring the team fully into the technology age of real estate.