Real Estate Marketing for Agents: Offer Information to Get a
Response
Want to know an easy, no-cost way to enhance your real estate
marketing program?
Add informative tips to your marketing pieces.
For instance, take a subject you know a lot about (and one
that's relevant to your audience) and divide it into 12 parts.
You've just created a tip-of-the-month postcard series. Now tie
it back to a buyer or seller guide, information kit, or some
other free report as a way to prompt that ever-critical first
contact from your target base.
The execution of this approach is simple, but you do need to
have some kind of follow-up piece that your prospects would
actually want -- a free report of some kind. Make sure it's
something with a high perceived value in your prospects' minds
(not something they can just go online and easily find
themselves).
The Q&A Version Here's another way to add information to
your real estate marketing program. Use your mailers to present
a commonly asked question about buying or selling, and then
answer the question thoroughly and helpfully on the reverse
side. Then create an offer to the effect of: "If you found this
Q&A helpful, you'll enjoy my free report, 'The Top 25
Home-Buying Questions, Answered' available online at..."
If you follow the Q&A approach, you can make it more believable
and "close to home" by including the questioners name and
neighborhood. For instance: "Bob Smith, Mayfield Ranch." Just be
sure you get permission before publishing someone's name. Most
people won't mind, but you have to ask.
Your informative tips don't have to take the form of Q&A though.
As long as they provide helpful information and refer back to a
source document.
Best Practices
Make your information unique and hard-to-find, the more so the
better. The problem with a free report on plain old "Home Buying
Tips" is that anybody can go online and get this information --
without requesting it from you. But if you offered "27 Tips for
Buying a Home in the 'Boom Town' of Austin, Texas," you've just
made your report more exclusive and more current.
Remember -- always tie the information back to your buyer /
seller guide (or whatever guide you created for your target
audience). Make it easy for them to obtain it, but make sure you
have a way to capture their contact information when they do.
You can have them call you, email you, or visit your website and
sign up for a newsletter ... as long as you capture some form of
contact information.
Conclusion
Real estate agents often forget about the most valuable asset
they have -- information. But by leveraging that information and
building it into your client communications, you can strengthen
your real estate marketing program and increase your response
rates.