11/20/2024 | Press release | Distributed by Public on 11/21/2024 16:56
If you're a realtor or manage a real estate business, you know how competitive your industry is. You have to promote your business and market your services if you want to rise to the top of the real estate game.
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Here are 20 real estate marketing ideas for small-town realtors looking to make it to the top of sales sheet this year.
If you work for a well-established broker or agency, chances are you have a site you link clients to where they can view homes by location, price, size, and more. Most of these sites are mobile-optimized and even formatted as mobile apps. Find out if your site is mobile-friendly, and share the link to access it from a smartphone with your clients.
Even if you can't be with clients every second of their search, your app can.
More and more online searchers are using the phrase "near me" in their searches. There are a few ways you can optimize your website for local search. One of the best is to pay attention to keywords on your website, and adjust them to include "City, State" in all the right places (places like your body copy, URLs, title tags and image attributes).
If your website only has one page for listings, you're missing opportunities to compete for more nichekeyword searches. For example, if pet-friendly, high-rise condos are in high demand in your city, dedicate a page on your website that targets the keyword phrase, "pet-friendly high-rise condo for sale in Austin, TX," and so on, and so forth. Add copy to the page that talks about these types of properties, then update your tagging and meta descriptions accordingly.
If a picture is worth a thousand words, a video is worth a million. Image slide shows are great, but they're just not as effective as videos and virtual tours at making people feel like they're inside a home.
Have any homes you're trying to sell that have smaller square footage but feel really open? Invest in virtual tours and video walkthroughs of any properties where you know the pictures and descriptions don't do them justice.
As far as new real estate marketing ideas go, this one's one of the hottest ideas you can try.
Wish you could stage every sad, empty home before showing it to potential buyers? The good news is… you can. And it no longer costs an arm and a leg. Tools like VisualStager let you upload pictures of properties online and then use their library of furniture items to click, drag, and stage your properties.Virtually, of course. (VisualStager is great because they also give you the option to take photos of fully furnished rooms, and they'll digitally remove any eye-sore furniture pieces for you.)
While staging still costs money, it is much lower than what most in-person staging companies charge.
Social ad retargeting is another clever way to invest your advertising budget in consumers you already know are highly interested in your products. Retargeting tracks users' online activity, following them from site to site and suggesting ads that fit their browsing behavior.
Smart advertisers use this technique to place ads on various social media channels right in the middle of consumers' feeds. By doing so, ads seem not only hyper-targeted but also almost like recommendations from friends.
Ever heard of "consultative selling"? Social selling is kind of like that. It's selling your real estate business…without really "selling" anything. You do it on your social media sites.
Instead of using social media to share promotions and push your services, use social media to build and nurture relationships. Share hot tips and tricks for home buying and selling. Promote your favorite contractors and residential service businesses, if you think they do a great job. Then, you'll be top of mind when consumers decide they need to buy or sell their homes.
Our social media team shares tips for small business owners looking to grow their businesses:
Do drones creep you out? Fair enough if they do. There's something about them that feels a little sci-fi.
If you've seen pictures taken from the unique, birds-eye-view of a drone in action, imagine how useful they could be for your real estate business. (And if you haven't seen them, imagine how much using them could help your home listings stand out!)
Buy a drone you can use to take aerial footage of homes and their surrounding landscapes. Place these images early in the galleries for your listings, perhaps right after the curb views of homes. You're bound to stand out with online home shoppers.
If your home listings include images of the front of the house, the interior, and the backyard, you probably feel like you've got a great listing. Consider adding images of local parks, hot shopping spots, and other neighborhood highlights that might attract out-of-towners to the specific geographic area, not just the home.
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First, create a Pinterest for your business. Then, ask new clients to build Pinterest boards dedicated to their new home searches. They can incorporate styles of homes they like, furnishings they can't get enough of, even their dream backyards. This will give you an idea of their tastes, so you're best equipped to show them homes they'll fall in love with. All they have to do is create the board and give you access to view it!
Are you in any social media groups for the residents of your neighborhood? If so, you're probably used to seeing the typical "Whose dog is this?" and "Remember to drive slowly in the alleyways!" posts. But have you thought about using the groups on sites like Facebook and Nextdoor to promote your real estate business?
Some groups don't take too kindly to marketing, so you'll need to use a soft approach. Just as often as you share your services, share tips so members begin to see you as a trusted resource. Does someone post needing a plumber? Share top contractors you work with as long as you know they're reliable.
Pro Tip: Here's how you can become a Nextdoor Neighborhood Favorite, too.
HomeLight, RateMyAgent, and realtor.com are all top realtor and real estate agent review sites. These types of sites, called third-party review sites, can sometimes make it pretty hard for your clients to leave reviews. Maybe clients don't want to give up their email addresses (fair), or they don't want to go through the trouble of creating new accounts and remembering passwords for all of them.
Instead, reach out to your happy clients and ask them for reviews directly. Then, post them on your own website. These first-party reviews will give your real estate business much-needed social proof online.
The agency you roll up under likely helps you with some local real estate marketing ideas. Whether they sponsor events or not, hitch your wagon to local events in your area. Let homeowners and residents in your contact list know about Easter egg hunts, church fall festival events, and even Christmas light displays.
Here's an example of a sponsorship opportunity for an annual gala at a country club:
People love their sports. But not everyone takes the time to organize in advance for the exact dates and times they plan to watch them! Help them out by printing up a friendly, branded (of course) reminder of when the top local teams will play this year. Think fridge magnets, business cards, or other small printed pieces people might be more likely to hang onto than a full-page flyer. Make the investment worthwhile by including a tiny pic of yourself, your name, and your phone number.
Coffee shops, local boutiques, pet grooming salons, doctors' offices, dentists, and other local businesses often feature bulletin boards or spaces in their checkout areas where other local businesses can share their business cards and coupons for free.
Do a quick local tour of your favorite neighborhoods to buy and sell homes, and stop in at the local businesses. If they have any local shopper promotions areas, ask how to participate. If relevant to real estate, you can even offer to take some of their cards and return the favor with client referrals of your own.
You probably do a lot online to market your real estate business already. It's a great place to spend money to get in front of ready-to-buy clients and generate highly qualified leads. But what do you do to nurture relationships with previous clients or individuals who may not be ready to get into or sell a home just yet?
Experiential marketing is a great, in-person technique for nurturing your client relationships. Host a block party or cookout, organize a meetup at a new restaurant in town, or drop off seasonal decor on your contact list's doorsteps for the holidays.
Paid search ads are advertisements on search engines, email platforms, and YouTube videos. They appear when users search for specific terms that businesses pay to advertise on.
For example, let's say I Google, "best real estate agent near me."
Notice the "Sponsored" tag above the first results? That means that these businesses outbid other businesses to advertise on this search phrase. These businesses either paid the most to appear on this page, or they won this position based on certain factors like reviews, relevancy, etc.
A customer testimonial is a video or quote from a customer who had a good experience with your business. Testimonials are great for real estate marketing because they demonstrate why people should work with you. If they see a recommendation from another customer who enjoyed their home-buying experience, then they'll be more interested in working with you.
You should build a section on your website dedicated to customer testimonials. This will make your testimonials easy to find and you can link to them on your social pages. Social media is a great place to share this content because your social followers are already interested in your brand.
Here's an example of Thryv's customer testimonials page:
Aside from customer testimonials, reviews are also very important for your business. Good reviews build a positive reputation for your brand, and they help you get discovered by search engines as well. Google uses customer reviews as a ranking factor. So, the more good reviews your business has, the more likely you'll appear first in search results.
When it comes to search engine marketing, you want to be at the top of the list. Asking your customers to leave reviews on your Google Business Profile will increase your chances of getting a review. I would recommend using email automation to automatically review requests after customers complete an invoice. Not every customer will respond, but it will improve your odds significantly.
Tip: Use this Google Review Link Generator to ask your customers for reviews.
Another way to get discovered by search engines is to build area pages for your website. Area pages tell people where you provide services. They're helpful for people who just discovered your brand, and they canimprove your website's SEO as well.
Here's an example:
This real estate website includes a "communities" page in its navigational menu. Each of these options leads to individual pages for each community:
This shows Google that this company operates in specific areas of Massachusetts. That way, when people search for "realtors near me," or "realtors in Northborough," this company has a better chance of appearing for that search.
If you want to grow your business and attract more clients to your company, you have to create interesting and attention-grabbing marketing campaigns. Use these marketing ideas to get you started, and get out the guide below more more tips to getting your business found online.
Get Your Business
Found Online
Are you ready to get serious about your online listings?