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Drip E-mail – The Slow, Effective Way

Home Best Practices
By Peyman Aleagha
May 19, 2013
Reading Time: 3 mins read

RISMEDIA, June 26, 2009-Have you implemented a drip e-mail campaign to buyer and seller prospects? If not, you surely know agents who are.  With the free nature of e-mail, it has become a much abused form of communication. And, drip e-mail from many real estate professionals is little more than automated periodic spam. With filters and rules in e-mail systems, it’s easy to have your drip e-mails trashed on arrival, so you never know that they aren’t being read. One broker used a service that let him know that only about 125 out of 800 of his regular e-mails were being read.

But, I’m not saying that regular (call them drip if you like) e-mails are ineffective. They can be one of your most effective lead generators that will bring in commissions on a regular basis. The idea is to first slow down the drips, and second deliver something worthwhile and valuable to the recipient. This is not:

– How to sell a home with the baking bread smell.
– Making rooms look larger by re-positioning furniture.
– Curb appeal is important.
– Leave the home when it’s being shown.

And so on and so on…

It’s not that there isn’t some good information there. It’s that there are millions of these going out every week, many purchased in bulk. Identical packages of drip e-mail are being sold to hundreds or thousands of real estate agents. Now that you know what they don’t need, what types of e-mails will get opened, and even be eagerly anticipated by your prospects and even past clients? We’ve all heard “location, location, location.” With ongoing client e-mail contact, it’s “statistics, statistics, statistics.”

– Homes sold during the period since the last e-mail.
– Average and median sold prices.
– Current inventory and days on market averages.
– Absorption rates – how fast is inventory being sold off?
– Sale price to list price discount ratios.

You can probably come up with a few more reports to add to these, and all right out of your MLS software system. Most provide a great deal of detailed data, and it’s as simple as printing it to a PDF document and attaching it to your e-mails.

This has been proven quite convincingly. Here’s the program the broker we mentioned above put into effect to improve e-mail opening and retention rates:

When you get the e-mail address of a new prospect, enter them into your database and send them the first e-mail thanking them for the site visit.
In the first e-mail, tell them that you’re going to send them three or four informative e-mails to point them to valuable local area information and real estate statistics. Just letting them know what’s coming cut “unsubscribe” requests in half for this broker.

Then send them three or four e-mails, each taking them to a section of your site that has maps, detailed area, lender or other information, and some statistical data.

In the last e-mail, tell them it’s the last in this series, and that you’re placing them on a special list to receive detailed real estate statistics as you issue them in the future. These will be statistics not available on the site. This broker did quarterly e-mails, so just four a year. He kept his prospects, and all of his transactions from the Web came from this list. You could do them every two months, or even every month if desired.

From the beginning, the prospect appreciates being told what’s going to happen. They don’t get your first e-mail and have to wonder if you are going to send one of these every other day forever. By telling them what you’re going to do, they don’t immediately request to be removed from your list. They want to see what’s coming.

This broker’s local MLS used the FNIS Paragon software, and it produced all of the required detail reports in just a few minutes. Most MLS software will provide similar statistical data for printing. Just make it a PDF and attach it. Or, if you can FTP it to your site, just send them a nice short e-mail with the link.

Remember, buyers aren’t the only ones who want statistics. Buyers want to keep track of the market to see what they’re going to pay, but sellers are just as interested in real estate stats. They want to know what their home might sell for by seeing stats for their neighborhood.

And, don’t forget the past client, as they want to keep up as well.

Peyman Aleagha is the founder and President of RealtySoft.com. RealtySoft provides real estate professionals with affordable Real Estate Website Design, Real Estate Print Marketing and Free IDX & MLS Search solutions. Find out more about RealtySoft by visiting www.RealtySoft.com.

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