How to Create a Marketing Plan for Real Estate Agents

 

He who fails to plan is planning to fail.

-Winston Churchill

No matter how far along you are in your career—whether you’re a real estate newbie or a seasoned veteran—you won’t succeed without a well thought out plan.

And when we talk about a marketing plan, we’re not talking about your ideas to write a blog whenever inspiration hits, or to create videos when you have time (if your plans are only in your head, they are little more than pipe dreams).

We’re talking about a detailed plan to jumpstart your business through specific actions.

A marketing plan is:

a document that details you or your company’s marketing goals for a specific timeline, including a detailed step-by-step framework for achieving those goals.

Think of it as the blueprint you’ll use to guide the construction of your real estate career—your process for promoting your services.

Some quick tips for getting started:

  • Allot a significant amount of time preparing the plan
  • All goals within the plan should be reachable (with specific steps for reaching them)
  • Keep it easily accessible for reference
  • Share with the necessary people who can help enact the plan
  • Refer to it regularly (say every quarter)
  • Be willing to adjust it

how to create marketing plan

 

How to Create Your Marketing Plan

Without clearly defined goals, your time and money with both be spent inefficiently.

Whether you’re an agent, home inspector, mortgage loan originator, appraiser, or notary public, just joining a team or setting up your office is not enough to attract customers.

You need to find them through marketing.

Although the details of marketing plans may vary, there are still some universal elements that every plan needs.

 

1. Clearly define your goals

Every subsequent step is based on this one, so it must be right. Maybe you have one specific goal or several—whether it’s driving more traffic to your website, increasing your number of clients, or reaching a higher revenue point—you won’t accomplish any of it without writing it down first.

 

2. Find your niche

What separates you from your competitors?

The answer to this question will help guide you to discovering your niche in the market.

Do you have superior customer service?

Do you specialize in a specific kind of property?

Do you have better images and videos than anyone else in your market?

Once you discover your niche, that knowledge will drive the tone of your marketing plan.

 

3. Find your target market

You cannot reach everybody.

Trying to reach every person is the same as attempting to reach nobody. Because time and money and effort are finite resources, you must necessarily exclude some potential customers in your marketing plan in order to more directly reach your target clients. (This comment is called “Hiding in Infinity.” Read more about it here.)

 

4. What’s your message?

Here’s where you get to have a little more fun.

What do you want to say to your audience and how do you want to say it?

Are your marketing materials going to be playful, professional—maybe a little bit of both?

Without a game plan going into it, your tone will be inconsistent.

Take a mountaintop view of your marketing plan and imagine how your brand will appear across various mediums and social media platforms.

 

5. What’s your budget?

How much are you going to spend on your marketing plan every month, quarter, or year?

It’s possible that the amount you spend could be zero—it’s possible (at least as far as money is concerned). However…

 Remember that your budget includes time, as well.

Defining a budget helps you cap expenditures before you get ahead of yourself trying to reach goals that may not be within reach yet given your revenue.

You may hate crunching the numbers, but it’s a necessary step, otherwise you may find yourself with a plan that has no financial backing.

 

6. Specify your outreach

How much time are you going to spend on digital marketing efforts?

What about traditional marketing like magazine and newspaper ads, direct mail, and perhaps even billboards?

You don’t necessarily need to be everywhere, but you do need to think of the best channels through which to reach your audience.

Where do your potential clients?

Where do they spend their time?

You need to be right there with them.

 

7. Cultivate a content expertise

Try adding a blog to your website to share and post original content. Contribute to other real estate websites. Stay consistent and, over time, if you are adding value to people’s lives, you will be seen as a market expert.

People will begin to trust you.

Google will begin to trust you.

Your website and related content will rise in Google’s search results.

More clients will come to you.

8. Delegate

Your team (if you have one) needs to know about your marketing plan in order for it to come to fruition.

Get their buy-in from the beginning and set the plan into motion. 

To sign up for classes with Larson Educational Services, visit our website, LarsonEd.com, or give us a call at 239-344-7510.

naples real estate school

About Larson Educational Services:

Utilizing 40 years of real estate training and professional education experience, Florida real estate school Larson Educational Services is the premier provider of Florida real estate licensing, exam preparation, post-licensing, CAM licensing, mortgage loan originator licensing, and continuing education in Southwest Florida. Classes are available in Fort Myers, Naples, Sarasota, and online. We are an approved Florida Real Estate School (License #ZH1002299), Florida CAM School (License #PRE31), Florida Insurance School (License # 370501) and NMLS Approved Course Provider.

Larson Educational Services

13040 Livingston Rd. #12

Naples, FL 34105

info@LarsonEd.com

239-344-7510

LarsonEd.com

 

Are you creating value online?

creating value online.png

Sometimes, the best move is to stop producing and contemplate.

Real estate is a notoriously fast-paced industry that requires a hustler’s mindset.

Similarly, the internet is a fast-paced medium that creates the illusion that you must constantly produce content.

When you add these two factors together, you get a lot of white noise—people producing online content just for the sake of producing online content.

But how often do we stop to ask ourselves:

“Is my content adding value to anyone’s life?”

I’ll admit it: we’ve been guilty of producing white noise in the past. Look back in our archives and you’ll see “press releases” that were little more than thinly-veiled advertisements.

Or we’d post surface-level advice articles that did little more than repeat what already existed elsewhere online.

At one point or another, we’ve all produced spam-y online writing material.

Sure, there was a time when pumping out a keyword-heavy blog post every day would improve your search ranking.

Nowadays, this technique of jamming keywords into blog posts or YouTube videos in the hopes of boosting your SEO is no longer viable. 

Google won’t reward this kind of writing in the search results and potential readers will quickly move on to something more interesting online.

Cat video larsoned

Do you really think you can compete with 10 hours of cat fails!?

Content is King

Google is constantly trying to improve its search algorithm to provide the best content for its users. You can read more about one of its latest major updates here: Google Webmaster Blog* (see footnote for more info).

Marketing used to be focused on the products we sell. Now, marketing is all about the stories we tell.

An easy way to get started telling stories is to provide your prospects with insight into your business. People love the idea of having a behind-the-scenes glimpse into an industry.

Share part of your sales process or a personal success story from your business. Or write a blog post about the time you failed miserably and what you learned from it.

By telling these stories, you provide value to your sphere of influence.

Thought Leaders

You need to read more.

We all do. Reading is how we make sense of the chaos in the world—reading is how we get new ideas, whether professionally or personally.

Don’t know where to start?

I would begin by finding 5 to 10 SuperStar Agents that I admire and reading the content they’re producing online if I don’t already: their personal blog, their ActiveRain account, etc.

Don’t stop there—get in contact with them.

Find out what books they’re reading. 

Ask them what books have had the greatest influence on them. The answers to these questions will provide you with a ready-to-go reading list.

Because successful people, in all industries, are molded by the books they read.

Hiding in Infinity

It’s easy to think about dominating an entire state or region. You tell yourself you’ll be the best real estate agent in Florida. Or the best in the southeast. Or the best in the world!

But can you be the best real estate agent in your own neighborhood?

Seth Godin, the author of 18 bestsellers about marketing and leadership, calls this tendency to think big as opposed to thinking small “hiding in infinity.”

He says:

“Whenever possible, ask yourself… ‘what’s the smallest group of people I could make a difference for?’ Smallest feels risky. Because if you pick smallest and you fail, now you’ve really screwed up. We want to pick big because infinity is our friend. Infinity is safe. Infinity gives us a place to hide.

(For more on this, check out Godin’s book Purple Cow. This quote comes at the 12:20 mark of his podcast “How to Think Small to Go Big” with Tim Ferriss.)

So find your niche—whether it’s selling waterfront properties in Naples, Florida, or selling chocolate-covered frozen bananas (I’m just spit-balling here)—and become a thought leader for everyone who’s interested in your little sliver of the world.

logo no background

Larson Educational Services

13040 Livingston Rd. #12

Naples, Florida 34105

239-344-7510

LarsonEd.com


*Footnote: Anyone who’s interested in SEO should follow Google’s Webmaster Blog. For the longest time, I could never find a primary source for Google’s algorithm updates. Any website or article you read about Google’s updates are using this blog as their source material. Rather than rechecking this site every few weeks, I would suggest signing up for their email feed—they’re quite infrequent, so they won’t clutter your inbox. Just click on “Feed” on the right side of webmasters.googleblog.com then click on “Get Google Webmaster Central Blog delivered by email” as seen in the pictures below.

webmaster blog copy

How to Use Videos for Real Estate Marketing [VIDEO]–LarsonEd

How to Use Videos for Real Estate Marketing [VIDEO]–LarsonEd

About Larson Educational Services:

Utilizing 30 years of real estate training and professional education experience, Florida real estate school Larson Educational Services is the premier provider of Florida real estate licensing, exam preparation, post-licensing, CAM licensing, mortgage loan originator licensing, and continuing education in Southwest Florida. Classes are available in Fort Myers, Naples, Sarasota, and online.

Brad Larson

Larson Educational Services

 

13040 Livingston Rd. #12

Naples, Florida

34105

info@LarsonEd.com

239-344-7510

www.LarsonEd.com

How to Use Videos in Real Estate Marketing–LarsonEd

How to Use Videos in Real Estate Marketing 

Florida Real Estate School

People like videos. While the average Internet user spends 48 seconds on a website, the same user spends close to 6 minutes on a website that has a video. If your real estate website and individual property websites include video, your visitors are likely to stay longer. What do videos help you do for your real estate listings?

 

  1. Build relationships

Video helps develop familiarity and approachability. If someone can see what you look like, know how you interact, and get a sense of your personality it can put you in control of the first impression you have on them.

 

  1. Stay top of mind

Having relevant video content, like home improvement or maintenance tips, can help you stay top of mind with your clients even after they buy a home.

Florida real estate school home improvement

Only do the home improvement thing if you know what you’re doing.

 

  1. Be easy to find

When homebuyers are searching for properties one of the first places they go is online. Having searchable videos will help you and your listings findable. Videos are more likely to generate a first page Google ranking. A video on the first page is more likely to be clicked over other content. To market a listing, use the address as the URL and in the video description.

 

  1. Grab and keep your prospects’ attention

A visitor to a website with videos will typically stay 6 times longer than sites with no videos. However, videos should be no more than 2 minutes in length.

 

  1. Be viewed as the local expert

Delivering relevant videos to your current, past, and future clients is a great way to separate yourself from your competitors. If the videos you have are truly helpful, they will increase repeat visits to your site, blog, or social network.

 

Using professional-looking videos will help improve your search listings and the way potential buyers view your brand.

 

About Larson Educational Services:

Utilizing 30 years of real estate training and professional education experience, Florida real estate school Larson Educational Services is the premier provider of Florida real estate licensing, exam preparation, post-licensing, CAM licensing, mortgage loan originator licensing, and continuing education in Southwest Florida. Classes are available in Fort Myers, Naples, Sarasota, and online.

 

Brad Larson

Larson Educational Services

1400 Colonial Blvd. Suite 44

Fort Myers, FL 33907

info@LarsonEd.com

239-344-7510

www.LarsonEd.com