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Real Estate Marketing Plan: Strategic Marketing Template for Real Estate Agents + Investors

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real estate business plan for real estate agents and investors

Looking for a sample real estate marketing plan to create your strategy?

We’ve got you covered.

Why You Need A Real Estate Marketing Plan

According to the U.S. Small Business Association, only 56% of small businesses with 50 or fewer employees have a marketing plan. Almost half of smaller businesses are missing out on leads and sales.

Here are four other reasons why a marketing plan is essential for your real estate agent or investor business.

  1. It forces you to think about where you’re going with your real estate business. Creating a common goal to drive towards.
  2. It ensures that you’re aligned with your company values.
  3. It serves as a foundation for your marketing activities. If you build a house, you start with a solid foundation. Same thing with your marketing plan.
  4. Possibly the most important – it gives you a process. Without a process, you won’t have the direction you need and will likely either be going off course or starting to feel confused about your marketing efforts. The process can also act as a measure of your failures and successes.

Sample Real Estate Marketing Plan

At its basic level, a real estate marketing plan answers a series of questions that helps you define your ideal targets and craft your business’s most compelling offers into a cohesive story. It uses good distribution channels to reach your ideal targets.

Here are the questions you need to ask when making a good real estate marketing plan:

  • What are your goals?
  • What impact do you want to have on your communities?
  • Is your market saturated with similar offers, or is it ripe with opportunity?
  • How tough is your competition?
  • Who is your ideal target?
  • What are your Strengths, Weaknesses, Opportunities, and Threats?
  • What are your compelling offers?
  • How will you reach your target audience?
  • What is your marketing budget?
  • What keywords are the best opportunities in your market?

Here is a quick video that can help get you started… Real Estate Marketing Plan: Simple 90 Day Strategy

Real Estate Marketing Plan: Simple 90 Day Strategy

What is Your Marketing Goal?

First things first: you need to set your goals and objectives.

Clearly, state what you want to accomplish for yourself in your real estate business. If you’re an investor, it could be buying 50 properties this year. As a real estate agent, you might consider closing 100 listings.

Or, in both situations, you could want to get your brand or name out more for recognition. It could be that 50 percent of your target market knows who you are. Set goals that you can quantify to record and track your accomplishments.

Develop a 10,000-foot vision for your business, such as…

  • Become the top producer in your area
  • Retire in 10 years
  • Control particular niches of buyers and sellers

Then quantify that vision with measurable goals. Measurable goals might include:

  • Obtaining 50 listings in the next year
  • Close 10 deals in your target market area in 12 months
  • Earn referrals from 50 percent of your past customers
  • Purchase 10 single-family rental properties in the next 48 months

What Impact Do You Want to Have in Your Communities?

You want your real estate business to be sustainable and build a good relationship with your community. How you approach and treat your clients has a tremendous impact on how your business is viewed within your market.

Your clients directly affect your business reputation, lead, and deal volume. But it’s not just your direct clients. Anyone that you interact with can be considered an indirect client. Residents, Facebook friends, your website host, employees, contractors, partners, and suppliers.

You must constantly assess your behaviors and their impact on your local community and the broader audience.

real estate marketing plan sponsorship ideas

Image: Placester

Then you can assess and find your niche within. What events to attend and who to build relationships with. Your community approach will also help you create your immediate and long-term business needs.


Is Your Market Saturated with Similar Offers?

You want to build strong relationships with your customer base. As you’re maintaining a high value and positive service for your customers, they’re more likely to spread the word among their peers.

If you’re in a competitive market and find it hard to make your marketing stand about your competition, then be sure to make your service and client experience stand out.

Build your real estate brand identity, and your customers will become ambassadors if they see and feel that “above and beyond” connection.

Marketing Strategies for Real Estate: How Tough is Your Competition?

First, you need to identify your competitors. Take into account your potential or future competitors too.

There are a couple of methods you can use to do this.

1. Look at them from a customer’s point of view

If you can look at your competitors from a customer’s point of view, you’ll be able to spot some of their larger strengths and weaknesses.

It’s a fun yet challenging activity to think like a customer. Why would a customer want to use them as a real estate service? Is it because they can offer more and faster payment turnaround time, or do they have top-tier customer service? These could all be strengths for your competition.

Become your ideal client and put yourself in their shoes. Wonder why you would be more likely to deal with them instead of using your company to accomplish their real estate needs.

2. Look at them from their point of view

Next, take a look at their point of view. This can help you understand their strategy, culture, and attitude toward the market. Take a look at what assets they bring to the field and how you would use them if they were yours. Take a look at what you interpret as their weaknesses.

How could you commit to making those weaknesses into your strengths?

Ask and answer these questions before your analysis:

Before you dive into your real estate marketing competitor analysis, be sure you’re asking the right questions. Here are some common questions to get you started:

  • Who are your competitors?
  • What types of services are they using?
  • How much market share do they have?
  • What have been some of their past strategies?
  • Are they using the same strategy?
  • Are they aggressive with their real estate marketing?
  • How competitive are they in the market?
  • What are their strengths and weaknesses?
  • Are they a threat to you? If so, how big of an impact can they have?
  • Does their marketing strategy affect yours or how you do business?

Who is Your Ideal Target Audience?

Create a simple paragraph profiling your ideal real estate target audience. Create a customer avatar regarding these demographics: sex, age, family, earnings, lifestyle, and geographic location.

Ask yourself questions about your customers, such as:

  • Are they followers or leaders?
  • Are they timid or aggressive?
  • Are they introverts or extroverts?
  • How often are they likely to move?
  • Are they traditional and bear more of a connection to the community?

No matter your real estate market, you’ll need to define them in this section narrowly. It is an important step that will guide you as you plan your media and public relations campaigns.

What are your Strengths, Weaknesses, Opportunities, and Threats?

Performing a SWOT Analysis is a crucial step when creating your real estate marketing strategy.

The term “SWOT Analysis” sounds like a daunting task. But, it can be simple.

It’s broken down into two categories:

  • Your internal issues: Strengths and weaknesses
  • Your external issues: Opportunities and threats

This analysis will allow you to see what factors will help you achieve your objectives due to your strengths and opportunities.

It will also highlight what obstacles you must hurdle before achieving your real estate goals due to your weaknesses and/or threats.

Overall, the SWOT analysis assesses your real estate company’s strengths, weaknesses, market opportunities, and potential threats to give you insight into the possible issues that can impact your success.

The number 1 goal of a SWOT analysis aims to determine and assign all important factors that could positively or negatively impact the success of one of the categories, giving you an in-depth view of your real estate business.

Four Categories Of SWOT:

Strengths:

  • What are the advantages of your real estate business?
  • What can you do better than your competition?
  • What exclusive resources can you use that others can’t?
  • How does your market see your strengths?
  • What factors into you closing the deal?
  • What is your company’s Unique Selling Proposition?
  • When considering your strengths, look at your internal employees and external customers/market.

Weaknesses:

  • What might you be able to improve on?
  • What locations and markets should you avoid?
  • What potential clients within your market might see as your weaknesses?
  • What factors cause you to lose the deal?

Again, account for your internal and external clients. Do your clients see weaknesses that you haven’t seen? What are your competitors doing better than you right now?

Weaknesses can be a gut check. But stick with it and be as realistic as you can.

Opportunities:

  • What positive opportunities are available to you?
  • Are there trends that you need to know?

Some of the positive opportunities you can take advantage of are:

  • Changes in real estate technology. For example, recording a video testimonial and uploading it to Facebook as soon as you record it.
  • Changes within the real estate field. Are more real estate agents becoming investors or vice versa?
  • Changes in the economic status and population profile within your market.
  • Are there any local events you can help organize or lead within the real estate niche?

Take a look at your strengths and weaknesses as you approach your opportunities. They can provide invaluable information on what you can work harder to improve upon.

Threats:

  • What obstacles do you need to hurdle in your market?
  • What are your competitors doing?
  • Are there any technical issues that are threatening your market position?
  • Do you have cash-flow problems that you need to address?
  • Do you have any weaknesses that are threatening your business?

Once you have chosen your real estate business values within the four SWOT categories, you can develop a more strategic plan.

For example, once you’ve identified your weaknesses and potential threats, you can create a plan to eliminate or at the least minimize them while continuing to improve upon strategies that will make you a more robust business.

Examples of a SWOT Analysis from Bplans

What Are Your Compelling Offers?

What exactly is your compelling offer?

To create your compelling offers, ask yourself the following questions:

  • Who do you sell or buy real estate to or from? Be highly specific.
  • What are the problems that you help them solve?
  • How do you solve their problems?
  • Why are you better at solving their problems?

Now create your compelling pitch like this:

How [insert who your ideal client is] can [insert verb] [insert the problem] through [insert solution].

How Will You Reach Your Target Audience?

Getting your audience to engage with your content is essential for connecting with your target market online. The online real estate market is increasingly growing and vying for client attention.

But, even the investor or agent with a small budget can succeed with the right strategies.

Start by narrowing it to a highly targeted audience.

If you offer buyer and seller services, your target currently includes more people in your local market.

For example, focus on only one section of zip codes within your market city. Then expand your area as your finances and business grow.

So, choose a specific area of your market and focus efforts there. Then expand.

A second option will be to focus on the seller or buyer market if you’re a real estate investor. There are specific factors to consider, but marketing towards the seller’s market is most likely the one to go after.

Your marketing costs within major cities will likely be expensive, so media such as Google Ads might be too high unless you can target slightly out of the city.

If you don’t have the budget, take advantage of pricing within the suburban markets.

The other thing you need to do is get your website organized to target your audience. If that requires creating city-specific pages, then you need to do that.

Also, get one of the most overlooked pages, your “About” or company page optimized. Be sure it includes your city or area, how you conduct your business, and your process. Spell out your strengths and why they should choose you over the competition.

What is Your Marketing Budget?

Having a solid marketing budget is integral to being realistic and will help you improve your revenue over time.

You can overspend on marketing costs if you don’t know your budget. Therefore causing an unwanted and bad experience.

Here are a few steps to help you organize your budget and determine where to spend your marketing dollars strategically.

Watch our 4-Step Marketing Budget Formula whiteboard strategy sketch if you need help determining your ROI and kick-start your planning.

1. Financial organization

Your first step needs to be organizing your current financial positions. You MUST be specific. If you’re too loose and choose to estimate, it creates an unrealistic budget.

This starts with getting in order your revenue information. You’ll need to know how much revenue your real estate business makes every month. Even though your income varies throughout the year, you must have a number based on reliable revenue (the minimum amount of money you make each month.)

You’ll also need to minus business expenses. Rent, materials, the cost of VA’s, etc.

Any business expense must be subtracted from your revenue before nailing down your marketing budget. Setting a realistic budget is one that focuses on income that exceeds expenses.

After you find your available disposable income, you’ll need to determine what that money will be. Although marketing is a major area to focus on, don’t forget to set aside a budget for unexpected circumstances and growth.

Separate your money based on your goals. You will invest more money in online marketing if your primary goal is attracting leads.

But, if your goal is to hire more VA’s or full-time assistants, you’ll want to put more income into your company’s growth and set aside less for marketing until you’ve been able to close more deals.

2. Determine where you want to allocate your funds

Once you have calculated what is available to spend on marketing, your next step is organizing and prioritizing your money.

There are three main elements to how you spend your marketing dollars:

  • Budget size
  • Your past experiences
  • Reaching the optimum target audience

Start by organizing how to spend the budget based on the amount. If you have a small, more limited marketing budget, you should probably consider Craigslist ads, Facebook ads, local citations, social media posting, and email advertising to attract new clients.

A heavier marketing budget would provide the opportunity to include direct mail, bandit signs, and Google Ads to attract an expanded range of clients.

Apart from any budget limits, don’t forget to consider and implement what strategies have worked for you in the past. You might have noticed postcards helped bring in more clients during a specific time.

Then do that same strategy again, even if you still have more budget for more expensive marketing methods.

Also, don’t overlook the marketing channels that will help you target and reach your optimum audience. For example, Facebook advertising is an effective channel for targeting motivated sellers, but you still need to create the right audiences to filter out potential buyer leads.

real estate marketing plan facebook ads
Facebook Ads Audience for Real Estate

Create and document very detailed customer avatars. Then, think about which media they’re more likely to consume. That is the spot where you need to be advertising.

If you’re considering testing a new marketing channel, allocate some funds for that test. Start with a small budget since you don’t know how effective the new channel will be.

For example, if you enter the Google Ads marketing channel, start with a small campaign with highly targeted keywords and a budget.

Only allocate more budget after you gain enough data to determine if it’s working for you. If it works, pull more funds into the new marketing channel.

What Real Estate Keywords Are the Best in Your Market?

How do you use real estate keywords? If you are only using them to optimize your website for search rankings, you could be missing out on other ways to gain visibility within your target market.

Get into the mindset to use your keywords in your online and offline marketing.

Here are some platforms where you can utilize your real estate keywords more:

  • Real estate website optimization (homepage, landing pages)
  • Real estate content (blog posts, articles)
  • Email subject line optimization (prospects, blog posts, articles)
  • On and offline branding
  • Real estate social media profile optimization (Twitter, Instagram, Facebook)
  • Offline marketing (postcards, bandits signs, direct mail)

Using real estate keywords should not be limited to your digital marketing efforts.

Find different ways to plug them into your offline practices as well.

For example, are you sending out flyers or postcards that take advantage of some keywords?

Are you placing bandit signs around your target market with specific messages and a phone number in case they’re sitting in a parking lot and want to write your number down to contact you later?

If you’re using this kind of marketing and not some keywords, it’s time to readjust your strategy.

Keywords hold a lot of power in online marketing but can be effective offline too. Just be careful that you’re not infringing on trademarks. If you question a keyword phrase, check it out first.

If you need help finding the right keywords to optimize your real estate investor website, check out our SEO Keyword Bible with 70+ SEO keywords.



Summing Up Your Real Estate Marketing Plan

This plan assumes that you’ve got a website that has been proven to convert leads.

If you’re trying to scrape together a bunch of tips to save a few bucks on building your website, you’re doing it wrong. It will cost you much more than the monthly membership price to build what we’ve built.

There are a few things you should do first to get that website up and running, and these only take a few minutes:

  1. Get your testimonials on the site because social proof and credibility are essential to conversions.
  2. Get your bio up to also build social proof and credibility. The “Our Company” page is one of the most important on your real estate website.
  3. Make sure the copy on the site reflects your business and is in line with local laws (for example, if you or your team have a real estate license, you’ll need to change the copy to make sure you’re correctly disclosing your license… but you should make that into a benefit since a license gives you more options for sellers than someone operating without one).

Okay, so that last one might be complicated if you’re new to the business… but you need to be making sure you’re aware of the laws around you since being ignorant isn’t an excuse if you’re trying to get out of a five-figure fine for operating without a license (in some states)…

This reminds me that I need to mention we’re not attorneys or financial advisors; all of this stuff is just general advice. You need specific, professional advice on your real estate investment business…

Having a competent lawyer ensures you’re not offering something illegal without knowing it is a good idea.

There are a couple of ways to use these questions…just cut and paste them into a document and start answering them if you’re ready.

Want our help in making your real estate marketing plan?

Again, If you’re already a Carrot Member, you can download the real estate marketing plan template OR, better yet, try out the Carrot Marketing Plan Generator!

For other real estate marketing tips, check out our Live Carrot Coaching Calls for members (Mastermind Calls) each week. Or, if you’re not a member, take a tour or our Coaching Calls.

Also, visit the Carrot Strategy Sketch Whiteboard Q&A on our YouTube Channel, and don’t miss our CarrotCast podcast.

Brendan Holmes

Brendan Holmes has been managing paid traffic accounts since 2013, overseeing more than $5 million in ad spend. As a seasoned content marketing and SEO expert at Carrot.com since 2015, Brendan helps real estate investors grow their online presence and generate high-quality leads. A seasoned content marketing and SEO expert at Carrot.com since 2015, Brendan works with Carrot and real estate investors to enhance their online presence and generate high-quality leads. His extensive digital marketing expertise, combined with in-depth industry knowledge, makes him a trusted resource for optimizing campaigns and driving results.

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