Creating a Newsletter
Creating a Newsletter for your Real Estate Business
Newsletters are an
effective way to provide valuable content to current and past clients,
prospective buyers and sellers, and farm areas. Newsletters can drive traffic
to a website (especially if through email), show you’re the local real estate expert,
a chance to build and promote your brand, and the ability to market yourself
and your knowledge of the real estate industry, and the community you serve. It’s
reported that there are 3.2 billion email accounts and that 91% of consumers
check their email at least once a day, so email newsletters, or often called e-newsletters,
are one of the best ways to get information in front of clients.
The most engaging real estate newsletters offer some type of market recap or analysis in a specific area because every seller or buyers looking in that community, want to know about property values, how those values compare to last month, last quarter or last year, and what’s selling slower or faster. They want to know if sales and volume are up or down, what factors led to those results, and how long or how fast are properties selling in that community. When a market update is included, the more detailed the analysis the better, so that you’re able to show that you are the local expert.
Photos, graphs, and charts are visually appealing and should be included in your newsletter. Photos are used to grab the reader’s attention so that they will want to continue. Graphs or charts are a simple way to condense the information into a snapshot that readers can easily view. If a reader is interested in the information on the graph or chart, they will want to know more and will read the rest of the data.
All newsletters should include a call to action. With an e-newsletter, it can be a button with a link to a landing page or a website that can offer a free market evaluation or a place to get pre-qualified. The call to action can be as simple as the ability to share the newsletter to a social media page. If the newsletter is a hard copy, the call to action can still offer a free market analysis or a place to get pre-qualified, but it will be in the form of a website or email address where they can access the same information.
If you’re consistent with your newsletter, give your newsletter a name. The name can be the headline of the newsletter and will make it easier for you to refer to the name within the newsletter or when talking to clients, and hopefully it will create enough engagements that others will refer to the name as well. For the sections of the newsletters, headlines are important to capture the reader’s attention just like a photo or chart. Try asking a question, utilizing a number before your title like 3 Things to …, or provide some sort of urgency like Here’s a quick way to… Once the newsletter has a name and includes local market updates, photos, charts, a call to action, and headlines, now you’ll need to fill the newsletter with helpful information that will create lots of engagement. Here are some ideas.
1.Ask a question? Then proceed to answer it.
2.Offer home improvement or decorating ideas, tips, or trends
3.Local news or a calendar of local events
4.Fun facts that can be tailored to the housing market or a specific community
5.Mortgage interest rates, loan options, or home affordability programs
6.Reviews or testimonials
7.Interviews or guest experts
8.Tips on saving for a home or how to get pre-qualified for a loan
9.A comparison to rent or buy
10.Getting a home ready to sell or ready for an open house
11.Moving or relocating tips
12.A survey or quiz, if using an e-newsletter
13.Just listed, just sold, or open houses – but these should be very minimal, if used at all
For e-newsletters, it’s best to use an email marketing company where they offer the ability to create highly engaging newsletters within their platform and can end bulk emails to a contact list. Companies like Constant Contact, Mail Chimp, and Active Campaign all have these features plus much more. There are also some CRM’s, franchises, and even individual companies that offer the ability to create and send out e-newsletters within their platforms. No matter which of these platforms are used, make sure that they are in compliance with anti-spam laws so that the newsletter will reach everyone and not be spent to a spam or junk folder. Places like Mail Chimp and MailerLite offer free subscriptions, so there’s no need to send your newsletter through your own email and risk the email getting automatically spammed. Plus, most of the email marketing companies offer tracking and analytics to see how many times the page was open, how many clicks throughs to other pages or links, and who are the most active users, so the information can be used when creating the next newsletter to maximize engagements. If opting to do a hard copy of the newsletter instead or as well, they can be mailed directly or dropped off to clients, prospects, or a specific farm area, they can printed as an ad or as an insert in a local newspaper or magazine, they can be posted on social media, or they can be used in all of these medians. It’s a good idea to make extra copies of the newsletter to include in buyer and listing packets, displayed at open houses, and on hand to be able to give to prospective clients.
If you opt to use an already created template or a marketing company that offers newsletters where you just plug in your contact information, make sure the template allows for local market updates and information and the ability to personalize it as much as possible. The goal is to get the reader to read the newsletter and utilize a call to action, if it’s a generic template, it might look like spam or junk mail and be discarded.
One of the great benefits of taking the time to create a real estate newsletter is that once all the research has been completed and the information gathered and organized in one place, it can be used in different modalities and on all platforms. The photo, graph, and chart can be used separately on social media pages as a stand-alone with a caption about the market values. Pieces of the information from the newsletter can be used to create a Monday Market Update with a drip system to post the information every week on social media or via email. If the newsletter offers home or decorating ideas, a Tuesday or Thursday Tips can be created, dripping pieces of the information every week on Facebook or Instagram. Some, or all, of the information can be turned it into blog posts for the next month or two, or a video or a series of video’s where the information is given in a video format, or even create a podcast. All of these can include a link that would then take the reader to a website or pdf where the entire newsletter can be accessed. A thorough and personal newsletter may seem daunting, but providing this information marks you as the local expert. Once the work is down, you’ll be able to use pieces of it to spread through all the medians you utilize, which makes the newsletter not just a one-off piece of marketing, but instead an e-newsletter, an insert for your listing and buyer packets, dozens of posts for social media pages, blogs, videos, and even a podcast. It can be a week’s worth of work to create the newsletter, but it can easily provide three months’ worth of content.
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