Bernice RossOn a recent group coaching call for new agents, one woman asked, “What should I leave behind at my listing appointment? I’m afraid that if I do all this work that they will give it to another agent and I won’t get the listing.”

The tried-and-true “brag book,” a beautifully bound leather folio, was a powerful way to show clients what you do to differentiate yourself from the competition. In it, you would include your comparative marketing analysis, sample marketing plans, company services and client testimonials. You would leave the book with the client at the appointment. You then had a reason to see them one more time to pick it up. This also gave you an additional opportunity to persuade the sellers to list with you.

The beauty of this approach is that it required a tremendous amount of work from a competing agent to have all the various things you had pulled together. It also was tough to copy.

While a number of agents still use the paper approach, especially with older clients, the same strategy also works beautifully in a digital environment. Here are the key elements.

 

Listening And Connecting

Regardless of whether you do a digital or paper-based listing appointment, remember that listening comes first. This means asking questions and taking notes on what the sellers say. You can use your digital device or take notes on paper. This approach sends a powerful nonverbal message that you care about the sellers and what they say. It also builds connection right from the beginning of your appointment.

 

Differentiate Yourself

Many agents are now using cloud-based CMAs and marketing reports such as Realtor.com’s Online Marketing Plan, Cloud CMA and Touch CMA. These are powerful tools that many agents have not yet learned to use. Also, since they generate reports automatically, there’s very little effort involved.

To ace out any competitors who do use these tools, let the sellers choose their own comparable sales. To do this, upload the interior shots of the best comparable sales, including a complete range from high to low. These shots should include the living room, kitchen and master, plus any other distinguishing features. Post these on Pinterest or Instagram.

Next, have the seller choose which comparable is closest to their home in terms of the interior and exterior appearance. Use that comp’s price per square foot to calculate their home’s value. The beauty of this approach is that the sellers named their own price. Moreover, once you have created a board on Pinterest for each property, you can continue to use that board whenever you do an appointment in that area.

 

Your Visual Marketing Plan

Very few agents use a written marketing plan on their appointments. Even if you are competing against an agent who has a written marketing plan, you can outshine them with a more sophisticated version that includes social media and video aspects.

The secret is to do more than to just talk about it. Instead, it takes very little time to do the following prior to your appointment.

Create a digital brochure. In the old brag books, the first page was always a color brochure for the property. Rather than explaining what you will do, when you have prepared the brochure, the conversation becomes, “Mr. and Mrs. Seller, do you want a paper version of the brochure as well? If so, would you prefer to have an interior or exterior photo as the primary photo?”

Most sellers will respond as if you already have the listing, making it much more likely they will list with you. Remember, every little “Yes,” increases the probability they will hire you.

Create multiple single-property pages across multiple social media sites. You have probably heard of “single-property listing sites.” These have been around for a number of years and are strong lead converters. These sites use the property address as the URL, i.e., 123MainStreetYourTown.com.

You can apply the same approach on Facebook, Pinterest and Instagram. Take your highest quality photos and post them on these sites using the property address as if it is the URL. For example, on Facebook, you can create a business page with the property address as the name of the page. (By the way, don’t do this on your profile page since it violates the Facebook terms of use.)

Remember to post your videos. When you create a digital brochure, you can also provide a link to your videos. These should be posted on all the photo sites mentioned above as well as on sites such as YouTube and Vimeo.

Video testimonials are equally important. There’s nothing better than one of your clients saying, “Susan did a fantastic job for us from start to finish. We even got over asking price!”

 

Compile Data In A Checklist

The final step is to create a checklist of all the services that you provide. Set it up in a table in your word processor or spreadsheet that shows the grid marks. List everything you have included from the suggestions from above plus any other unique services you and your company provide. Place a check mark beside each service you offer. Leave four additional columns where the sellers can compare your services with the other agents they may interview.

Remember, the secret to converting your listing appointments into signed listings is to ask questions, write down what the sellers say, and provide unique services that your competitors do not offer. Doing this in a digital, cloud-based format means that the only thing being left behind is your competition.

 

Bernice Ross, CEO of RealEstateCoach.com, is a national speaker, trainer and author. She may be reached at Bernice@RealEstateCoach.com.

Brag Book Goes Digital

by Bernice Ross time to read: 4 min
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