Real Estate Postcard Marketing - 6 Secret Ingredients for Success
by Brandon Cornett
Remember a few years back when all the fast food chains crowed about their
"secret" sauces and ingredients? It sure added some mystique, didn't it? Nothing
improved the flavor of a hamburger or drumstick like good old-fashioned secrecy!
Now let's transition to postcard marketing, where a similar concept applies. A
small percentage of real estate agents have discovered the "secret ingredients"
of postcard marketing. As a result, they enjoy huge success each time they
conduct a mailing.
Other agents, however, do not enjoy such success. They send postcard after
postcard, but, alas, no response. These agents do not know the secret
ingredients of postcard marketing success.
Let's uncover some secrets, shall we?
Postcard Secret #1 -- Don't Rely on Technology
You first need to realize that technology alone won't lead you to postcard
marketing success. If it were that easy, all agents would enjoy record-breaking
responses from their mailings.
In fact, technology is the most straightforward part of the equation. A postcard
marketing service will handle all of the technology for you. But there's the
rub. Technology can help you deliver a powerful message, but it cannot create
that message for you. That's your job.
Nobody knows your audience or your skills better than you, and nobody cares
about your success as much as you do. So the message, and everything that brings
it to life, must begin with you.
Postcard Secret #2 -- Know Your Audience
When creating your postcard message, start by identifying your audience. This
might seem obvious, but it's a critical step upon which the rest of the process
will rest. To identify your core audience, you simply have to ask yourself a
series of questions.
What area do I want to represent? Am I focusing on buyers or sellers? Where
might I find these people? What's important to them? What do they want to know?
What do I have to offer that might motivate them?
When you've answered these questions, you should be able to write a paragraph
from the combined answers. This paragraph is your audience statement, and it
will help you set your postcard marketing objectives accordingly. Once you've
defined your audience, you can more easily determine the kinds of offers that
might motivate them.
Postcard Secret #3 -- Identify the Desired Response
Now that you know your audience (and assuming you've done some research to
really get to know them) you can set the objective for your postcard campaign.
Ask yourself, "What do I want to happen as a result of sending my postcards?
What's the ideal response?"
Here's the key to this step. Don't ask your postcards to do more than they're
capable of doing. I see real estate marketers using postcards to try and
convince recipients that they offer superior service. That's a lot to ask of an
8" x 5" piece of card stock.
Scale back your objective until you find something that (A) gives the postcard a
more realistic task, (B) follows a more natural sales progression, and (C)
capitalizes on known behavior.
What's a good response to aim for? How about a phone call or an email? Now
that's something a postcard can handle, especially if you give people a good
reason to contact you (like an insightful report on future construction in your
area). And that leads to our next "secret"...
Postcard Secret #4 -- Offer Something Great
We know from statistics that most consumers end up choosing the first real
estate agent they contact. So you can capitalize on this known behavior by
aiming for that critical first contact. This is where your offer comes into
play.
The value and relevance of your offer will determine the size of your response.
That's a fundamental principal of postcard marketing that many agents overlook.
A postcard without explicit value is a postcard destined for the trash.
Think of it this way. The postcard is only a messenger. A messenger without an
important message is worthless. But if the messenger has valuable news or
information, everybody wants to hear what he has to say!
Here's an example. If I lived in a residential area suffering from "commercial
creep," and somebody offered me an exclusive report on future commercial
development and how it might impact my home value ... I would want that report!
And I'd contact anyone to get it.
Postcard Secret #5 -- Leverage Your Website
Have a website? If so, you have a perfect marketing partner to complement your
postcards. The reasons are somewhat psychological:
The goal of any marketing program is to gain new business, but sometimes you
have to offer indirect paths as well as the direct ones. Direct paths are for
direct people. A direct path on a postcard would be a phone number. Some
interested prospects will choose the direct route and call you straightaway.
But those who are less direct would rather learn more about you first. They need
to get comfortable before they "raise their hands." So why not build an
informational resource section of your website and point to it with your
postcards?
The point is to offer different response channels for the different personality
types. A direct phone number for the direct people, and an indirect website path
for the more timid souls. Then mention both paths on your postcards, and you've
increased your chance for response -- be it direct or indirect.
Postcard Secret #6 -- Measure Your Success
Make sure you have some way to track the responses you get back from each
mailing. This will allow you to compare one postcard message to another to see
which one performs better.
First, establish a baseline response based on your first mailing (out of X
number of recipients, X responded). Next, try to improve one element of the
postcard, such as the offer. You won't know if it's truly an improvement until
the test is complete, but that's the whole point.
Lastly, send the new version of your postcard to the same list, the same number
of recipients, and with all other things being equal. Track the results as you
did before, and compare the two mailings. You've just completed a simple A/B
test to determine which of two offers is more effective.
You can continue this testing in one of two ways: You can keep putting your
winning offer up against new challengers. Or you can move on to other aspects of
the mailing, such as the design, headline, list, timeframe, etc. The goal is to
have a postcard that combines the best of all elements.
Conclusion
I hope you see now that the "secrets" of postcard marketing success aren't
really secrets at all. They are proven methods that have been used by direct
mail marketers for years. And now that you understand them, you have everything
you need to create your own postcard marketing success.
* Copyright 2006, PostcardSmart. You may republish this article online if you
retain the byline, author's note and active hyperlinks.
About the Author: Brandon
Cornett is the editor of PostcardSmart.com, the Internet's largest library of
postcard marketing advice.
For more expert articles on postcard marketing, visit
http://www.PostcardSmart.com.
Source of this article:
www.goarticles.com
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