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Homes that sell vs Homes that sit (CA)

When sellers price for the market they remember - not the one they’re in - homes sit, prices drop, or listings disappear.

This email helps you name that disconnect and start the kind of conversation that leads to smarter pricing, stronger positioning, and fewer surprises. We also added a soft P.S. for buyers—because in this market, some well-priced homes are absolute steals.

IG Reel: What do buyers really want right now?

This IG reel is fast, visual, and ridiculously easy to execute, but it’s also backed by real data from Zillow, NAHB, and HomeLight on what today’s buyers are actually looking for.

Post as-is or update any of the ten points to reflect what you’re seeing in your market.

IG Poll: What’s the chance…

Inspired by a killer reel from Rick J Lee, and built around the same psychology behind our “What’s the chance?” text, we’re lowering the bar and opening the loop.

“Getting back in the market” feels casual. The options feel safe. But the insight you get? Game-changing.

This one’s short, strategic, and built for engagement.

What’s the chance…

Most scripts put people on defense. This one opens the door.

In a market full of hesitation, your message has to do more than inform - it has to disarm.

That’s why we built this text around three words I picked up from a Lewis Howes video: What’s the chance? It’s playful, non-threatening, and it bypasses the part of the brain wired to shut down salesy conversations.

Instead of pressure, it invites possibility. And for buyers who’ve felt sidelined the last two years, that’s exactly the kind of nudge that gets them to re-engage.

Homes that sell vs Homes that sit

When sellers price for the market they remember - not the one they’re in - homes sit, prices drop, or listings disappear.

That’s the story behind two new reports from Realtor.com and Clever, and the reason we built this campaign.

The data is clear: 72% of future sellers think they’ll get over asking. Only 42% of recent sellers actually did. Nearly half had to cut their price. And delistings? Up 47% year-over-year.

This email helps you name that disconnect and start the kind of conversation that leads to smarter pricing, stronger positioning, and fewer surprises. We also added a soft P.S. for buyers because in this market, some well-priced homes are absolute steals.

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Trying to make sense of this market? (CA)

This week’s email is grounded in insights from RBC’s latest housing report and recent coverage from The Globe and Mail. Together, they capture a clear mood in the market: caution.

National resales fell nearly 10% in February—the sharpest monthly drop in years. But that stat alone doesn’t tell the whole story.

Because in a cautious market, people don’t stop moving. They just move differently.

This email helps you communicate that nuance—to show up as a calm, informed resource in a time when many are feeling uncertain.

Trying to make sense of this market?

This week’s email pulls from two of the most respected sources in housing data—Altos Research and ATTOM. Together, they paint a picture that’s more complex than the headlines suggest.

It’s a national view—but one that helps you frame local conversations with more clarity and confidence.

Because even when your market behaves differently, buyers and sellers are still hearing national narratives. Your job is to bring perspective.

Here’s what the latest numbers show—and how to use them to educate, inform, and stay relevant.

This template also includes a direct-response P.S. designed to surface potential sellers—so you can spark the right conversations at the right time.

Exclusive Open House Invite for Past Guests

Smart agents know that one Open House can lead to the next. Every buyer who walks through the door—whether they loved that home or not—is a lead who’s actively searching. So why not use that connection to keep them engaged?

This email works because it feels personal. It’s not a generic “Come to my Open House” blast—it’s an intentional, direct invitation. And by using the Deal of the Week strategy, you create curiosity without giving everything away. No full address. No full listing. Just enough intrigue to make them reply.

Use this as a simple but effective way to turn past Open House visitors into future clients. If they’re serious about buying, they’ll want the details.

Open House Follow Up Text

Most follow-up texts fail because they feel like a sales pitch. This one works because it does the opposite—it gives the lead control.

“Should I contact you if…” is a powerful phrase. It shifts the conversation from pushing a sale to seeking permission. And that matters because people are more likely to engage when they feel like they’re choosing to.

But here’s the key: make it feel local. If they toured a home in [Neighborhood], reference it. If there are similar listings coming soon, hint at them. The goal isn’t just to follow up—it’s to keep the conversation open and position yourself as the agent they want to hear from.

Use this text to re-engage buyers without sounding pushy.

This is a good sign for homebuyers (CA)

A new report just dropped, and it’s the perfect opportunity to reach out to your database with valuable, timely information.

BNN Bloomberg just covered National Bank’s latest Housing Affordability Monitor, which shows that affordability in Canada improved for the fourth consecutive quarter. Rising incomes and lower mortgage rates are helping offset higher home prices, bringing mortgage payments to their lowest level as a percentage of income in nearly three years.

That’s a shift your audience needs to know about.

This email gives buyers a reason to re-evaluate their options and helps sellers understand what this means for demand. It positions you as the go-to resource for market insights while staying relevant and data-driven.

FSBO Letter #2: CMA Offer

By now, the FSBO seller has likely dealt with lowball offers, pushy agents, or worse—radio silence. And if their home isn’t moving, they’re starting to wonder why.

That’s where this letter comes in. Letter #2 in the sequence shifts the conversation to pricing—one of the biggest pain points for FSBO sellers. Instead of telling them they’ve priced it wrong, this letter leads with empathy, highlights the risk of guessing, and offers a free CMA as a straightforward, no-pressure solution.

The goal? To make it easy for them to say yes. No obligation, no catch—just valuable data that helps them make smarter decisions. And when they realize they need more than just numbers? You’re already the agent they trust.

FSBO Letter #1: 3 Tips

Most FSBO sellers expect agents to pressure them into listing. That’s why most direct mail from agents goes straight into the trash.

If you want to stand out, you have to do something different. Instead of pushing for a listing, this letter builds trust by meeting sellers where they are—acknowledging their frustrations, offering value, and positioning you as a helpful resource, not just another agent looking for a deal.

This is letter #1 in a three-part sequence. The goal? To shift their perception of you from “just another agent” to someone they can actually trust. No sales pitch, no scare tactics—just practical advice that makes them feel more confident in their sale.

FSBO Email Campaign: This Is Where Most Sellers Get Stuck

Most FSBO sellers think the hardest part is getting an offer. But in reality? The toughest part is knowing what to do next.

Many sellers assume price is all that matters. But once the offers start rolling in, they realize there’s a lot more at stake—hidden costs, contingencies, and tricky negotiations that can cost them thousands. The problem? FSBO sellers don’t always see these pitfalls coming until it’s too late.

This email positions you as the guide they didn’t know they needed. By educating them upfront and offering a free CMA, you’re not just providing value—you’re giving them the clarity and confidence they won’t get from an online estimate. No sales pitch, just real help. And when they hit a roadblock? You might be the first person they think to call.

FSBO Text Script

Most FSBO sellers screen calls from unknown numbers—especially from agents. If they didn’t pick up, it’s not necessarily a “no.” It just means they don’t know why they should talk to you yet.

This text is short, direct, and creates curiosity. Instead of sounding like another agent trying to “win the listing,” you’re positioning yourself as someone with genuine interest in their home. No sales pitch, just a reason for them to call you back.

The goal? Get them to engage. Once they respond, you can shift the conversation toward value—helping them, not selling them.

Once you get them on the phone, use 1 of these 3 call scripts:
- FSBO Pricing Call Script
- FSBO Photos Call Script
- FSBO Listing Description Call Script

Market Like You Gossip

Forget the hard sell. Instead, market like you gossip. Instead of laying out every detail, tease your audience with just enough insider information to spark curiosity. 

Imagine texts that start with, "I probably shouldn’t be telling you this but…" and then hint at great deals or hidden opportunities. Research shows that curiosity-driven messaging can boost engagement significantly. 

Challenge the norm—let this campaign show you how a playful, coy approach can help you start more conversations.

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