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This final letter is where you fully step into authority. You’re not easing in anymore - you’re stating facts. Your track record. Your volume. And the clear pattern you’ve seen when homes don’t sell. The problem isn’t the house. It’s the plan behind it.
This message works because it introduces advanced tactics without overwhelming the seller. You’re giving them just enough to realize there’s a different level of marketing they likely haven’t been exposed to—while signaling that you know far more than what fits in a letter.
Each tactic is behavioral, not flashy. It explains why buyers act differently when the launch is engineered correctly.
This is your mic-drop moment - positioning you as the professional who finishes the conversation strong and leaves the next move entirely in their hands.
Skepticism fades when strategy becomes visible.
This letter exists to replace hope with proof. After messages of clarity and reframing, now you show - not tell - what happens when the right plan is applied. But this only works if the example is real, recent, and specific.
This must be a personalized case study from your own business. A property the seller can picture. A timeline they recognize. Details that make the outcome undeniable. Days on market. Number of offers. What changed at relaunch. Vague success stories won’t land here, specifics create belief.
Notice you’re not promising the same result. You’re demonstrating what’s possible when presentation, promotion, and pricing finally align. That keeps the message credible and consultative.
This letter is where confidence starts to replace hesitation.
You’re no longer just explaining the problem - you’re showing you’ve already solved it, recently, and right where they live.
This letter is designed to pull the seller out of the national noise and re-anchor them in what’s actually happening right now in their market.
The credibility here comes from specificity. Open houses you hosted. Showings you tracked. Buyers you’ve spoken with. This must be customized with real, hyper-local observations that only someone actively working in the market could know. That “boots on the ground” perspective is what separates you from every generic market update they’ve already ignored.
You’re also reinforcing a key theme from earlier letters: demand isn’t the problem - exposure and execution are. By now, that idea should feel familiar, even obvious, to the seller.
This message restores momentum without urgency.
It keeps you top of mind while gently reminding them that when they’re ready, there’s a smarter way forward.
Waiting rarely fixes a strategy gap, it just stretches the uncertainty.
This second letter is about helping the seller make a decision without pressure. They’re already replaying the last listing in their head, wondering if they chose the wrong agent, the wrong timing, or the wrong price. This message meets them right there and gives them a clean fork in the road.
Notice the restraint. You’re not chasing them. You’re giving them permission to disengage if they truly believe everything was done right. That confidence is disarming, and it signals experience.
Then you re-anchor the conversation around exposure and execution. You introduce the idea that there is a path forward, and that it’s repeatable, intentional, and proven.
This letter doesn’t explain the strategy yet.
It earns curiosity, reasserts control, and sets up the next message where you show exactly how you operate differently.
This first letter in the 2026 Expired Listing Blueprint is meant to slow the moment down and reframe what just happened - without blaming the seller or bashing the last agent. You’re speaking to someone who already did the work, took the risk, and still didn’t get the result. That frustration is real, and this message names it directly.
Then you shift the conversation.
By breaking the failed sale into three clear leverage points - presentation, promotion, and price - you give the seller language for what likely went wrong and show them this wasn’t random or personal. It was fixable.
Your goal is simple: restore confidence, establish authority, and open the door for a smarter second attempt - on their terms.
This page sets the tone for the entire Cannonball.
The Relaunch Plan cover is a comparison. You’re holding up a mirror to their last experience while showing how it could - and should - feel different. Side by side. Old reality versus a reimagined one.
Clear fixes for each breakdown. Better visibility. Better positioning. Better communication. Stronger negotiation.
This is the first page they read, and it should feel like relief.
A fresh start that says: You weren’t wrong. You just didn’t have the right plan.
This piece is your proof-of-work that you’re great at your job - clean, visual, and impossible to ignore. The Perfect Resume isn’t about ego or flexing numbers. It’s about removing uncertainty by showing the seller, at a glance, that they’re dealing with a professional who operates at a high level and does it consistently.
Design matters here. This should feel polished and intentional, not crowded or defensive. The stats do the heavy lifting: longevity, volume, pricing strength, recent momentum. No explanations needed.
And here’s the key: if your individual numbers feel modest, don’t undersell yourself. Use your team’s performance.
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Expired sellers don’t need more options, they need a clear path. But before they’ll follow anyone forward, three hurdles have to be cleared.
The first is empathy: Do you actually understand what I just went through?
This is the opening shot of the Cannonball. The first contact. The moment you interrupt the noise and reset the narrative before other agents turn desperation into discounting. You’re grounding the seller in facts - real sales, real price ranges, real activity in their area - and calmly pointing out the missed opportunity without blame.
You’re also acknowledging two emotional truths at once: some sellers are ready to act, others are worn down and overwhelmed. Either way, you position timing and strategy as the real stakes of the next few weeks.
Most importantly, this letter works because it arrives with the Relaunch Plan. You’re not just identifying the gap, you’re showing up with a framework and a next step already thought through.
This is exemplifying leadership. And it sets the tone for everything that follows.
This page sets the tone for the entire Cannonball.
The Relaunch Plan cover is a comparison. You’re holding up a mirror to their last experience while showing how it could - and should - feel different. Side by side. Old reality versus a reimagined one.
Clear fixes for each breakdown. Better visibility. Better positioning. Better communication. Stronger negotiation.
This is the first page they read, and it should feel like relief.
A fresh start that says: You weren’t wrong. You just didn’t have the right plan.
Every year, Spotify Wrapped reminds people of one thing: the story you lived is worth seeing. And when a trend grabs this much attention, smart marketers don’t ignore it.
This campaign takes a format your audience already loves and turns it into a snapshot of your year in real estate.
This carousel gives you your own “Wrapped,” designed to stop the scroll, spark engagement, and remind people what you actually do all year long.
Below you'll find instructions for how to take the Claude template and customize it for yourself.
If it doesn’t already, the “Deal of the Week” should live in your weekly SOPs. Every week, find the hottest new listing in your market - and turn it into a reason for people to stop, share, and engage.
We know: you can’t always get the listing agent’s permission to share the photos of your Deal of the Week. That’s why we created this template.
Follow the instructions below on how to edit the template in Canva and post to Instagram.
Not sure which listing to feature?
- Filter for new listings (within the last 7 days)
- Focus on your target price point
- Stay in your ideal neighborhood or farm area
That should give you a pool of 50–70 listings.
From there, zero in on the one with the highest saves or views—that’s your deal of the week.
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Want us to automate the Deal of the Week for you every week? Try out AI Mode.
The Deal of the Week strategy needs to be added to your weekly marketing SOPs. It's simple, repeatable, and highly effective.
Use the template we provided below to send out your Deal of the Week, use this free tool to write the email and send it yourself, or get AI Mode to automate the entire process for you.
Not sure which listing to feature?
- Filter for new listings (within the last 7 days)
- Focus on your target price point
- Stay in your ideal neighborhood or farm area
That should give you a pool of 50–70 listings.
From there, zero in on the one with the highest saves or views—that’s your deal of the week.
Redfin’s analysis shows that new listings get dramatically more views in the first few days than older listings — and even a price drop never brings the same level of interest back.
Translation for sellers:
• Your first 72 hours get the most attention you’ll ever see.
• Buyer interest falls fast once a listing sits.
• Correcting the price later doesn’t create a second launch.
This is important info for you to communicate. But with the wrong energy, it can come across as off-putting.
So we softened the approach in this email, and framed it with a simple piece of advice: think like a buyer.
Every year, Spotify Wrapped reminds people of one thing: the story you lived is worth seeing. And when a trend grabs this much attention, smart marketers don’t ignore it.
This campaign takes a format your audience already loves and turns it into a snapshot of your year in real estate.
This carousel gives you your own “Wrapped,” designed to stop the scroll, spark engagement, and remind people what you actually do all year long.
There’s one thing you can never afford to skip in a sales script: destroying the objection in the consumer’s mind. And right now, this one might sound familiar: “Selling just isn’t a priority with the holidays coming up.”
That’s why this text is built on a simple, reliable formula:
Destroy the objection.
Bring something new.
Offer a soft, low-pressure CTA.
You’ll find two versions of the script below: a clean, plug-and-play version for anyone… and a personalized version with hook ideas if you want to go deeper.
Send this to everyone who opened yesterday’s email.
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This text works because it turns a simple follow-up into a high-response moment. Everyone who opened yesterday’s email is your prospecting list for this script.
The apology is the hook. It feels human, unscripted, and disarming.
Most agents close with low-status lines like “Let me know” or “Just following up.” Those phrases put you in a waiting position. High-status phrasing, the kind Mark Satterfield teaches, flips that dynamic. It shows confidence, direction, and leadership, exactly what clients want from an agent.











