Inman

Portal-powered brokers open their lead-conversion playbooks

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Takeaways:

In May 2013, Florida real estate agent Robert Slack decided to dip his toe in Zillow waters with a $160-per-month spend on buyer agent ads.

By January, he was running a team of five agents; a year and a half later, he launched his own firm, Robert Slack Fine Homes, which now has 30 agents and is on track to do 300 sides this year thanks predominantly to the more than $15,000 each month on Zillow ads.

[Tweet “Robert Slack says Zillow leads account for 90 percent of his business.”]

Slack attributes this real estate breakout to Zillow, whose leads account for 90 percent of his business. His Zillow spend generates an approximate fivefold return, he said.

San Francisco broker Kevin Markarian has a similar tale, but he’s riding the realtor.com beast.

The site accounts for close to 60 percent of his 18-agent brokerage’s business. In late 2013, he upped his realtor.com ad spend by tenfold; he soon hired a team, and by April 2014, he had launched his own brokerage. He credits realtor.com.

[Tweet “Kevin Markarian says realtor.com leads account for almost 60 percent of his business.”]

Slack and Markarian’s portal-based broker business models represent a new and big opportunity for agents and brokers who want to expand their business.

Both brokers opened up their portal playbooks to Inman.

Zillow and realtor.com ads

Slack and Markarian have different reasons for choosing Zillow v. realtor.com, including personal preference, the specifics of their market and poor experiences with the other portal.

They buy impressions or leads from the portals’ two chief — and most lucrative — advertising products: agent contact forms that show up on the sites’ listing detail pages.

In Zillow’s “Premier Agent” program, agents pay for a certain number of “impressions” each month. In realtor.com’s product, Connection for Co-Brokerage, agents buy a certain number of leads each month. Both are sold on a ZIP-code basis.

Zillow “Premier agent” ads (left) are branded to agents; up to four agents show up on each contact form. On realtor.com’s Connection for Co-Brokerage ads (right), agents pay for leads from an unbranded contact form; consumer inquiries go to one or more agent. 

By the end of September, all Zillow impressions that agents pay for will be shared with those that its sister site (Trulia) tallies, and vice versa.

Slack and Markarian both convert their portal leads into clients at about the same rate: 3.5 percent. That may sound low, but it’s close to industry standard.

Broker-tested portal playbooks

Because portal leads are such a big part of their businesses, Slack and Markarian have crafted detailed systems to process them.

Slack’s firm’s Zillow lead-followup flow:

Markarian’s firm’s realtor.com lead-followup flow:

Slack and Markarian also maintain well-groomed Zillow agent profiles, because, as Markarian said, leads are “Googling you as you talk to them.”

Markarian focuses more on cultivating his Zillow profile than his on realtor.com one, because, like many agents may, he feels it gets more exposure. (But that may be changing; his realtor.com profile showed up fourth in Google search results for his name — just behind his Zillow profile).

Lead-conversion takeaways:
  • Have a consistent, detailed lead-followup process.
  • Respond quickly, if not immediately with software help.
  • Delegate to a team.
  • Use a CRM.
  • Use virtual assistants.
  • Don’t give up.

Here’s how Markarian and Slack’s expenditures and return-on-investment breaks down:

Kevin Markarian, realtor.com Robert Slack, Zillow
Monthly spend $15,000 Over $15,000
No. of leads per month 300 1,200
% of business through portal 59% 90%
No. of ZIP codes 18 90
No. of agents 18 30
ROI 5X 5X
Approximate lead-conversion rate 3.5% 3.5%

Sources: Kevin Markarian, Robert Slack

Email Paul Hagey.