2 October 2025 | 1 reply
Obvious next step.Outcome: Higher opt-in rates and fewer drop-offs.Step 4: Connect the follow-up – Deliver the magnet by email and kick off a short nurture.Outcome: Fast replies, booked calls, and warmer conversations.Step 5: Promote it everywhere – Pin it to your profiles, run a small ad, add a QR code to mailers, and link it from blog posts.Outcome: Consistent daily signups instead of random spikes.Sample Templates or ScenariosCampaign outline: “Thinking of Selling in [ZIP]”Audience: Owners in 66208 who plan to list in 3–6 monthsLead magnet: 7-page “Pricing and Prep Playbook for 66208”Landing page: Headline, 3 bullets, short form, privacy notePromotion: Two feed posts, one email to SOI, $10/day zip-code ad, QR on postcardFollow-up: 5-email series with tips, then invite to a short pricing consultEmail sequence (5 messages, plain text)Delivery: Link to the guide and one tip they can use todayStory: A quick win from a recent sale in their areaEducation: Common pricing mistake and how to avoid itSoft proof: Short review from a local clientNext step: Offer a quick call or home value reviewChecklist: “Weekend Prep for Show-Ready Photos”Clear counters and floorsLight bulbs matched and workingFresh towels and neutral linensCurb touch-ups and swept walkwaysScent neutral, windows cleanedInvestor scenario: “2-Unit Analyzer”Magnet: Google Sheet that calculates taxes, insurance, rent, vacancy, and cash-on-cashNurture: Three short emails on screening, maintenance, and lending contactsClose: Invitation to get on a weekly deals listMistakes to AvoidToo generic – “Ultimate home guide” sounds nice and converts poorlyToo hard to consume – Keep it short, skimmable, and useful on a phoneNo follow-up – If delivery is the end, the lead goes coldWeak headline – Lead with the outcome and the audienceAsking for too much – Start with name and email; add phone laterSet and forget – Update quarterly so advice and stats stay currentThe Bottom LineLead magnets work because they flip the script.
30 September 2025 | 27 replies
Or was it the DE or NV Series LLC accessibility?
30 October 2025 | 379 replies
So, lets say they hit a huge series of grand slams and are returning 20% / year annualized.
7 October 2025 | 6 replies
We don’t know any PMCs to recommend in the area mentioned, but since selecting the wrong PMC is usually more harmful than selecting a bad tenant, you might want to read our series about “How to Screen a PMC Better than a Tenant”:https://www.biggerpockets.com/member-blogs/3094/91877-how-to-screen-a-pmc-better-than-a-tenant-part-1-services-and-processesWe recommend you get management contracts from several PMCs and compare the services they cover and, more importantly, what they each DO NOT cover.
26 September 2025 | 1 reply
Life is a series of domino effects.
24 October 2025 | 122 replies
If you pass the series 7, 65 or 82 licensing exams you become accredited.
23 September 2025 | 2 replies
I originally planned to pursue a Graduate Assistantship in athletics, but a series of events steered me toward real estate.This summer, my mom met a local investor at a pottery workshop, introduced us, and now I work for her and her husband.
19 October 2025 | 42 replies
If it isn't house payments, it's toys like boats, bikes and beaches.
13 October 2025 | 41 replies
Bentonville is the mountain biking capital of the world along with the new location of the Walmart home office and campus.
5 November 2025 | 188 replies
My contention is that it’s almost always best to hold title to any property you control in a separate entity - usually a LLC or Series LLCThe “owner” (title holder) of the subject real estate is the LLC - so the LLC is the landlord.