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4 Reasons Advertising in a Real Estate Magazine Will Not Sell Your Home

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4 Reasons Advertising in a Real Estate Magazine Will Not Sell Your Home

Paul Tosello

Looking for a Residential Real Estate Expert? Meet Paul, a Realtor with 37 years of experience and a background in residential construction...

Looking for a Residential Real Estate Expert? Meet Paul, a Realtor with 37 years of experience and a background in residential construction...

Mar 6 5 minutes read

Many home sellers I meet ask me if I advertise in a real estate magazine (or real estate book). Before I advertise any home in any type of media, I want to know if it will help to sell the home. And according to the National Association of REALTORS, real estate books and magazines result in less than 1% of home sales nationally.

Real estate magazine publications are available just about everywhere – grocery stores, malls, newsstands, etc. So why are they so ineffective? I have thought a lot about this, and the answers are fairly obvious. But you have to think like a buyer. How do buyers find the homes they eventually buy? More than 75% of the time, they find them online or through their buyer’s agent. So what is it about home books and magazines that makes them useful in less than 1% of homes, according to the 2014 National Association of REALTORS Profile of Home Buyers and Sellers.

2. Real estate magazines are extremely limited in geographic reach.


The Dallas-Fort Worth Market attracts companies and people relocating.  If your buyer is shopping for a home from their computer in Miami, New York, California, or overseas, they are only going to see listings that are promoted online. If a buyer in Miami goes to the local grocery store and picks up a copy of the Real Estate Book, guess what they are going to see? That’s right – waterfront condos and beach property! Only people shopping for groceries in Dallas-Fort Worth will see Dallas-Fort Worth properties!  With print advertising you are not getting in front of a large group of the potential buyer market.

1. Real estate magazines are not searchable.


When was the last time you picked up a copy of Homes and Land, or perhaps the Real Estate Weekly? Did you skim through it? Did you pay attention to how the listings are sorted? In most cases, you will see colored page edges indicating a geographical area (such as Southlake, Colleyville, Flower Mound, etc.). Within those sections are pages assigned to individual real estate companies. So, Coldwell-Banker may have a couple of pages for its listings, Keller-Williams may have a couple of pages, and so on. On one page of Keller-Williams listings, for example, there may be 20 listings, including mobile homes, vacant lots, condos, and luxury homes. Unfortunately, the only way to search for the type of home you want is to look at every listing on every page.

3. Real estate magazines have outdated and incomplete information.

Real estate listings and prices change every day – sometimes multiple times per day. Photos are updated, property descriptions are edited, prices are reduced, and listings are changed from Active to Pending to Sold.

Printed media like real estate magazines have lead times – there is a deadline for the ad to be submitted, time for printing, and then the magazines must be distributed to racks and boxes all over the area. All of this takes place before the reader even picks up a copy. By now, it has been several days since the ad submission deadline, and no doubt many of the listings have been changed in MLS. Printed media’s lag times mean it will not be consistently up-to-date and cannot help

4. Real estate magazine ads provide limited property descriptions and usually only 1 photograph.

Most of the ads in books and magazines consist of 1 photograph, a brief description, and contact info for the listing broker.

A few agents spend a lot of money for the front cover, the back cover, or larger ads, but even those ads suffer from the other shortcomings already discussed. When you’re trying to squeeze a photo and a description into a 1/4-page or 1/8-page ad, how much can you really say about a property?

So, why do real estate agents spend money on these advertisements?

1. Agents advertise in real estate magazines to make their sellers feel “warm and fuzzy.” Sellers see that their agent is doing something to try to sell their home. Unfortunately, if the agent is really doing this to sell their home, then they are probably out of ideas, and they really don’t know how to sell the home. Otherwise, why would they spend money on an ad that has less than a 1% chance of success?

2. Agents use these ads to promote their real estate company. This actually makes sense – if a local homeowner is looking to sell a home (and is in need of an agent), he/she may pick up a copy of a publication and look through it to see who has a lot of listings, who is spending money on ads, etc. From the standpoint of gaining exposure to potential sellers, advertising in real estate books makes sense.

But remember, there is less than a 1% chance that a buyer will find the home they buy in a real estate magazine. So if you’re selling your home, hopefully, your agent knows of much more effective ways to market your home.

 

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