A study of over 2,200 US businesses found that the average response time to a web lead is 42 hours – and nearly 1 in 4 companies never respond at all. (Oldroyd et al., Harvard Business Review)
The Mindset Shift First
That $1M Young & Eglinton listing is not just a sale. It is a lead magnet for a client persona. Every lead who clicks is telling you:
- Their budget range
- Their target neighbourhood
- Their stage in the buying journey
- Their lifestyle (urban, walkable, upscale)
You are building a pipeline, not just closing one deal.
Step 1 – Respond Within 5 Minutes
Speed is your biggest differentiator. Studies show lead conversion drops 80% after the first 5 minutes. Set a phone notification for every form submission.
Your first message script:
“Hey [Name], thanks for your interest in [Address]. Are you looking to buy in the next 90 days or just exploring the area?”
One question. No pitch. Get them talking.
Step 2 – Log Everything in Your CRM Immediately
Following your checkpoint’s coverage mapping principle (Section 2) – no gaps, no duplication – your CRM note for every lead must include:
| Field | What to Log |
|---|---|
| Lead Source | Facebook Ad — [Listing Address] |
| Persona Tag | Buyer / Investor / Curious / Seller Watching |
| Budget Signal | Clicked a $1M listing = $900K–$1.2M range |
| Timeline | 0–90 days / 3–6 months / Just browsing |
| Last Touchpoint | Date, channel, what was said |
| Next Action | Specific task with a due date |
| Conversion Stage | Cold / Warm / Hot / Under Contract |
Never leave a lead without a next action assigned.
Step 3 – Follow-Up Cadence (The 5-5-5 Rule)
| Day | Action |
|---|---|
| Day 1 | Personal text or DM within 5 minutes of lead coming in |
| Day 3 | Send a value piece – neighbourhood stats, a comparable sold listing |
| Day 7 | Phone call. Leave a voicemail if no answer |
| Day 14 | Email with a market update for Young & Eglinton specifically |
| Day 30 | Check in – “Still exploring the area?” |
| Day 60 | Share a new listing that matches their profile |
| Day 90 | Audit. Are they worth continued nurture or archive? |
This mirrors your checkpoint’s 30/60/90-day performance tracking rule from Section 9 – applied to lead pipeline instead of article rankings.
Step 4 – Segment Your Pipeline Like Keyword Buckets
Your checkpoint (Section 3) organizes content into TOFU / MOFU / BOFU buckets. Do the same with leads:
TOFU Leads – Cold Just browsing. Clicked out of curiosity. Long-term nurture only. Send market reports monthly.
MOFU Leads – Warm Evaluating neighbourhoods or comparing properties. Book a discovery call. Send comparables.
BOFU Leads – Hot Ready to act in 0–90 days. Daily or every-other-day contact. Book showings immediately.
Pre-Funnel – Sellers Watching They are not buying. They are checking what their own unit is worth. Tag them as a future listing lead and nurture separately.
Step 5 – Statistics That Should Live in Your CRM Dashboard
Track these numbers every month:
- Lead-to-showing ratio – How many leads book a showing?
- Showing-to-offer ratio – How many showings result in an offer?
- Average days to close – From first contact to signed deal
- Cost per lead – Total ad spend ÷ total leads
- Cost per closing – Total ad spend ÷ total closed deals
- Pipeline value – Total potential commission in active leads
These numbers tell you whether your ad spend is working — and they make your pitch to future listing clients undeniable.
The Bigger Play
Every lead from this $1M listing who does not buy this unit is a warm contact for your next listing in the same neighbourhood. By the time you post that second ad, you already have 40, 60, or 100 people who know your name, have seen your content, and are one message away from booking a showing.
That is how you stop starting from zero every time.