Realtor Visibility Sprint: GBP, Reviews, Follow-Up Scripts
Most Realtors are doing “all the things” and still not getting consistent inbound leads. This 7-day visibility sprint shows you exactly what to fix on your Google Business Profile, how to ask for reviews that help you rank, and the follow-up script that turns open house conversations into appointments.
The Realtor Visibility Sprint: 7 Days to Fix Your Google Presence (and Convert More Leads)
If you are posting consistently, networking, hosting open houses, and still not getting predictable inbound leads, you do not have a work ethic problem.
You have a visibility problem.
In 2026, effort does not equal opportunity if people cannot find you at the exact moment they are searching. And that moment is usually on Google.
This post is a step-by-step sprint you can run in under an hour a day. It is designed to do two things:
Get you found more often in local search
Convert more of the leads you are already meeting (without chasing)
If you want the quick version: optimize your Google Business Profile, collect reviews that include location and outcomes, and stop sending follow-ups that end the conversation.
Let’s get you set up.
What “Visibility” Actually Means for Realtors
Visibility is not “posting more.” Visibility is being discoverable when intent is high.
Examples of high-intent searches:
“Realtor near me”
“moving to [city]”
“best neighborhoods in [city]”
“sell my house in [city]”
“[city] waterfront homes agent” (Lake Norman friends, I’m looking at you)
Google, and increasingly AI search results, rely on consistent business signals:
accurate business info
strong reviews with context
clear services
locally relevant content
If your online presence is scattered or vague, Google cannot confidently put you in front of the right people.
The 7 Day Visibility Sprint
Do these in order. Each day builds on the last.
Day 1: GBP Foundation
Open your Google Business Profile and check these three things:
1) Primary category
Be specific. “Marketing consultant” and “real estate consultant” are not the same. Your category impacts what you show up for.
2) Services
Fill out your services list with what you want to get hired for. Not what sounds fancy.
Examples:
Real estate marketing consulting
Real estate lead generation support
Google Business Profile optimization
Listing launch marketing
Relocation marketing campaigns
CRM setup and lead nurturing (HubSpot)
3) Service areas
Set service areas based on where you want business, not where you happen to be sitting when you create the profile.
Quick win: add your top 5 target areas and keep them consistent across your website and socials.
Day 2: Fix Your Business Description (This is a rankings and conversion lever)
Most GBP descriptions are either bland or stuffed with keywords. Both are a miss.
Use this structure:
Line 1: Who you help + where
Example: “Outsourced Operations and Marketing for Realtors in Raleigh and Lake Norman.”
Line 2: What you actually do
Example: “I help agents get found on Google, convert leads through follow-up systems, and turn listings into content that drives calls.”
Line 3: Proof or differentiator
Example: “Boutique, hands-on support. No fluff. Clear deliverables.”
Line 4: CTA
Example: “Message me for a quick visibility audit.”
Day 3: Photos That Build Trust and Signal Activity
Google rewards fresh activity. People reward proof.
Upload 10 new photos this week:
a clean headshot
you working, laptop, on-site, meeting, content creation
screenshots of results (blur any sensitive info)
a simple branded graphic (checklist, script, framework)
local photos (Raleigh, Lake Norman landmarks, events, streetscapes)
Tip: upload 1 to 2 photos weekly going forward. Consistency wins.
Day 4: The Review Sprint (Reviews that rank are not generic)
“Highly recommend” reviews are nice, but they do not help you rank like reviews with context.
Ask for reviews that include:
location (city, neighborhood)
service (buying, selling, relocation, marketing support)
outcome (what improved, what result happened)
Copy/paste review ask:
“If you’re comfortable, could you mention the area you’re in, what I helped you with, and the result? That helps local agents find me when they need the same support.”
Five prompts to make it easy for them:
Mention the city or neighborhood
Mention the service (GBP, content, CRM, listing launch, etc.)
Share the problem you were trying to solve
Share what felt different about working together
Share the result
Day 5: Build One Website Page That Actually Converts
Pretty websites do not convert if they do not answer the right questions.
Minimum viable “conversion” setup:
clear positioning
proof
next step
Create one page that targets a real, high-intent search:
Option A: “Google Business Profile Optimization for Realtors”
Include:
who it’s for
what’s included
common mistakes
timeline
CTA to book
Option B: “Relocation Marketing for Realtors”
Include:
what you build (guides, neighborhood content, visibility assets)
examples of deliverables
CTA
If you already have a services page, your job is to add one page that is laser-focused, not another general overview.
Day 6: Create a 3 Area Content Map (The simplest local authority play)
Pick 3 areas you want to own. Then write 3 pieces of content.
For each area:
Who it’s perfect for
Who should skip it
The tradeoff nobody says out loud
This is the kind of content that gets saved, shared, and ranked.
Day 7: Publish One “Start Here” Offer Post and Pin It
This is your lead-capture post. It should be simple and specific.
Example:
“If you’re a Realtor and your Google Business Profile is not producing calls, comment AUDIT and I’ll send you the top 3 fixes that will move the needle fast.”
Pin it on Facebook. Feature it on LinkedIn. Add it to your GBP as an Offer post.
Bonus: The Open House Follow-Up Script That Converts
Most agents send follow-ups that end the conversation.
Use a follow-up that asks one smart question:
Copy/paste:
“Hey [Name], thanks again for coming by today. Quick question: what’s the one thing you’re hoping your next move fixes or improves? More space, shorter commute, better schools, walkability, less maintenance, or something else? If you tell me that, I’ll send you 3 options that match, plus what you should watch for before you fall in love with the wrong house.”
Why it works:
it is about their life, not your schedule
it asks one easy question
it earns the right to send more value
If You Want Me to Check Your Visibility
I run a quick mini audit and send you:
3 quick fixes
the 1 thing to change first
what to post for the next 2 weeks
Comment AUDIT or message me with your market.
FAQ
How long does GBP take to improve?
If you fix categories, services, description, and start consistent posting and reviews, you can see movement within weeks. Real stability comes from consistency.
Do I need to post daily on GBP?
No. Weekly is fine. Consistent is the point.
What matters more, website or GBP?
GBP usually drives the fastest local results. Your website supports conversions and longer-term ranking.
Are generic reviews still helpful?
Yes, but specific reviews help you rank and convert better.
The Realtor’s Catch‑22: You Need Marketing to Sell Homes, but You Need Sales to Afford Marketing — Here’s How to Break the Cycle
Stuck in the marketing catch‑22? You need marketing to sell homes but sales to fund your marketing. Discover how to break the cycle with smart strategies, AI tools, and bold storytelling.
Catch 22 graphic depicting the struggle for agents needing marketing to get listings but needing listings to afford marketing
If you’ve ever felt trapped by the paradox of needing marketing to get listings and needing listings to pay for marketing, you’re not alone. A recent LinkedIn post showed that 86 % of agents stay with a brokerage because of the marketing support they receive — yet most feel abandoned when it comes to actual strategy. That gap is exactly why so many realtors are stuck in neutral.
Why traditional marketing falls short
Too many agents throw money at generic ads and lead‑generation services that promise the moon and deliver dusty email lists. Marketing consultant Carter Vincentini didn’t mince words when he said “95 % of real estate marketing is trash”. Leads like “I love this area and want to serve you” rarely convert because they lack specificity and authenticity. Without a clear brand story and strategic messaging, your posts are just more noise.
The data confirms the shift
New survey research from The Real Brokerage found that 88 % of agents are already using AI to enhance marketing assets, property descriptions, social media posts and virtual stagings. Even more telling, 68 % of agents say AI saves them significant time, and 14 % credit AI tools with improving marketing effectivenesss. The message: automation isn’t an option any more — it’s the foundation. The remaining gap is strategy and storytelling.
Break out of the marketing catch‑22
Here’s how to reclaim control of your pipeline without burning cash:
Lead with value, not vanity. Instead of boilerplate posts, share insights specific to your market: neighborhood changes, upcoming zoning decisions, or how national interest‑rate shifts affect local buyers. Demonstrate that you know more than the MLS; you understand how homes fit into people’s lives.
Adopt AI — but make it personal. Use AI tools (like ChatGPT) to draft property descriptions, video scripts and email sequences, but always inject your authentic voice. AI saves time; your human touch seals the deal.
Invest in content that compounds. Stop throwing money at single‑use ads. Build evergreen guides, checklists and explainer videos that answer common questions (“How do I time the market?” or “What does a pre‑inspection really save me?”). These assets position you as a trusted advisor and can be repurposed across Instagram, TikTok, LinkedIn and email.
Join the conversation where it’s happening. Facebook groups like Real Estate Agent Referral Network & Marketing Tips have hundreds of thousands of members seeking advice. Show up. Answer questions. Share your insights without pitching. When agents see you as a resource, you become their go‑to when they’re finally ready for professional support.
Build strategic partnerships. Align with local businesses, mortgage brokers and home‑service providers. Co‑host webinars or Instagram Lives that tackle topics your audience cares about (e.g., staging on a budget, understanding appraisal gaps). Combined audiences multiply exposure without multiplying costs.
Final take
Marketing isn’t a cost centre; it’s an investment. The real catch‑22 isn’t a lack of budget, it’s a lack of strategy. When you master authentic storytelling, adopt smart tools and show up consistently, your marketing not only pays for itself — it becomes your unfair advantage.
Ready to stop wasting money on ads that don’t convert? Let’s design a marketing strategy that actually works — and break your business out of its vicious cycle.

