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The top real estate CRM software

By Scott Robinson

The real estate industry deals with large amounts data -- including prospective client information, property inquiries, closings and referrals -- and a real estate CRM system is an effective tool to help increase efficiency.

Due to the competitive market and the expansion of digital marketing, real estate CRM systems are gaining popularity. A real estate CRM system enables real estate agents to shift from one sales or marketing mode to another with minimal headache.

Why real estate agents need a CRM

Real estate isn't nearly as straightforward as many might assume. Different kinds of properties require different marketing approaches, as residential customers and commercial customers have different needs. Both the prospect's pipeline -- which is a combination of marketing, in-person meetings, property showings and property closings -- and the customer journey in real estate can vary tremendously, so real estate agencies require considerable flexibility when considering a CRM system, matching features to their often highly customized requirements.

Real estate agents often set the routine goal of making five sales calls a day, five days a week -- also known as the "daily five." There is a data flow before and after the call. First, agents need to uncover information about the prospective client prior to the call. Then they need to capture additional information during the call. CRM systems excel at this sort of contact management -- they often include fields for storing personal information about customers, such as spouse's name, birthdate and personal interests. The high volume of data involved makes automation essential to agents, and a real estate CRM system delivers that automation.

The real estate sales process also requires a great deal of notetaking on the agent's part, and CRM systems often make note capture and organization much easier by building notation features directly into other functions. Email marketing is an important marketing strategy, and social media now plays a part in lead generation and market analysis. CRM can help there, too, by integrating automated email functionality, as well as social media post building and deployment directly into marketing processes.

Real estate CRM software features

For the most part, real estate CRM software does not differ from traditional CRM systems. Real estate CRM systems offer agents the same conveniences and optimization tools as a conventional CRM platform, including:

A real estate CRM system provides a well-integrated platform for all these features, which are common in most sales and marketing operations. The real estate agent is equipped with all these capabilities -- many of them mobile -- with some additional capabilities specific to the agent's marketplace.

However, there are some additional types of data that other businesses don't require, and real estate CRM systems are designed to accommodate that data. Here are some features that are specific to real estate CRM systems:

Popular real estate CRM systems

The real estate CRM market is still relatively new compared to the traditional CRM market, but here are some noteworthy players in the field:

  1. Market Leader

Built on a foundation of all the core essentials -- lead generation, management and nurture, contact management, multichannel marketing and listing management -- Market Leader has extra features, including website integration that automatically identifies and forwards leads, tracking of lead sources and conversions and automated responses to website interest to accelerate initial contacts.

Downside: The real estate office's website must be part of Market Leader's domain, which makes it difficult when switching platforms.

  1. Follow Up Boss

Follow Up Boss is a team-oriented, complete CRM platform that caters to salespeople who work in groups, rather than individually. Sales teams can work collaboratively with Follow Up Boss, which offers smart lists for sales call management and templates for action plans and campaigns. There are tools for managing follow-ups, lead nurturing, multichannel messaging and website activity tracking. Follow Up Boss also synchronizes with Office 365, Gmail and Google Calendar, ensuring that they all match.

Downside: Follow Up Boss' automation features are not easily customizable.

  1. Wise Agent

Wise Agent handles lead generation and management, marketing automation, contact management and all the other basic features of a CRM system. It also offers other features, such as commission tracking, transaction management and a call list function that handles the "daily five." Wise Agent has a landing page builder to help with marketing, and its customer management includes custom fields for capturing little details of a prospect -- such as birthdays, names of children and pets.

Downside: With all its functionality, Wise Agent has a big learning curve.

  1. TotalBrokerage

TotalBrokerage is feature-rich, with all the standard CRM system functionalities plus transaction workflow, accounting tools and a team workspace deployment option. Its reporting tools include analytics to stimulate insights; financial forecasting and performance tracking; and integration with Facebook, with the ability for users to customize it to integrate with smaller social media platforms, or any other third-party source.

Downside: TotalBrokerage's learning curve is steep, and the custom integrations mean fewer out-of-the-box integrations.

  1. IXACT Contact

This platform is all-in-one, with contact management, lead nurturing, marketing website generation, marketing automation and social media integration. IXACT Contact offers many digital assistant features. It prompts the agent to stay in sync with their activity calendar, guides relationship management and provides business management notifications all through a mobile app.

Downside: IXACT Contact won't import contacts from other CRM systems.

01 Feb 2021

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