Mainstreet Millionaire Discusses How You Can Focus on the Most Profitable Foreclosure Leads

Released on: February 25, 2008, 7:31 am

Press Release Author: Marko Rubel / MainstreetMillionaire.net

Industry: Real Estate

Press Release Summary: If you market your services to people in foreclosure, or to
any targeted list of ready-to-sell homeowners, you're going to get qualified leads.
But leads aren't deals...

Press Release Body: Whether you\'re new to real estate investing or a seasoned pro,
you can't make money unless you have a list of qualified leads (people who are
probably ready to sell their homes).

If you market your services to people in foreclosure, or to any targeted list of
ready-to-sell homeowners, you\'re going to get qualified leads. But leads aren't
deals. yet. Some may become super-profitable bargains that put thousands of dollars
in your pocket - but if you want to make top profits, you\'ll need to focus on the
best leads and discard the rest.

It\'s easy for new investors to get excited when their marketing starts working, and
understandably so. And it's tempting at this stage to want to contact everyone who
responds. But it only takes a few days to discover that not all leads are created
equal.

This is true even when investing in foreclosures, where most of your leads will be
motivated to sell. Buying at foreclosure can be very profitable - especially once
you learn how to flush out the best ones .

When I started investing, I quickly learned that I\'d never have enough time to
contact every lead. Instead, I've learned to evaluate and screen my leads to find
the best possible opportunities. Over the years, I\'ve used a 24-hour recorded
message, direct mail, and a live answering service. But I\'ve found that one tool
works better than any other: the Internet.

Almost all my marketing to people in foreclosure drives the prospect to one of my
websites, for two reasons:

* People in foreclosure are usually scared and confused. As a result, they're
more likely to visit a website - where they can remain anonymous at first - than
call you directly.
* The website encourages prospects to qualify themselves.

I load up my websites with audio and video testimonials from previous sellers.
people I've helped by buying their homes and stopping the foreclosure process.
people I've helped after their listing with a real estate agent expired without a
sale. and so on. These are all real people who sold their homes to me when they were
in foreclosure or needed a quick sale.

If you\'re new to real estate and don't have these kinds of testimonials yet, you can
partner with an investor who does have a track record and use his testimonials
(while you also benefit from his experience). Or you can include general
testimonials from people who know you and know you're trustworthy. Have them say
things like \"Jack always comes through with his promises\". or \"Alice does what she
says she\'s going to do when she says she's going to do it.\" Then make sure you live
up to those words.

I invite my website visitors to submit an electronic form with all the information I
need. I promise them a response within 48 hours, but at no time do I tell them I
will make an offer on their home.

The prospective seller must answer all the questions on the form before the website
will allow them to submit the form to my office. The questions are designed not only
to get qualifying information, but also - and just as important - to find facts that
could disqualify them. That\'s because I don't want to waste a lot of time following
up on unqualified leads.

Some of the questions are the sort of thing any investor would ask: how much the
seller owes, to whom, and so on. But I also ask questions that \"test the waters\" to
gauge how motivated they are (such as how many payments they're behind).

Finally, I ask the seller to tell me why they want to sell now. In many cases, this
question makes or breaks the deal. Here\'s why:

If they write a long story on that last question (I often get as much as two and a
half pages), I learn something important about them. And if all the numbers work, I
put them on the top of the pile.

Why? Because people in distress appreciate it when you let them pour their hearts
out. I\'m a good listener, so I\'m sympathetic when they tell me about the tragic
circumstances and bad luck that have brought them to their present position. And
because I listen, the seller is frequently on my side when it comes time for me to
present my offer. That makes negotiations much easier.

But if they write something like \"I\'m not taking one penny less than the full value
of my house. My bother-in-law says it\'s worth $250,000 and that's what I expect\"...
I won't waste another 10 seconds on that lead. I won't even waste the time it takes
to put his address on a pre-printed, pre-stamped rejection postcard.

In short, my website does almost all the work of qualifying my leads. I waste no
time on any where there is no deal to be made.

I recommend that you establish a method of pre-screening and pre-qualifying your
leads, preferably with a system - like a website - where the prospects screen
themselves. This method has made me a better, more focused real estate investor -
and it can make you wealthier in your own business in a much shorter period of time.

The more I\'ve concentrated on the best prospects, the less time I've wasted, the
more deals I've closed, and the more money I\'ve made. Recently, I made over $1
million in a 12-month period. I would never have been able to achieve that before I
fine-tuned my marketing.

Article written by Marko Rubel for MainstreetMillionaire.net,
a free
real estate investing newsletter
.


Web Site: http://www.mainstreetmillionaire.net

Contact Details: Mainstreet Millionaire

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