You may be wondering as you read this: what is a "landing page?" A landing page is a single web page designed to convert traffic from a marketing or advertising campaign. The goal of the landing page is to lead visitors to take a single action—like buying a product or entering information—as an interested prospect. For a service business like property management, the best conversion rates come from lead generation rather than direct sales.
You can host your landing page directly on your website if you have one, or use a landing-page tool like HubSpot to create and manage your landing pages. Platforms like HubSpot have done the data research on what designs convert the best. They take out the guesswork—saving you valuable time.
The beauty of the landing page is it is part of a system that generates new clients via automation; once you set up your landing page, it works automatically.
Every landing page has certain critical elements designed to get a prospect to take action. Tools like HubSpot take the guesswork out of the design. The best landing page is clean and minimalist with just enough information to entice and spur a prospect to action as quickly and efficiently as possible. A high-converting landing page has four critical elements.
Tell the landing page visitor what to do. For example, "Fill in the form to get your free rental analysis!"
The fewer fields you use, the easier it is for the prospect to respond.
Create a brief paragraph that states the benefit of taking action. You want two or three sentences that guide the landing page visitor to take action to receive the benefits of property management.
In marketing terms, this is the "value proposition," the conditions that make your business attractive to clients.
Offer a gift for taking action that directly ties to the benefit you offer and a major pain point of your ideal audience. You might provide a free rental analysis or a one-page test like, "Are You Ready for Property Management?" Use the test to address five to seven major pain points, and show the benefits of property management for each test question. Make sure your gift is relevant to your property management business. This is the "lead magnet," a free item in exchange for information.
Geekly Media Pro Tip: Include a short video addressing objections and highlighting the benefits of property management. One minute is the optimal length. Three minutes is the absolute maximum length for this type of video. A second video option is a short client testimonial on how your business helped them achieve success.
The purpose of a landing page is to convert prospects by exchanging your lead magnet for a page visitor’s information. Avoid cluttering this page with distractions or links to your website which divert the visitor from taking action. Don’t over-complicate the landing page.
Marketing advisor Tim Ash states, “Do you have what I want? Why should I get it from you?” The idea is to get to the point.
Property management marketing keeps the client pipeline flowing to grow your doors. Inbound marketing is designed to bring clients to your website and convert them into an audience. A landing page is a simple and effective automation tool to gather prospect data and introduce them to your property management systems. Because the landing page connects to your email service, it simplifies workflow automation to bring you new leads.
Creating an inbound marketing system is a crucial component of streamlining your property management workflows. Property management marketing is only one component of your business: whenever you automate a process for your business, you simplify an already busy life.
A landing page reduces the time you spend on outbound marketing—like cold-calling property owners. Your time is freed up to focus on helping your clients and growing your company.
At Geekly Media, we know how many hats you wear to provide excellent service to your clients: move-in and move-out, lease management, vendor coordination—marketing for property management is just one hat. A strong landing page that converts is just one way to work smarter—not harder.