HOW ESTATE AGENTS CAN BUILD THEIR ONLINE REPUTATION

When it comes to building online reputation, Google is king.  It is estimated that over 90% of consumers google a business before financially engaging with it. The good news is that if estate agents have secured positive reviews and any third-party blogs have said only good things about them, their online reputation will be secure.

However, this is not the case for most agents.  Many have experienced disgruntled clients, who have vented their disappointment and anger in negative comments across social media and review sites. This published feedback can be potentially damaging and can ruin the hard-earned reputation that an estate agent may have built up over some years.

Even though estate agents may spend hundreds of pounds on digital branding campaigns with new websites, blogs, online ads and search engine marketing, to increase web traffic and instructions, they can’t buy brand reputation.

According to PropertyHeads.com, never before, has it been so important to deliver outstanding customer service to clients.   Ben Davis, Chief Executive of PropertyHeads.com commented: “In the digital space, brand reputation is built through positive conversations with consumers; good reviews and feedback across social media; brand transparency and honesty; and listening to customers.

“We created PropertyHeads.com, a dedicated property social network, to empower estate agents to maintain control of their brand by networking with their clients directly, posting content and managing buyer and vendor enquiries. Our site is the only place where agents can get a review from a customer, that is then automatically flagged to that customer’s friends and family, when they are looking for an estate agent themselves. However, we don’t give star scores, because we recognise that it’s an ineffective way to rank ten local agents when the difference between their star score is a rounding error.

“We will ban agents (or more likely a firm masquerading as an agent) if they consistently get very negative reviews. We can do this because we don’t charge agents, so we’re not motivated by subscription payments and all our reviews are attributed to real members, so it is impractical to game the system.

“We give agents the opportunity to build their brand and reputation though posting quality content and engaging with local home movers. Forming groups on PropertyHeads.com (e.g. Southend Landlords, or Romford first time buyers) is a great way to build reputation and win business. Being on PropertyHeads is therefore a boost to reputation in itself.”

PropertyHeads.com has outlined some areas to consider when agents are considering improving their online reputation:

  • Monitor your brand regularly – stay informed about online conversations to identify complaints and misinformation and their sources.  Be prepared to address them in a positive, professional and prompt manner
  • Adopt best practice when it comes to handling bad reviews.  If they are handled in a professional manner, agents can send the right message out to prospective vendors. But if they are dealt with in an unprofessional manner, they can seriously damage reputation and lead to a loss of potential instructions
  • Online reviews bring a great opportunity for estate agents to enhance their reputation online and convince potential customers to get in touch. In fact, reviews are one of the most powerful marketing channels to help drive sales. Reviews and star ratings give agents ‘social proof’. Good reviews can be used across all marketing channels including press, online, outdoor advertising, social media and on agents’ websites. These can be very powerful and if successfully incorporated into a Google AdWords campaign, can help agents to increase click-through rates and boost instructions
  • Provide a good client experience at all points of contact. Ensure Facebook replies, website navigation, invoicing, emails and SMS messaging give the client the best customer experience possible.  Good customer service will encourage clients to recommend you to friends and family and post positive reviews online
  • Be proactive, engaging with clients and prospects on social media, posting helpful and informative content about the local property market to demonstrate expertise.  It’s also worth joining or establishing relevant groups on Facebook or PropertyHeads.
  • Listen to client feedback and make improvements – this will help you to improve your customer service and establish more happy customers.  Invite clients to feed back their experiences and let them know you’re listening to their comments and plan to make improvements
  • Say what you mean and mean what you say – stick to your brand promises and go the extra mile to ensure you always deliver.  This goes a long way to building trust and reputation.  When agents fail to keep their promises, clients can become disappointed and vent their negative feelings across social media
  • Work on being transparent and honest in all your communications.  Consumers will have much more respect and trust in your agency. When using social media, tell the truth as consumers are increasingly savvy and many of them have highly sophisticated filters to spot estate agents that aren’t being truthful. The trick is to use all of the social media tools to tell an entertaining brand story in a way that drives consumer trust, loyalty and reputation.
  • Customers are increasingly impatient so agents should respond promptly to all enquiries. Be open to utilising new tools such as PropertyHeads’ Instant Messaging for agents (which allows agents to instantly respond to portal enquiries and begin to build that customer relationship immediately).

For more information, please visit www.propertyheads.com.

EAN Content

Content shared by this account is either news shared free by third parties or sponsored (paid for) content from third parties. Please be advised that links to third party websites are not endorsed by Estate Agent Networking - Please do your own research before committing to any third party business promoted on our website. As an Amazon Associate, I earn from qualifying purchases.

You May Also Enjoy

Rightmove logo
Breaking News

Mansion Tax on Homes over £2 million

Comment on Mansion Tax being introduced for homes over £2 million and £5 million from April 2028 Colleen Babcock, Rightmove’s property expert says: “The property market needs less taxation not more, to encourage and enable movement. Today’s announcement of a Mansion Tax could lead to some distortion at the top end of the market, particularly…
Read More
Breaking News

Autumn Budget 2025: Property Industry Reacts

The Autumn Budget has confirmed a series of major housing and property tax reforms that will reshape the market over the coming years. The measures place particular emphasis on higher value homes, revised council tax structures and long term planning reform. Below is a breakdown of the announcements that directly affect the property market, together…
Read More
Breaking News

Solutions to fix construction skills

The Centre for Social Justice (CSJ) has released a report titled, ‘Skills to Build: Fixing Britain’s construction workforce crisis.’ After speaking to several organizations and having roundtables to garner a wide understanding of the sectors’ perspectives and needs, they have proposed twenty six recommendations that will fix the issues underpinning the skills crisis. Richard Beresford,…
Read More
Breaking News

Budget Commentary – Mansion Tax, Business Rates & Planning Reform

Andrew Teacher, Co-founder at LauderTeacher, one of the UK’s leading advisors on real estate communications, investor relations and a former spokesman for the BPF, comments on the potential Budget. Mansion tax “Nobody likes paying tax, but the reality is a council tax revaluation is long overdue. Rather than distorting the market, which is what a…
Read More
Rightmove logo
Breaking News

Budget 2025 market data & home-mover and agent insight

Speculation about property tax changes is fuelling uncertainty across much of the market Rightmove research found that home-movers would favour staggered stamp duty payments, while a poll of estate agents also suggested that staggered payments would be a preferable change to shifting payment to the seller Rightmove data on rumoured property tax changes Mansion Tax…
Read More
Breaking News

Breaking Property News 24/11/25

Daily bite-sized proptech and property news in partnership with Proptech-X. Symple resolves four core issues in the new Renter’s Rights Act Automating compliance in the new PRS landscape   The Renters’ Rights Act has raised the bar for private landlords in England in terms of property condition, hazard resolution, evidence of compliance and regulatory registration. Symple…
Read More