This Agency Sold A House Through Social Media….. Twice!

Social media is a movement that has already happened in the property industry and for those who haven’t yet caught on, be warned: other agents are claiming your business. With the new millennial generation of home buyers relying on mobile and social more, the industry is being urged to embrace new communications in order to succeed. Remember that old adage ‘adapt or die’?

For whatever reason, we don’t often hear from the agents mastering social. Perhaps they’re just keeping schtum incase their competitors catch on, but you’d be mistaken if you think this means it doesn’t work. Quite the opposite, and we think it’s about time to celebrate agents’ success.

We took a trip (t’up North) to grab a coffee with the MD of Goole’s Housesetc, David Leake. First reason to take David seriously: His office has sold more properties than any other in their postcode sector, for four years running. And this competitive edge is coming from social. So why did David (and other agents engaged on social) decide to jump online? On a basic level, social media is an affordable way to get more eyes on your business. But it hasn’t taken marketers long to realise that social media is less about technology and more about psychology. In an industry where trust makes or breaks everything, social media helps agents show their human side and build relationships with homemovers.

The problem is, getting online is the easy part, the challenge is knowing what to do when you’re there. Like many agents new to social media, when David first joined Twitter he used the channel to predominantly push stock. Having access to so many people makes it ever so tempting to use social media just like a portal, but resist the temptation. When David diluted listings and shifted his strategy more towards sharing valuable content people cared about, things got better. When he sprinkled in some personality, things really took flight.

So David is a big Barnsley F.C. fan. In fact he’s a season ticket holder. Why does this matter? Because by sharing this with his audience and joining conversations around his passion, he quickly attracted likeminded clients. In fact, a direct message popped into his inbox when a fellow fan fancied relocating to Goole. Best thing? After taking him on a viewing, the client paid full asking price and David had his first sale without spending a penny on marketing. This is the power of networks, and what David quickly realised was that by focusing on relationships he had created a big audience that wanted to listen. So much so, that it took a mere hour for David to get an enquiry from posting a property on Facebook. A follower tagged a friend and Housesetc had a call almost immediately. Now this property was not listed on any portal, big or small, just Facebook. And this was not a one-off event, Housesetc are getting consistent ROI from their social media efforts.

With an instant, cost effective, and schedulable marketing channel right at his fingertips, David struggles to understand why sticking a photo in the paper is still even a thing. But admits: “We’re pleased a lot of agents don’t use it because it gives us an edge”.

Housesetc are huge advocates of social media and are reaping the rewards. Closing words from David: “if you stand still, you’ll go backwards”.

View the full videos here.

Originally posted on Propertyflock.

You May Also Enjoy

Breaking News

Rights Act: Key changes renters need to know — new rules start on 1 May 2026

The Renters’ Rights Act is a major overhaul of the rules that govern renting in England, the biggest in decades. Propertymark, the UK’s leading body for property professionals, wants renters to understand what’s coming and how it will affect them. The next wave of changes under the Act will take effect on 1 May 2026.…
Read More
Breaking News

What Would Make Me Stay: How Tenants Are Redefining What Home Really Means

68% of tenants say the single biggest factor that would make them stay in their rental home long term is the relationship with their landlord or agent, above rent levels, location, or the quality of the property itself. That is the headline finding from LRG’s Winter 2025/26 Lettings Report, and it points to something the…
Read More
Breaking News

Competition for rented homes falls to lowest level in six years

More homes for rent and a drop in demand eases the pressure on renters Competition for rental homes falls to six year low with 4.8 enquiries per property Increased supply sees the number of homes available for rent up 11% on last year Meanwhile demand for rental properties falls 14% year-on-year on lower migration and…
Read More
Breaking News

Mortgage lending now supports 30% of housing stock

Mortgage lending now underpins 30% of England’s housing stock, rising to as high as 42% in the country’s most mortgage-reliant locations. At the same time, many areas of the market have seen a notable increase in the number of homes owned with a mortgage over the last three years, highlighting the continued strength and resilience…
Read More
Estate Agent Talk

Is it worth buying a fixer-upper property?

The latest research from eXp UK reveals that fixer-upper homes can be picked up for an average saving of more than £44,000, but when the cost of renovating the property is accounted for do homebuyers actually stand to make a saving? And what chance do buyers have of finding one on today’s market? Fixer-uppers are…
Read More
Breaking News

Nottingham letting agents are the busiest in Britain

The latest research from Propoly reveals that across Britain’s major cities, there are an average of 13.5 rental listings for each single letting agency branch, with the nation’s busiest agents found in Nottingham where this figure climbs to 35 properties per professional. Propoly has analysed the estimated number of current rental listings in 21 of…
Read More