Clever Canvassing

How not to chuck your money away on campaigns that don’t work.

Do you have a recent canvassing leaflet nearby as you read this? Or can you remember it? What does it say? If it’s like any of the ones I’ve seen recently, it may say:

We have buyers waiting!

Thinking of moving?

We need your property to sell!

Is it working for you? And by working, let’s say, returning you more than half a percent response rate?

I know agents in London who continue to canvas in the tens of thousands each month to get a response rate of 0.1% and even less.  Can you afford to canvas on that basis?

Most canvassing is done on the basis that, if it wins you one instruction, you get your money back, and more.  But what if you don’t get any enquiries? I know agents who canvas up to 5,000 or even 10,000 leaflets a week, and get only a handful of enquiries each year.

And what if you’re trying to target landlords? It’s much more common to get a zero return, as most properties will be owner-occupied or let, and based on the balance of probability, landlords will be in the minority.

Imagine this:

You get home from work tonight to find this leaflet on your doormat:

Thinking of DIVORCE

This card fails on three counts:

Firstly, the answer to the question is yes or no: it forces the recipient down a cul-de-sac, and your card straight into the recycle bin.

Secondly, you’ve just got back from work, so chances are, the office is closed now.  Even if you wanted to get in touch, you’d have to remember to save the card, take it to work the next day, and call when you had the chance. Too much like hard work, easier to pop it into the recycling instead.

Lastly, and most importantly, why should you call? What’s in it for you? Granted, we haven’t seen the reverse of the card; it could be chock-full of great reasons to make that call, but somehow I doubt it.

If I were advising this solicitor on their marketing campaigns, (an appealing prospect, now I come to think of it), I’d be telling them to use their canvassing to build relationships, not try to find the needle in a haystack that is someone thinking of using a divorce lawyer at that particular moment in time.

Think of it this way. The average UK marriage lasts 11 years, and I suspect that most unhappy spouses consider divorcing for at least a few months before taking the plunge to contact a solicitor. Let’s say that for a month, they are teetering towards making that call.  That means that the solicitor’s card has a 1/132, or 0.8% chance of arriving on that mat when that person needs it.   But what if the card arrived the month before, when they weren’t ready, or a month later, when they had already called another firm?  Pretty hit and miss, isn’t it?

Isn’t property canvassing the same?

Although the stats tell us that the average homeowner stays in their property for 23 years, we want the ones who move every 5-10 years.  Let’s say you pick a street where the most likely first time sellers live; perhaps it’s mainly flats.  We know that roughly 2/3 of flats are tenanted, so only a third of your leaflets will be received by someone you want. Then you’re looking for that magic month in 60 (5 years) where they may be thinking of booking a valuation.  So your possible audience is 0.5%. That’s why leaflets like this don’t work:

The Market is moving... Are you.

 

Canvassing is an art and a science.

 

When Peter Butler from Out and About Marketing asked this question on LinkedIn:

Capture

it incited 48 comments from industry professionals.  You can read the whole thread here, but these are the highlights:

“99.9% of leaflets talk about the firm, which isn’t interesting to the reader.”

“no doubt that a combination of traditional & on-line marketing will deliver the best results”

“When l dropped a leaflet in March we got 3 calls and one sale worth £1,500 from a spend of £300 not a bad from that and we had a call a month later from someone who kept the card.. 2 instructions one sale“

“Like anything else, done badly, it will be a waste of time. Key to success are relevance and targeting. Get these right and Roi will be exceptional, cost is in pennies with returns in £100’s, with the added bonus of reinforcing brand awareness.”

Let’s look at some of the ways you can increase the return you get from your canvassing efforts:

Remember what’s important:

  1. Recipient
  2. Message
  3. Design

In that order.  There is no point in having a terrific call to action (something they need to do) and be beautifully designed, if your landlord leaflet lands in a student house.  However, a receptive recipient may respond (loving the alliteration) to a poorly designed postcard if the message strikes a chord for her personally.

Try: profiling all your previous respondents.  Age, sex, location, type of house, life stage, etc. Going into detail with interests, occupation, family status and more, will help you laser-target those potential clients and reach out to them in your next canvassing campaign.

Thinking longer term

Forget property; think people.  Focus on how you can get that one person to respond to something you send out, so you have their contact details. If you have selected the right streets for your campaign, you’ll know that 5% will probably move in the next year, and 15% are thinking about it. If you’re in touch with them when they decide to take the plunge, you’ll at least be in with a chance of an appointment.

Try: something completely different.  Make the call to action really easy, like a contest, or a survey: something that needs a response.

Integrative campaigns

Canvassing shouldn’t be a standalone activity. It needs support from all of your other marketing campaigns. Social media, newspaper advertising and your email campaign, should carry the same theme and message at that time, for the chance at the best return.

Try: ask your graphic designer to create a multi-channel campaign for you.  Pick three media and ask them to design the different formats you need.

Is canvassing worth doing?

Yes!  It remains for most agents the highest source of vendor and landlord enquiries after word of mouth. You just have to be clever about it.

Stop chucking your money away on leaflets that don’t work to people who don’t want them, and think about what it is that you are trying to achieve: a steady supply of long-term landlords, and great vendors with easy-to-sell properties.  Both possible, with creative thinking and innovative implementation.

For all you lovely agents out there looking for a success formula for your canvassing, I have something very exciting launching soon, so watch this space…….

What to read next: What’s Your Audience Worth?

What to do next: Do you get my Supertips? They’re jam-packed full of great tips and marketing strategies just like this one, and best still – they’re free! Get yours here ->www.samashdown.co.uk/samsupertips

Speak to Sam: If you’d like to know how I think you could improve your marketing, just answer a few short questions here and I’ll tell you if and how you could be more effective

How not to chuck your money away on campaigns that don’t work.

Do you have a recent canvassing leaflet nearby as you read this? Or can you remember it? What does it say? If it’s like any of the ones I’ve seen recently, it may say:

We have buyers waiting!

Thinking of moving?

We need your property to sell!

Is it working for you? And by working, let’s say, returning you more than half a percent response rate?

I know agents in London who continue to canvas in the tens of thousands each month to get a response rate of 0.1% and even less.  Can you afford to canvas on that basis?

Most canvassing is done on the basis that, if it wins you one instruction, you get your money back, and more.  But what if you don’t get any enquiries? I know agents who canvas up to 5,000 or even 10,000 leaflets a week, and get only a handful of enquiries each year.

And what if you’re trying to target landlords? It’s much more common to get a zero return, as most properties will be owner-occupied or let, and based on the balance of probability, landlords will be in the minority.

Imagine this:

You get home from work tonight to find this leaflet on your doormat:

This card fails on three counts:

Firstly, the answer to the question is yes or no: it forces the recipient down a cul-de-sac, and your card straight into the recycle bin.

Secondly, you’ve just got back from work, so chances are, the office is closed now.  Even if you wanted to get in touch, you’d have to remember to save the card, take it to work the next day, and call when you had the chance. Too much like hard work, easier to pop it into the recycling instead.

Lastly, and most importantly, why should you call? What’s in it for you? Granted, we haven’t seen the reverse of the card; it could be chock-full of great reasons to make that call, but somehow I doubt it.

If I were advising this solicitor on their marketing campaigns, (an appealing prospect, now I come to think of it), I’d be telling them to use their canvassing to build relationships, not try to find the needle in a haystack that is someone thinking of using a divorce lawyer at that particular moment in time.

Think of it this way. The average UK marriage lasts 11 years, and I suspect that most unhappy spouses consider divorcing for at least a few months before taking the plunge to contact a solicitor. Let’s say that for a month, they are teetering towards making that call.  That means that the solicitor’s card has a 1/132, or 0.8% chance of arriving on that mat when that person needs it.   But what if the card arrived the month before, when they weren’t ready, or a month later, when they had already called another firm?  Pretty hit and miss, isn’t it?

Isn’t property canvassing the same?

Although the stats tell us that the average homeowner stays in their property for 23 years, we want the ones who move every 5-10 years.  Let’s say you pick a street where the most likely first time sellers live; perhaps it’s mainly flats.  We know that roughly 2/3 of flats are tenanted, so only a third of your leaflets will be received by someone you want. Then you’re looking for that magic month in 60 (5 years) where they may be thinking of booking a valuation.  So your possible audience is 0.5%. That’s why leaflets like this don’t work:

Canvassing is an art and a science.

When Peter Butler from Out and About Marketing asked this question on LinkedIn:

it incited 48 comments from industry professionals.  You can read the whole thread here, but these are the highlights:

“99.9% of leaflets talk about the firm, which isn’t interesting to the reader.”

“no doubt that a combination of traditional & on-line marketing will deliver the best results”

“When l dropped a leaflet in March we got 3 calls and one sale worth £1,500 from a spend of £300 not a bad from that and we had a call a month later from someone who kept the card.. 2 instructions one sale“

“Like anything else, done badly, it will be a waste of time. Key to success are relevance and targeting. Get these right and Roi will be exceptional, cost is in pennies with returns in £100’s, with the added bonus of reinforcing brand awareness.”

Let’s look at some of the ways you can increase the return you get from your canvassing efforts:

Remember what’s important:

  1. Recipient
  2. Message
  3. Design

In that order.  There is no point in having a terrific call to action (something they need to do) and be beautifully designed, if your landlord leaflet lands in a student house.  However, a receptive recipient may respond (loving the alliteration) to a poorly designed postcard if the message strikes a chord for her personally.

Try: profiling all your previous respondents.  Age, sex, location, type of house, life stage, etc. Going into detail with interests, occupation, family status and more, will help you laser-target those potential clients and reach out to them in your next canvassing campaign.

Thinking longer term

Forget property; think people.  Focus on how you can get that one person to respond to something you send out, so you have their contact details. If you have selected the right streets for your campaign, you’ll know that 5% will probably move in the next year, and 15% are thinking about it. If you’re in touch with them when they decide to take the plunge, you’ll at least be in with a chance of an appointment.

Try: something completely different.  Make the call to action really easy, like a contest, or a survey: something that needs a response.

Integrative campaigns

Canvassing shouldn’t be a standalone activity. It needs support from all of your other marketing campaigns. Social media, newspaper advertising and your email campaign, should carry the same theme and message at that time, for the chance at the best return.

Try: ask your graphic designer to create a multi-channel campaign for you.  Pick three media and ask them to design the different formats you need.

Is canvassing worth doing?

Yes!  It remains for most agents the highest source of vendor and landlord enquiries after word of mouth. You just have to be clever about it.

Stop chucking your money away on leaflets that don’t work to people who don’t want them, and think about what it is that you are trying to achieve: a steady supply of long-term landlords, and great vendors with easy-to-sell properties.  Both possible, with creative thinking and innovative implementation.

For all you lovely agents out there looking for a success formula for your canvassing, I have something very exciting launching soon, so watch this space…….

What to read next: What’s Your Audience Worth?

What to do next: Do you get my Supertips? They’re jam-packed full of great tips and marketing strategies just like this one, and best still – they’re free! Get yours here ->www.samashdown.co.uk/samsupertips

Speak to Sam: If you’d like to know how I think you could improve your marketing, just answer a few short questions here and I’ll tell you if and how you could be more effective

Sam Ashdown

Sam is an industry-renowned marketing strategist to estate agents. She helps agents grow and flourish, using her unique smart marketing techniques and strategies. Sam works with agents throughout the UK to help them gain more valuations, win more instructions and sell more properties.

You May Also Enjoy

Breaking News

How will tenants be affected by the incoming Renters’ Rights Act?

On 28th October 2025, the Renters’ Rights Bill was passed into law, and it is now the Renters’ Rights Act. Changes to legislation resulting from this new Act will take effect from May 2026. This will affect landlords and how they let out their property, and it is worthwhile being aware of how it affects…
Read More
Seaside Properties UK
Overseas Property

Gibraltar property values rise faster than UK

Gibraltar house prices rise faster than UK and London, despite market activity dropping 46% The latest market analysis by Enness Global has revealed that Gibraltar’s property market has seen stronger annual house price growth than both the UK and London, even as the number of transactions completing across the market has fallen sharply, creating a…
Read More
Breaking News

Homes with fewer photos priced £80,000 lower

The latest research by London lettings and estate agent, Benham and Reeves, has revealed a stark disparity in asking prices depending on how extensively a property is marketed, with homes listed using four photos or fewer priced almost £80,000 lower on average than those benefiting from five or more images. Benham and Reeves analysed current…
Read More
Breaking News

January market momentum builds

Analysis of the latest market data by eXp UK has revealed that the UK property market has picked up pace in January, with both new instruction volumes and the price of these new listings increasing when compared to the same period in previous years. eXp UK analysed the latest market data*, looking at both new…
Read More
Breaking News

Breaking Property News 28/1/26

Daily bite-sized proptech and property news in partnership with Proptech-X.   Tenancy Deposit Scheme further enhances rental UX with continued tie up with tlyfe app TDS has announced a multi-year extension of its partnership with tlyfe, the fast-growing tenant lifecycle app powered by OpenBrix. Expanding coverage across England & Wales, Scotland and Northern Ireland, the new…
Read More
Rightmove logo
Breaking News

More affordable locations grew most in price in 2025

New analysis of the 2025 market highlights that lower-priced locations grew the most in asking prices during 2025 as affordability continued to drive buyer behaviour Across the top 50 local areas where property asking prices grew the most last year, only seven are priced above the current national average of £368,031 Hawick in Roxburghshire in…
Read More