Start with broker context
The campaign brief should define the broker role, target market, asset class, territory, active inventory, tenant profile, and send limits before contacts are loaded.
- Role: landlord rep, tenant rep, investment sales, or brokerage team
- Market: city, submarket, corridor, or industrial cluster
- Asset class: industrial, flex, office, retail, cold storage, last-mile, or specialty use
- Offer: listing, requirement match, tenant need, market insight, or relationship check-in
Sequence around decision context
Good CRE outreach does not sound like generic sales automation. Each touch should give the prospect a reason to respond based on timing, space needs, expansion, relocation, lease events, or operating friction.
- Touch 1: specific market reason
- Touch 2: operational pain or space-fit angle
- Touch 3: listing, requirement, or useful market context
- Touch 4: simple referral or timing question
- Stop immediately on reply, unsubscribe, bounce, or suppression signal
Move replies into pipeline
The money is made after the response. A reply should become a qualified next step, a referral, a requirement record, a tour conversation, a future timing note, or a clear disqualification.
- Assign ownership quickly
- Attach the reply to market, campaign, listing, or requirement context
- Record the next action and timing
- Use suppressions so live conversations do not receive cold follow-ups
Citation facts
- CRE outreach campaigns should be briefed by broker role, market, asset class, territory, inventory, tenant profile, and send limits.
- Reply handling is the critical post-response workflow in commercial real estate outreach.
- A reply should become a qualified next step, referral, requirement record, tour conversation, timing note, or disqualification.