If your database feels cold or your emails aren’t converting, try one or more of these five strategy shifts from Josh Ries. The results might surprise you.
When we first started sending nurture emails to our real estate database, we were excited. We assumed that once we hit “send,” the open rates would roll in and leads would start flowing.
That didn’t happen.
Our early email campaigns underperformed. Open rates were disappointing. Engagement was low. And worst of all, we started questioning if email marketing was even worth the effort.
Turns out, the problem wasn’t email itself, it was how we were doing it.
5 changes that helped our email campaigns convert
We made five changes that significantly boosted our open rates, increased engagement and brought our list back to life. If you’re struggling with your email marketing, these are worth testing.
1. We shortened the word count
Our first emails were way too long. We were packing in market stats, updates, personal stories: you name it, we added it. After testing a range of formats, we landed on something that worked best for our audience: 200 to 300 words per email.
That doesn’t mean this is the sweet spot for everyone. Each market is different. Your audience may prefer 100 words or 800. The key is to test and adjust based on what your database responds to.
Why this helped: People are busy. When emails are too long, they either skim or delete. By tightening up our message, we made it easier for people to read the full email and take action. Shorter emails got higher click-through rates and fewer unsubscribes.
2. We prioritized list maintenance
We realized that list hygiene was a blind spot. We started being ruthless about maintaining list quality. Bounces, unsubscribes and inactive addresses were removed regularly. We also switched to a double opt-in system, which gave us cleaner data and reduced spam complaints.
One of the most powerful things we started doing was sending an email every six months asking people if they’d like to be unsubscribed. At first, this felt counterintuitive. But we found it re-engaged people who had been quietly reading but not responding. It also helped us clean our list of contacts who no longer found value in our content — which is a win in the long run.
Why this helped: A clean list means better deliverability. Email platforms notice how people engage with your emails. If you keep sending to unengaged contacts, your deliverability tanks. But when you’re consistently emailing a list of people who actually want to hear from you, everything improves.
3. We switched to the hook, story, offer framework
We started using the Hook, Story, Offer framework (a concept popularized by Russell Brunson). Each email now follows this format:
- Hook: Grab attention with a scroll-stopping subject line or first sentence
- Story: Share something relevant, insightful or personal
- Offer: Invite action or provide value
But here’s the key: Not every offer is a sales pitch. Sometimes our offer is simply a free resource, local market insight, or something helpful for buyers or sellers. This approach builds trust and keeps us from sounding like we’re constantly selling.
Why this helped: Structure gives you clarity. The Hook, Story, Offer model keeps your emails tight and purposeful. It also helps you rotate value-based content with sales opportunities, which builds credibility and keeps readers from tuning out.
4. We A/B tested subject lines (and kept it simple)
We began testing two subject lines on a small portion of our list before sending the winner to the full audience. We made a common mistake early on, getting too fancy. We tried emojis, symbols, “clever” formatting.
None of it worked.
We learned that the KISS method (Keep It Simple, Stupid) wins almost every time. Now, we keep subject lines short, clear and focused. Two simple subject lines, tested head-to-head. That’s it.
Why this helped: Subject lines are the front door of your emails. Fancy tricks can actually hurt credibility. When we focused on clarity and relevance, our open rates went up, and so did engagement inside the emails.
5. We segmented the list for personalization
As our list grew, we stopped treating it like one giant group. We started with simple segments, buyers versus sellers. Over time, we got more specific, building segments based on engagement, time in database and lead source.
Why this helped: When an email speaks directly to a person’s situation, they’re more likely to open, click and reply. List segmentation helped us send the right message to the right people at the right time, and it made our nurture emails feel more personal.
Email marketing isn’t broken. Most agents are just doing it wrong
Email is still one of the most powerful tools you have in real estate. But if you’re sending the same templated content every other agent is sending, don’t be surprised if it ends up in the trash.
Once we tightened up our format, cleaned our list, stopped being afraid of losing people and added real value in each message, everything changed.
If your database feels cold or your emails aren’t converting, try one of these five shifts. Then test another. The results might surprise you.
