The best agents know that new lead generation and warm follow-up aren't either/or. Here's how top producers are activating both — and what's working right now.
Running ads, working your farm, door knocking, posting content — this is the engine of any serious real estate business. New lead generation builds long-term pipeline and keeps fresh opportunities coming in. That's not going anywhere.
But here's what top producers know that makes them different: they run new lead generation and they stay relentlessly consistent with the conversations already in motion. Both channels working together is what creates a business that feels predictable instead of feast-or-famine.
The agents closing the most deals right now aren't necessarily generating the most leads — they're the ones staying in front of the right people at exactly the right moment.
The follow-up side of the business is often where the fastest transactions come from — because the trust is already built. Here's what tends to get in the way of working that side consistently:
When things get moving, follow-up is the first thing that slides. Active clients take priority — which is right — but warm conversations can cool down in the meantime.
Without a system or a scheduled reminder, follow-up competes with everything else in the day — and often loses. It's not a willpower issue; it's a structure issue.
When a contact goes quiet, it's easy to assume they've moved on. More often, life just got in the way. Buyers and sellers regularly re-engage when the timing is right — if someone reaches out.
Fresh leads naturally pull attention. But a warm contact from 60 days ago who's ready to move is often a much faster path to the closing table than starting from scratch.
The goal of any follow-up message is simple: restart a conversation. Three scenarios come up most often — here's a script for each one that's working well right now.
"Hey [Name] — hope things are going well! I was thinking about our conversation a while back about [specific detail — neighborhood, timeline, etc.]. Wanted to check in and see if anything had changed for you. No pressure at all, just want to make sure you have what you need whenever the timing feels right."
"Hey [Name] — quick one for you. I've been noticing some movement in [neighborhood/area they mentioned] and thought of you immediately. Inventory is [shifting/tightening/opening up] and it might actually be worth a conversation given what you told me before. Worth a quick chat this week if you have 10 minutes?"
"Hey [Name] — it's been a while! Life gets busy for all of us. I was going through my contacts and your name came up — genuinely wanted to see how things are going. Still thinking about making a move, or has life taken a different direction? Either way, great to reconnect."
Think back over the last 60 to 90 days. Somewhere in your texts, emails, or DMs there are conversations that started with real intent — someone asking about a neighborhood, a ballpark on what their home might be worth, a question about timing — that haven't been picked back up yet.
Those aren't cold leads. Those are warm ones waiting on a touch.
The average buyer spends 3 to 6 months from first conversation to first offer. Staying consistently present across that window is what keeps you top of mind when they're ready to move — and it's one of the highest-ROI activities in the business.
The agents who run the most consistent businesses tend to be the ones who treat their existing contact list like an active asset — not just a record of past conversations. They're regularly checking in, adding value, and staying visible without being pushy.
That's not just good relationship skills. It's a genuine business strategy. And it works alongside new lead generation, not instead of it.
Five personalized follow-ups to warm contacts this week. If two of those restart a real conversation, you've just activated two potential transactions that were already within reach. Run that consistently for 90 days and the compounding effect on your pipeline is significant.
Not a mass blast. Not a drip campaign. Five specific people from your existing conversations, with a message that actually sounds like you. Here's how to make it a habit.
Pull up your texts, emails, and DMs from the last 30–90 days. Look for contacts who showed genuine interest and haven't heard from you recently. Choose five. Write their names down before the day gets away from you.
Pull one specific detail from your last conversation — a neighborhood they liked, a timeline they mentioned, a concern they shared. That one detail is what makes your message feel like it came from you, not a CRM.
Lead with curiosity, not urgency. A simple, low-stakes question gives them an easy on-ramp back into the conversation — and signals that you're there to help, not to push.
Match the medium to the relationship. Text for people you've spoken with personally. Email for more formal contacts. DM if that's where your conversation lived. Don't force someone to a channel they didn't use with you.
Whether you use a CRM, a notes app, or a spreadsheet — write down who you contacted, when, and what you said. If they don't respond in 2 weeks, that person goes back on next month's follow-up list.
Five is intentional — small enough to do with real personalization every single week, and consistent enough to produce results over time. Twenty follow-ups a month, 240 a year, all with people who already know and trust you. Agents who build this into their weekly rhythm consistently report it as one of their highest-converting activities.
Follow-up is a long game that compounds fast. Here's a realistic view of what consistent execution produces — and why each type of response is worth more than it might seem in the moment:
Agents who add this rhythm to their existing business consistently describe the same thing: their pipeline feels more predictable, more active, and less dependent on any single lead source. Both channels — new and warm — working together.
Short-form video has become one of the highest-reach, lowest-cost lead generation channels available to agents — and TikTok specifically rewards consistency and authenticity over production quality. You don't need a studio. You need a hook and something worth saying.
Here's a format that's generating real engagement and inbound conversations for agents right now. It positions you as a local expert, invites interaction, and naturally surfaces buyers and sellers in your comments.
"If you're thinking about buying a home in [your city], I need you to answer this before you start looking."
"Would you rather be walkable to restaurants and shops — or have a bigger yard and more space? Because that one answer is going to change everything about your search. [City/area A] is going to be your vibe if you want walkability. [City/area B] is where you're going if space matters more. Drop A or B in the comments — and if you want to know exactly what your budget gets you in either area right now, send me a DM."
"A = [Neighborhood] · B = [Neighborhood] · DM me for a free breakdown"
"Here's something most buyers don't figure out until it's too late — and I wish someone had told me to warn them sooner."
"The homes that are priced right in [your market] right now are going fast — sometimes the same day. If you're waiting until you feel 'ready,' you might keep missing the ones you actually want. Readiness comes from having a plan, not from waiting. If you want to know what having a plan actually looks like in [city], drop 'plan' in the comments and I'll walk you through it."
"Drop 'PLAN' in the comments 👇"
TikTok generates new inbound interest. Your follow-up rhythm converts warm contacts who already know you. Run both at the same time and you've built a business that's generating from two directions simultaneously — new faces finding you, and existing relationships converting when the timing is right.
Pick five names from your contacts and send a personal message to each one. Film one TikTok using one of the scripts above. That's it. Two moves, both of which are already working for agents right now.