![» Courses[GB] Real Estate Video Profits. This is the general knowledge you’ll need about the home’s specifications according to the real estate agent you’re working with. So the home’s square footage, amount of bedrooms and bathrooms, acreage as well as any other details that the agent wants to highlight.](https://fexmall.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/07/Real-Estate-Video-Profits1.png)
Dallan Wright – Real Estate Video Profits
Writing a script for a real estate video can become very easy once you have the right template.
When I start on a real estate script, no matter what the size or shape or look of the home, I know that I will need these three basic ingredients: Information, Adjectives and Narrative.
That’s it. With those simple elements you can easily create a script for any home or property.
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Now let me elaborate: Information
This is the general knowledge you’ll need about the home’s specifications according to the real estate agent you’re working with. So the home’s square footage, amount of bedrooms and bathrooms, acreage as well as any other details that the agent wants to highlight.
That for me is the key. I don’t sell homes, so I always defer to the Agent for what they think are the highlights and points about the home they want emphasized in the video. Now that doesn’t mean you need to bring up every single detail in the video.
The video is just a teaser. It is not going to sell the home on it’s own and it doesn’t need to. It is there to pique interest and get buyers inside the home where the agent can work their magic. Don’t drown your audience in minutia, but instead give them breadcrumbs that will lead them to the conclusion that they just have to see the home.
Example:
- 8 Bedrooms
- 10 Bathrooms
- Butler Pantry
- Theater
- Gated Community
- Adjectives
This is where you take the mundane details of the home and turn them into something worth listening to. It would be easy to just list off every detail about the home in a bullet point type script, but it is also terribly boring and not what the audience or agent wants.
They already have the details of the home, but it’s the writer’s job to make an ordinary “master bedroom” into “a spectacular spa worthy master retreat.” Adjectives are words that describe or modify another person or thing in the sentence.
They enhance and enrich the boring specs of the home and should be used liberally. It’s a way to create a type of inception on the listener, so that when they see a bedroom we make them think it is an “exquisite room accented with mahogany and comfy, plush carpeting.” Adjectives allow us to embellish and take liberties making the home more than just walls, windows, a roof and floors.
It’s important to be aware of trends in the real estate community such as whether people like natural sunlight or LED lighting. Whether an open floor plan with large islands are better than pointing out a more segmented home with lots of separate rooms and spaces. If you are not aware of these types of trends or hot button topics, then just ask the agent because they will know them all.