YouTube for Real Estate Leads? You Bet! Here’s How to Run Your Account

YouTube For Real Estate Leads? You Bet! Here’s How To Run Your Account

People watch one billion hours of YouTube per day. Per day. That’s a ton of eyeballs — and a ton of potential leads for your real estate business.

But without adopting some key YouTube marketing strategies and best practices, your YouTube channel isn’t likely taking advantage of all that potential.

Read on for the most essential tips and tricks for turning your YouTube channel into a lead-generating machine for your real estate business.

1. Brand your channel

Whether your branding is effective or not comes down to consistency. Your website, newsletters, business cards and social media channels — including YouTube — should all look and sound pretty similar.

Your YouTube channel allows for a banner image (at the top of your channel’s homepage) and a profile photo that accompanies everything you post.

Your profile photo should be a crisp and clear (not pixelated!) version of the headshot that you’re using on your other properties.

Your banner image, which should reflect your brand colours and fonts, is an opportunity to incorporate details about your business. We recommend including your name, the area you serve, your website address and a recent milestone or award, if available. For example:

Jane Smith
York Region Realtor
janesmithrealty.com
Voted York Region’s top realtor in 2015!

2. Use keywords

SEO best practices aren’t just for your website. You need to employ them on your YouTube channel, too, if you want the right people to discover your videos. This means incorporating the best possible keywords in your video titles, descriptions and tags.

Video titles

First thing’s first. You need to tell search engines about the content the video contains, starting with the video title.

Before naming a video, do an analysis: search YouTube for keywords or phrases that describe your video, and see what else is out there. Search Google too, to see what comes up. As you type in both search bars, take note of what the autocomplete function recommends your search phrase be. For a more advanced tool, try Google’s Keyword Planner.

You want to find the sweet spot between keywords that people are searching for, and keywords that have been used so often that it would be nearly impossible for your video to be discovered.

Keep your video title to 70 characters or less (including spaces) to avoid having it appear shortened in search results, and aim to use the keyword near the very beginning.

Descriptions

The description accompanying each of your videos should contain the same keyword included in your video’s title, ideally in the first sentence and once more in the rest of the text (which should be at least 100 words).

The description should first and foremost describe the video and, near the end, it should include a brief summation of you and your business. And… as always… include a link back to your website (of course!).

Tags

Adding tags to each of your videos is key to being found and ranked in YouTube search results.

Use your main keyword first, the one from your title and description. Then, add other keywords that describe the video, but also you and your business. For example, “Jane Smith,” “York Region realtor,” “York Region real estate,” and “top York Region real estate agent.”

3. Add cards to your videos


Cards — which will officially replace YouTube’s original annotation feature as of May 2017 — are a way of delivering on-screen calls-to-action to your viewers while they’re watching your video.

There are five different types of cards available, allowing you to promote:

  • another video or video playlist
  • another channel
  • donations to a non-profit
  • a link to a non-YouTube website
  • or a poll you’d like your viewers to participate in.

You can include up to five per video (though, for a short video, that many would likely feel like overkill).

Cards are a great way to get your viewers to watch additional videos on your channel, or to visit your website for additional content. They even work in mobile view.

A word of wisdom: include cards near the end, not the beginning of your video. You don’t want to direct your viewers elsewhere before they’ve hardly seen your video.

4. Make sure your video thumbnails are strong


Video thumbnails may not strike you as important but think about it: in addition to your video’s title, they are what draw a YouTube user to click your video. Pixelated, unclear and empty thumbnail images scream low-quality.

You could choose a frame from your video to serve as its thumbnail but it’s rare that the samples picked out by YouTube’s video manager are strong enough. Instead, try designing custom YouTube thumbnails for your videos for more control on what viewers see. You can use one of the many online image editors available, or hire a graphic artist for the task. Once you’ve selected a good image to use, you can then upload it to YouTube and specify it as the thumbnail to be used. 

Try to keep your thumbnail style consistent for all your videos. This keeps your channel page looking professional and well-branded, and helps identify your content, as well as make it stand out.

 

 

Subscribe To Our Blog


Learn something new every day