Send You a Marketing Package? What's That?

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The Marketing Package

In actuality, a marketing package is not that mysterious. It’s simply general information about a property that includes income and expense data.

You might even call it a flyer, but with enough information about the property for an investor to assess its profitability.

What kind of information?

First, the obvious: Price, number of units, address, age, and square footage. Secondly, the intrinsic: Picture, description, and list of features. Thirdly, the terms: What about the current loan? Is it assumable? Is the owner willing to carry? Fourthly, the income and expense statement: A detailed summary of income and operating expenses. Finally, the ratios: Cap rate, gross rent multiplier, cash on cash, cost per unit, cost per square foot, and so on.

What about the format?

Thankfully, there is no one way to construct a marketing package. It can be simple or elaborate; one page or several pages; no photo, one photo, or multiple photos; loose-leaf or bound. It’s your call.

But bear in mind that its content and structure which is important, not the fancy trimmings. Moreover, that a buyer makes a decision based on the property’s numbers, not its presentation. Because even a gold-leafed bound marketing package won’t sell a property when the sum total of all its numbers doesn’t make economic sense.

What’s more, big isn’t necessarily better. In fact, you’re going to discover that ONE comprehensive page is easier (and less expensive) to distribute than a booklet, and that most callers prefer condensed over bulky.

The important thing is to have a marketing package ready to present. Nothing screams unprofessional louder to an apartment caller than when you don’t have one. And given that you’ve read this article, it proves that you do care about such things.

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