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The behind-the-scenes work shouldn’t slow you down. We streamline the details, keep everything on track, and help you stay ahead - so you can focus on what you do best.
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"Jessica is great. Ive been using her for my transaction coordination services many years and she is very organized and on top of her files. I fully recommend her."

"Working with Jessica is an absolute game-changer. As a loan officer, I see firsthand how a disorganized file can slow down a closing, but with Jessica, everything is always two steps ahead."

"I have been working with Jessica for the past five years, and she is truly the best. She is incredibly knowledgeable, responsive, and always makes sure every detail is handled."
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"Jessica is an absolute rockstar. She's highly experienced and professional. We've done many deals together and I can't recommend her highly enough."

We don’t just check boxes or move papers from point A to point B when your listing enters escrow. Our services can begin before that.
Aside from the usual tasks a Transaction Coordinator performs, we go above and beyond - seamlessly assisting with the entire transaction lifecycle.
We've partnered with agents, teams, boutique brokerages, and big box agencies to deliver superior services - every time.
For more information or to contact us about forming an alliance, head over to our Brokerage Partnerships page to learn more and get in touch.
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Lofty, previously known as Chime, is a comprehensive real estate CRM platform designed to help agents boost productivity and close more deals. With features like lead management, automated follow-up sequences, and detailed reporting, Lofty ensures agents stay on top of their pipeline. It also integrates seamlessly with websites and marketing tools, allowing agents to run targeted campaigns and capture more leads.
The platform’s built-in AI assistant analyzes interactions and suggests the best times to reach out, ensuring no opportunities are missed. Lofty is ideal for agents looking to streamline their workflow and grow their business efficiently.

Transform your direct mail strategy into a lead-generating machine with Mailbox Power. This end-to-end direct mail platform empowers real estate agents to design, send, and track personalized postcards and letters that convert. From neighborhood targeting to response tracking, Mailbox Power eliminates the guesswork and turns mail campaigns into measurable revenue.
More than just a mailing service, Mailbox Power is the complete solution for agents who want to scale their sphere through direct mail without the headaches. Create professional campaigns, identify high-intent prospects, capture leads from mail responses, and measure ROI—all in one intuitive platform. Pair Mailbox Power with LeadPages for landing page capture or Follow Up Boss for seamless CRM syncing.

Elfsight is a platform offering a variety of easy-to-use widgets to enhance your website without any coding skills needed. While it’s not specifically for real estate, you can use it to add things like contact forms, reviews, social media feeds, and more. These tools can help boost engagement and capture leads, making your real estate website look polished and professional. It’s a simple way to elevate your online presence and keep potential clients on your site longer.

Notion is a versatile productivity tool that helps real estate agents stay organized and streamline their workflow. With its customizable templates for tracking listings, managing transactions, and maintaining client databases, Notion provides a central hub for all business activities. Agents can create to-do lists, collaborate with team members, and store important documents—all in one place.
The platform’s flexibility allows users to design workflows that match their unique needs, whether it’s tracking leads, creating property marketing plans, or managing schedules. Notion is ideal for agents looking to simplify their processes and stay on top of their game.

Two CRMs. Very different philosophies. Here's how BoldTrail and Follow Up Boss actually stack up for California agents in 2026.
Every few months someone in a real estate Facebook group asks which CRM they should use. The thread hits 200 comments. Half the agents say BoldTrail changed their life. The other half say Follow Up Boss is the only thing that actually works. Nobody agrees. Everyone is slightly defensive about their choice.
The reason the debate never gets resolved is that both platforms are genuinely good at different things, for different kinds of agents, with different kinds of businesses. Comparing them like they're identical products competing for the same customer is part of why agents keep ending up on the wrong one.
This post is not going to tell you one is objectively better. It's going to tell you which one is better for your specific situation, because that's the only comparison that actually matters when you're the one writing the monthly check.
Both platforms have been through significant changes in 2026. BoldTrail completed its rebrand from kvCORE and has been rolling out updated AI features. Follow Up Boss was acquired by Zillow a couple of years back and has continued operating as a standalone product with its own roadmap. The competitive landscape has shifted. The pricing has shifted. What agents are actually getting for their money has shifted.
So here's the current, honest version of this comparison.

BoldTrail is the rebranded version of kvCORE, built and owned by Inside Real Estate. If you used kvCORE at any point in the last five years, you already know the bones of what BoldTrail is. The rebrand wasn't cosmetic. Inside Real Estate used it as an opportunity to streamline the interface, consolidate features that were scattered across the old platform, and push harder into AI-assisted lead engagement.
At its core, BoldTrail is an all-in-one platform. CRM, IDX website, lead generation tools, marketing automation, and reporting all live inside one system. That's the pitch and, to a meaningful degree, the reality. If you want a single login that handles most of what your real estate business needs to function, BoldTrail is built for that.
The platform is particularly strong for teams and brokerages. The lead routing, accountability dashboards, and agent performance reporting are designed with multiple users in mind. A team lead who wants to see pipeline activity across five agents from a single screen is exactly who BoldTrail was architected for.
The AI features have improved. The smart CRM functionality that automatically scores and prioritizes leads based on behavior has gotten more accurate. The automated follow-up sequences, the behavioral triggers that fire when a lead visits your IDX site repeatedly, these are legitimately useful and not just marketing copy.
The tradeoff is complexity. BoldTrail has a lot of features. More than most solo agents will ever use. And the learning curve is real enough that agents who don't invest time upfront in configuration often end up using two percent of what they're paying for. The BoldTrail features most agents never touch post goes into that in detail, and the pattern it describes is common enough to be a genuine concern before you sign up.
Follow Up Boss is a CRM first. Not an all-in-one platform, not a website builder, not a lead generation tool. A CRM. And it's very, very good at being a CRM.
The philosophy behind Follow Up Boss is different from BoldTrail's. Instead of building everything in-house, FUB is designed to integrate cleanly with the tools agents are already using. Your leads come in from Zillow, Realtor.com, your IDX site, your Facebook ads, wherever. Follow Up Boss pulls them all into one place, organizes them, and gives you a clean, fast interface for managing follow-up.
The interface is the thing agents talk about most. It's genuinely simple to use. Not simple in a watered-down way, simple in the way that a well-designed tool feels intuitive from day one. Agents who've bounced off complex CRMs before tend to actually stick with Follow Up Boss because the barrier to daily use is low enough that it becomes a habit instead of a chore.
The acquisition by Zillow raised eyebrows when it happened. The concern was that FUB would get folded into Zillow's ecosystem and lose its independence. That hasn't happened. Follow Up Boss has continued to operate as its own product with its own integrations and its own roadmap. Whether that continues long term is a fair question, but as of 2026 it's still the same platform agents chose it for.
The weakness is what it doesn't do. No built-in IDX website. No lead generation tools. No transaction management. If you want those things, you're paying for them separately and integrating them yourself. For some agents that's a feature. For others it's a dealbreaker.
This is where the two platforms diverge most sharply, and where your choice of lead sources should heavily influence your decision.
BoldTrail's lead management is built around the assumption that you're generating leads through the platform itself, or at least through its IDX website. The behavioral tracking that makes BoldTrail's smart CRM so useful, the ability to see that a specific lead has visited your site fourteen times and looked at the same neighborhood three times, only works because BoldTrail controls the website the lead is visiting. If your leads are coming from external sources, that behavioral data disappears.
Follow Up Boss makes no such assumption. It's built to aggregate leads from anywhere. Zillow, Realtor.com, Facebook Lead Ads, your own website, open house sign-in apps, manual entry from a networking event. Everything routes into one inbox and gets treated the same way. The speed-to-lead notifications, the automatic text and email responses, the lead routing rules, all of it works regardless of where the lead originated.
For agents running paid leads from multiple sources, Follow Up Boss's aggregation approach is a significant practical advantage. You're not managing five different inboxes or trying to remember which platform a lead came from. It's all in one place with one follow-up workflow.
For agents whose primary lead source is their IDX website and organic search traffic, BoldTrail's integrated approach means the CRM knows things about your leads that Follow Up Boss never could. That behavioral intelligence, while imperfect, is genuinely useful for prioritizing who to call first.
Neither approach is wrong. They're just built for different lead ecosystems. According to the National Association of Realtors, the majority of buyers use online search as a primary step in the home buying process. Where your leads come from should drive this decision more than anything else.
BoldTrail has pipeline management built in. You can track deals from initial contact through active transaction with status updates, task assignments, and team visibility all inside the same platform. It's not as deep as dedicated transaction coordination software, but it gives you a meaningful overview of where every deal stands without switching tabs.
Follow Up Boss is more limited here. The pipeline view is contact and deal stage focused, not transaction management focused. You can track where someone is in your sales process, pre-approval, active search, under contract, but you're not getting the document checklists, deadline tracking, or compliance oversight that a platform like Skyslope or a dedicated transaction coordinator would provide.
For agents who use a TC for transaction management and just need the CRM to handle the relationship side of the business, Follow Up Boss's pipeline is sufficient. For agents trying to run a leaner operation where one platform does more of the work, BoldTrail's deeper pipeline features are worth something.
This is also where the question of support infrastructure matters. Agents who handle their own transactions and need software to compensate for the lack of admin support will get more mileage from BoldTrail's depth. Agents who have a TC managing their files and just need the CRM to stay on top of relationships and follow-up will find Follow Up Boss more than adequate. If you're in the latter camp and haven't thought through what a TC actually handles versus what your CRM should handle, that distinction is worth getting clear on before you invest in either platform.

Pricing transparency is not either platform's strong suit, which is frustrating when you're trying to make a real decision.
BoldTrail's pricing is team and brokerage focused and typically requires a conversation with their sales team to get an actual number. Solo agent pricing exists but is not prominently advertised. What agents report paying varies significantly based on team size, whether you're bringing the platform in at a brokerage level, and what add-ons are included. The all-in-one nature of the platform means you're potentially replacing several other paid tools, which changes the value calculation.
Follow Up Boss publishes its pricing more transparently. The solo agent plan runs around $69 per month. The platform tier that unlocks the features most serious agents need runs higher, in the $150 to $500 range depending on team size and features. It does not include an IDX website, lead generation, or marketing tools, so those costs are additive.
The honest comparison is not just platform cost versus platform cost. It's total technology cost. If you're currently paying for a separate IDX website, a separate CRM, and separate email marketing tools, BoldTrail's all-in-one pricing may actually be comparable or lower. If you already have an IDX website you're happy with and just need a clean CRM layer on top of it, Follow Up Boss's lower entry point makes more sense.
HousingWire has covered the CRM landscape in real estate extensively, and the consistent finding is that agents overpay for platforms they underuse. Before you commit to either, be honest about which features you will actually open every day, not which ones look impressive in the demo. If your CRM has collected dust before, the problem probably wasn't the platform.
The solo agent question comes down to one thing: how much time do you have to configure and maintain your software?
BoldTrail is more powerful for a solo agent who generates leads through their website and has the patience to configure the platform properly upfront. The behavioral tracking, the automated follow-up sequences, the smart lead scoring, these features work in the background once they're set up and can genuinely save time. The problem is getting to that point. The setup investment is real, and agents who don't make it tend to end up with an expensive tool they barely use.
Follow Up Boss is better for a solo agent who generates leads from multiple sources, wants to get up and running quickly, and values simplicity over feature depth. The daily workflow in FUB is fast. Agents who actually open and use their CRM every day consistently report that the FUB interface makes it easier to maintain the habit. And a CRM you use every day at seventy percent of its capability beats a CRM you open twice a week at twenty percent.
For new agents or agents who've historically struggled with CRM adoption, Follow Up Boss's lower friction is a meaningful advantage. For established agents with a steady IDX lead source and the discipline to invest in setup, BoldTrail's depth eventually pays off.
Both platforms offer trials or demos. Use them. Don't make a twelve-month software decision based on a sales presentation. Spend a week in each interface doing your actual daily tasks and see which one you reach for naturally.
BoldTrail. Not close.
The platform was architected for teams. Lead routing rules, round-robin assignment, agent accountability dashboards, team-level reporting, role-based permissions, all of it is more sophisticated in BoldTrail than in Follow Up Boss. A team lead who needs visibility into what every agent on the team is doing with their leads, how fast they're responding, how many calls they're making, which deals are stalling, gets a much more complete picture from BoldTrail.
Follow Up Boss has team features and plenty of teams use it effectively. But the team management layer is not where FUB was built to compete. It's capable, not purpose-built.
If you're running a team of three or more agents and lead accountability is something you actively manage, BoldTrail is the stronger choice. The agent tools page has more context on how different platforms fit different team structures, and it's worth cross-referencing your current setup against what each platform actually requires to function at team scale.
Follow Up Boss wins on integrations. It connects to more external tools more cleanly than BoldTrail does, and that's by design. The platform is built on the assumption that agents have existing workflows and existing tools they're not going to abandon. FUB plays well with others.
Zapier connects Follow Up Boss to virtually any other tool in your stack. DocuSign, Google Calendar, Slack, your open house apps, your lead sources. The integrations are well-documented and generally work the way they're supposed to.
BoldTrail integrates with common tools but the philosophy is different. The platform wants to be your everything, so the integrations that exist tend to push data into BoldTrail rather than creating a bidirectional flow between equal platforms. If you're committed to a specific set of external tools and those tools are core to how you work, check BoldTrail's current integration list carefully before assuming it plays nicely with your stack.
According to Inman, the trend among high-producing agents is toward tighter, more integrated tech stacks rather than sprawling collections of loosely connected tools. Both platforms reflect that trend in different ways. BoldTrail solves it by consolidating everything internally. Follow Up Boss solves it by connecting cleanly to whatever you're already using.
Depends who's asking.
You should probably be on BoldTrail if you run a team of three or more agents, your primary lead source is your IDX website, you want one platform to handle CRM and website and marketing automation, and you're willing to invest real time in configuration upfront.
You should probably be on Follow Up Boss if you're a solo agent or small team, your leads come from multiple external sources, you've struggled with CRM adoption before and need something that feels fast and intuitive from day one, and you're comfortable paying separately for your IDX website and other tools.
The wrong answer is picking one because someone in a Facebook group said it changed their life. Their business is not your business. Their lead sources are not your lead sources. Their tolerance for software complexity is not yours.
Both platforms have a free trial or demo available. Use both before you decide. And if you want a clearer picture of how your current tech stack fits together before adding a CRM on top of it, our team at Relaxed Agent is happy to talk through it. We work with agents across California on all kinds of platforms and have a pretty good read on what actually gets used versus what collects dust.
The best CRM is still the one you open every morning. Everything else is a feature list.

Sellers visit your website before they ever call you. Here's why most agent seller pages push them away and what a converting one actually looks like.
Someone in your market decided last Tuesday that they want to sell their house. Maybe they've been thinking about it for six months. Maybe their neighbor just closed and they want to know what their place is worth. Either way, before they called anyone, they went to Google.
They searched. They clicked on a few agent websites. They landed on your seller page, or whatever you're calling the page that's supposed to speak to sellers. They read for about twelve seconds. And then they left.
No form submitted. No phone call. No appointment.
This happens dozens of times a month on most agent websites, and the agents have no idea because nobody told them. The traffic shows up in Google Analytics, bounces, and disappears. Meanwhile the agent is spending money on Zillow leads or postcards wondering why new business feels so hard to generate.
Your seller page is the problem. Not your market, not your price point, not your competition. The page itself is failing the people who are actively looking for a reason to call you. A seller who lands on your website is already warm. They're doing research. They're in the consideration phase. The only job your seller page has is to make them feel confident enough to pick up the phone or fill out a form.
Most seller pages don't come close to doing that job. Here's why.

Sellers do not make spontaneous decisions. They research. They compare. They quietly evaluate three or four agents before they reach out to any of them. By the time someone submits a form on your website, they've probably already looked at your Zillow profile, read a couple of your reviews, and checked your recent sales.
Your seller page is one stop on that research journey. But it's a critical one, because it's the one place on the internet that you fully control. Your Zillow profile is constrained by their layout. Your Google Business listing is limited. Your seller page is yours. You can say exactly what you want, position yourself exactly the way you want, and give sellers exactly the information they need to feel confident.
The problem is that most agents treat the seller page like a formality. A page that needs to exist because every real estate website has one. So it gets a generic headline, a stock photo of a house, a paragraph about how you're committed to getting sellers top dollar, and a contact form.
That's not a seller page. That's a placeholder.
According to the National Association of Realtors, the vast majority of sellers say they found their agent through a referral or online research. Online research. That means your website is actively in the running for every listing in your market, whether you realize it or not. The agents winning those listings aren't necessarily the best agents. They're the ones whose websites do the best job of answering the questions sellers are quietly asking.
Your headline is doing more damage than you know.
Open your seller page right now and read the first line. If it says anything close to "Thinking About Selling?" or "Ready to List Your Home?" or "Get Top Dollar for Your Property," you've already lost a significant percentage of the sellers who land there.
Not because those phrases are offensive. Because they're invisible. Every agent website in your market says some version of the same thing. Sellers have seen it so many times it registers as background noise. It tells them nothing about you, nothing about what makes you different, and nothing about what they can actually expect if they work with you.
The headline on your seller page has one job. It needs to stop a seller mid-scroll and make them feel like you understand their specific situation better than anyone else they've looked at.
That requires specificity. "We've sold 47 homes in Riverside County in the last 18 months, and our listings average 11 days on market" says something real. "Thinking About Selling?" says nothing. One of those makes a seller lean in. The other makes them hit the back button.
HubSpot's research on homepage conversion consistently shows that specific, benefit-driven headlines outperform generic ones by a significant margin. The same principle applies to every page on your site, especially the pages designed to convert high-intent visitors like sellers who are actively researching agents.
Here's the version most agents write: "I am a dedicated real estate professional committed to helping you sell your home for the best possible price in the shortest amount of time. With years of experience in the local market, I have the expertise and negotiation skills to ensure a smooth transaction."
Sellers read that and feel nothing. Because it says everything and nothing simultaneously. Every agent claims to be dedicated, experienced, and skilled at negotiation. The copy gives sellers no reason to believe any of it, and no reason to choose you over the three other agents they're looking at.
What sellers actually want to know when they land on your seller page is surprisingly specific. They want to know what your process looks like. What happens between the day they call you and the day the sign goes in the yard. What you do differently than the other agents they're considering. What your track record actually looks like in their price range and their neighborhood. And what it's going to cost them, or at least a ballpark.
Most seller pages answer none of those questions. They describe the agent in flattering terms, add a call to action, and hope for the best.
Show the process instead. A short, plain-language walk-through of what working with you actually looks like from first call to close gives sellers something concrete to evaluate. It also demonstrates confidence. Agents who hide their process are agents sellers don't trust. Agents who show their work are agents sellers want to call.
Your blog content can support this page too. If you've written anything about the selling process in California, link to it from the seller page. Sellers who are in research mode will read it. Every additional minute they spend on your site is a point in your favor.

Testimonials on seller pages fall into two categories: the ones that actually work and the ones that make sellers scroll past without reading.
The ones that don't work sound like this: "Working with [Agent Name] was a wonderful experience. She was very responsive and knowledgeable. I would highly recommend her to anyone looking to buy or sell." That's a perfectly nice review. It's also completely forgettable and could apply to any competent person in any service industry.
The ones that work sound like this: "We listed on a Thursday. We had 14 offers by Sunday. We sold for $38,000 over asking. [Agent Name] told us exactly what to expect at every step and was right every time." That's a testimonial that makes a seller pay attention.
Specificity is the difference. Sellers evaluating your page are looking for evidence that you've done for someone else what they want done for them. Generic praise doesn't provide that evidence. Specific outcomes do.
Pull your best testimonials. Not the nicest ones, the most specific ones. The ones that mention days on market, list price versus sale price, number of offers, or a difficult situation you helped navigate. Those are the testimonials that belong on your seller page, positioned near the top where sellers actually see them, not buried at the bottom after they've already decided to leave.
If you're also linking sellers to your reviews page from here, make sure the path is obvious and the anchor text is direct. Don't make them hunt for proof that you're good at your job.
According to BrightLocal's research on consumer reviews, the majority of consumers trust online reviews as much as personal recommendations. Sellers are consumers. Your testimonials are your most underused conversion tool, and your seller page is the highest-leverage place to use them.
"Request a Free Home Valuation" is a reasonable call to action. It's also one that a lot of sellers aren't ready for when they land on your page for the first time.
Here's the seller's internal monologue when they see that CTA on a cold visit: "If I fill this out, they're going to call me immediately. I'm not ready to talk to anyone yet. I'm just looking."
And they leave.
The problem isn't that you're offering a valuation. That's a smart offer. The problem is that it's the only offer. Your seller page has one ask, and it's a high-commitment ask for someone who showed up to do quiet research.
The fix is to give sellers a spectrum of ways to engage based on where they are in their decision process. The seller who's ready to talk gets the valuation request form. The seller who's still in research mode gets a lower-friction option, a link to a market report, a blog post about what selling in California actually involves, or a simple "text us your address for a quick estimate" option that feels less formal than a form submission.
You're not lowering your standards. You're meeting sellers where they are. The ones who aren't ready today will remember that your page gave them something useful without pressuring them. And when they're ready, you're the agent they think of first.
Forbes has written extensively on the role of low-friction lead capture in service businesses, and the core principle holds in real estate: the easier you make it for someone to take a small step, the more likely they are to take the bigger step later.
A breakdown of what sellers actually pay and receive.
Not a detailed commission negotiation. Not a legal disclaimer. A plain-language explanation of what your service includes, what the typical costs of selling look like in your market, and what sellers can expect to walk away with.
This is the section most agents skip because it feels like it opens up a commission conversation before you've even met the seller. That's the wrong way to look at it. Sellers are going to have that conversation regardless. The question is whether they're having it with you on your terms, on your website, where you can frame it properly, or whether they're having it with a competitor who's willing to be more transparent.
Transparency converts. Sellers who feel like an agent is hiding something don't call that agent. Sellers who feel like an agent is being straight with them do.
A simple section that says "Here's what selling typically costs in [your market], here's what's negotiable, and here's what you can expect to net based on current market conditions" does more to build seller confidence than any amount of marketing copy about being committed to their success. It also positions you as an expert who understands the financial reality of a transaction, which is exactly what sellers want in an agent.
If you've worked with a transaction coordinator long enough to know where deals get complicated, this is also a good place to briefly address the parts of the selling process that stress people out. Disclosure requirements, inspection negotiations, timeline expectations. Sellers who feel informed are sellers who feel confident. Sellers who feel confident call you.

To be concrete about it, here's what the best seller pages do that most agent seller pages don't.
A specific, market-focused headline that leads with outcomes instead of personality. Something that tells a seller in the first three seconds that you know their market and have a track record worth looking at.
A short process section. Five to seven steps, plain language, no jargon. What happens from the first call to the day the deal closes. Sellers are scared of the unknown. A visible process removes that fear.
Outcome-specific testimonials. Not character references. Results. Days on market, sale price relative to list price, number of offers, something a seller can evaluate against their own goals.
A transparent cost and net section. Even a rough one. Sellers who understand the math are sellers who are ready to have a real conversation.
Multiple CTA options tiered by commitment level. A valuation request for the ready seller, a market report or useful link for the one who's still deciding.
A photo of you that looks like a human being, not a corporate headshot from 2014. Sellers are choosing a person. They want to see one.
Links to supporting content. If you have blog posts about pricing a home correctly, the selling process in California, or what a transaction coordinator does to protect the deal, link them here. Sellers in research mode will read them. Every useful thing you give them is a reason to trust you.
None of this is complicated. It's just deliberate. Most seller pages are built by people thinking about what an agent wants to say, not what a seller needs to hear. Flip that and the page changes entirely.
A seller does their initial research on their phone. They're on the couch at 9pm, kids are asleep, and they're finally getting around to looking up agents they've been meaning to check out. Your seller page loads on a four-inch screen and either earns their attention or doesn't.
Pull your phone out right now and navigate to your seller page. A few things to check: does the headline still read as one clean line or does it wrap into three awkward lines that break the sentence? Is the valuation request form usable with your thumbs or does it require pinching and zooming? Does your photo load at a reasonable size and resolution or does it look like a postage stamp? Is there a tap-to-call button somewhere in the first scroll?
Google's mobile-first indexing means your mobile experience isn't just a conversion issue, it's an SEO issue. A seller page that's broken or clunky on mobile ranks lower in search results, which means fewer sellers ever find it in the first place.
If your site is built on Webflow, the mobile responsiveness is generally solid but still requires manual review at each breakpoint. If you're on an older WordPress theme or a template that hasn't been updated in a few years, the mobile experience is probably worse than you think. The website tips section of the blog has more on what a fully mobile-optimized agent site looks like end to end, including the contact page fixes that pair with a strong seller page.
You don't need a new website to fix your seller page. You need about two hours and a willingness to rewrite it from the seller's perspective instead of your own.
Start with the headline. Make it specific to your market and your results. Then add the process section. Then swap your generic testimonials for your most results-specific ones. Then add a secondary CTA for sellers who aren't ready to request a valuation yet. Then check the whole thing on your phone.
That's it. Those five changes will make your seller page perform better than ninety percent of the agent sites in your market, because ninety percent of agent sites haven't done any of them.
If you want a seller page that's built to convert from the ground up, our digital solutions team works with California agents on Webflow builds designed specifically around lead capture and listing appointment generation. You can also reach out directly if you want a second set of eyes on your current page before you start rewriting.
The sellers are out there doing research right now. The only question is whether your page gives them a reason to call you or a reason to keep looking.

Lofty has serious features and a serious price tag. Before you sign up, here's what solo agents actually experience on the platform in 2026.
Every few months a platform gets hot in real estate circles. Agents talk about it at broker meetings, it shows up in every Facebook group, and suddenly everyone either swears by it or has a strong opinion about why they switched away. Lofty is in that conversation right now, and has been for a while.
The pitch is compelling. AI-powered CRM, built-in IDX website, lead routing, predictive analytics, automated follow-up, a mobile app that actually works. It sounds like the kind of thing that would let a solo agent run like a small team. And for some agents, that's exactly what it does.
For others, it's an expensive subscription they stopped logging into by month four.
This post is for the agent who's actually trying to figure out which one they're going to be before handing over a credit card number.

Lofty, formerly known as Chime, rebranded in 2023 and has been positioning itself as an all-in-one platform for real estate agents and teams ever since. The core product is a CRM with built-in lead management, but calling it just a CRM undersells what it's trying to do.
The platform combines contact management, an IDX-powered agent website, automated drip campaigns, a dialer, social media tools, and an AI assistant that Lofty calls its "AI Assistant" for lead engagement. The idea is that everything an agent needs to manage their business, from the moment a lead comes in to the day they close, lives inside one platform.
That's an ambitious promise. And it's worth understanding what's actually included at each tier before you evaluate whether it's worth it for your specific situation. You can see the full feature breakdown on the Lofty agent tools page and cross-reference it against what you're actually using day to day in your current setup.
Lofty's pricing has evolved over the years and isn't always the most transparent on the surface. The base plan for a solo agent generally starts around $400 per month, though the number you see can shift depending on whether you're paying annually, what add-ons you include, and whether you're coming in through a promotional offer.
That's not a small number for a solo agent. For context, that's roughly $4,800 a year for the software alone, before you factor in any paid lead sources you're plugging into it, any additional dialer minutes, or any setup fees if you're migrating from another CRM. Inman has covered Lofty's pricing structure in depth, and the general consensus is that the platform justifies the cost at volume, meaning agents running enough transactions or leads to actually use the full feature set.
The question for a solo agent isn't whether Lofty is a good product. It generally is. The question is whether you're going to use enough of it to make $400 a month feel like an investment rather than an overhead line item you resent every time you check your bank statement. If you're already paying for a separate CRM, a separate website, and separate email tools, the math might actually work in Lofty's favor. If you're a newer agent with a thin pipeline, it probably doesn't.
Here's where the honest conversation starts. Lofty has a lot of features. A lot. And the demo looks fantastic precisely because it shows you everything working together at once, the AI responding to a lead, the pipeline updating automatically, the website pulling in IDX listings, the analytics dashboard populating with data.
In practice, solo agents tend to use a narrower slice of that.
The IDX website is one of the most-used features. If you don't already have a solid real estate website with IDX integrated, Lofty's built-in site is genuinely good and removes the need to pay separately for that. The contact management and pipeline tracking get used consistently because those are fundamental to running any active business. The mobile app gets used a lot because solo agents are always on the move.
The AI lead engagement tool, the social media posting features, the advanced reporting dashboards, and the more sophisticated automation sequences? Those get set up in month one and rarely revisited. Not because they don't work, but because solo agents don't have the bandwidth to build and manage complex automation sequences while also running their business. The BoldTrail features most agents never touch dynamic plays out similarly at Lofty. The platform is capable of more than most solo agents ever extract from it.

To be fair to the platform, there are specific scenarios where Lofty is genuinely hard to beat for a solo agent.
If you're running paid leads, Lofty's lead routing and automated follow-up is legitimately strong. The AI assistant can respond to a new lead within seconds of them registering on your site, which matters enormously for conversion. According to research from the National Association of Realtors, the speed of initial contact is one of the strongest predictors of lead conversion. Lofty's automation handles that first touchpoint faster than any solo agent manually could, especially when the lead comes in at 11pm on a Saturday.
The IDX website integration is also a genuine advantage. Having your lead capture, your property search, and your CRM all talking to each other without manual imports or Zapier workarounds reduces friction in a way that actually saves time. For agents who've dealt with the headache of syncing a standalone IDX site with a separate CRM, the all-in-one architecture is a real quality-of-life improvement.
The mobile app is one of the better ones in the category. Solo agents who are always in the car, always between appointments, need a CRM they can actually use from their phone without wanting to throw it out the window. Lofty's mobile experience is solid enough that it passes that test.
The biggest limitation for solo agents is the same thing that makes Lofty great for teams: it's built to scale. A lot of the platform's most powerful features, things like lead routing rules, round-robin assignment, team reporting, and role-based permissions, are designed for organizations with multiple people. As a solo agent, you're paying for infrastructure you'll never use.
The learning curve is also real. Lofty is not a platform you set up in an afternoon. Getting it configured properly, migrating your existing contacts, building out your automation sequences, and customizing your IDX site takes time. A lot of it. Agents who dive in without a plan end up with a half-configured CRM that does less than the spreadsheet they were using before.
Customer support has been a consistent sticking point in agent reviews of the platform. The onboarding experience has improved, but getting timely help when something breaks or a configuration doesn't work the way you expected it to can be frustrating. For a solo agent with no admin support, a day lost troubleshooting a CRM is a day not spent in front of clients. This is actually one of the underrated arguments for keeping your tech stack lean and your support structure human, whether that's a TC or a trusted brokerage admin.
If your CRM has been collecting dust in the past, adding a more complex platform on top of the same habits won't fix the underlying problem. Lofty is a multiplier. It amplifies what you're already doing. If what you're already doing is inconsistent, it'll amplify that too.

The agents who get genuine value from Lofty share a few common traits. They're running paid lead sources, specifically portal leads or Google ads, and they need automation to handle the volume and speed of initial follow-up. They're doing enough transaction volume that a $400 monthly platform cost is a rounding error rather than a budget line they're watching. They're willing to invest time upfront in learning and configuring the platform. And they have at least some consistency in their follow-up habits already, because Lofty works best when it's extending a process that exists, not creating one from scratch.
Team leads and small teams get even more from it. If you're managing even one buyer's agent or one admin, the team-level features start earning their cost. The lead routing, the accountability dashboards, the ability to see your entire operation from one screen, that's where Lofty's architecture really makes sense.
Solo agents who are newer to the business, running on a tighter budget, or still building a consistent lead pipeline may find that a lighter CRM and a strong lead generation strategy gets them further than a feature-heavy platform they're not using to capacity. There's also something to be said for tools that integrate well with each other rather than one platform that tries to do everything. Zapier, for instance, can connect a simpler CRM to the rest of your workflow for a fraction of the cost.
Lofty is a legitimate platform. It's not vaporware, it's not overhyped in a way that completely misrepresents what it does, and for the right agent it genuinely delivers on its promise of a connected, automated business operation.
But the right agent isn't every agent. If you're a solo agent with a steady paid lead source, a track record of actually following up consistently, and the time to invest in learning a complex platform, Lofty is worth a serious look. Request a demo, ask hard questions about what onboarding support actually looks like, and get the real pricing for your specific setup in writing before you commit.
If you're earlier in your business, running mostly on referrals and sphere of influence, or if you've had a history of buying software and not using it, start smaller. A well-configured Follow Up Boss or even a disciplined Notion setup will serve you better than a $400 platform you log into twice a month.
The best CRM is the one you actually use. That's not a cliché. It's the only metric that matters. You can explore what popular agent tools other California agents are using, or reach out to our team if you want a second opinion on your current tech stack before making a switch.
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Agents obsess over their homepage and ignore their contact page. That's backwards. Here's what a contact page that actually converts looks like.
Someone found you. Maybe through Google, maybe through a referral, maybe because they saw your yard sign and typed your name in. They clicked around your site. They liked what they saw. And then they went to your contact page and left without sending a message.
That happens more than you think. And almost no one talks about it because contact pages feel like a solved problem. You put a form. You put your email. Maybe a phone number. Done. Except it's not done. The contact page is where the decision to actually reach out gets made or abandoned, and most real estate websites treat it like a footnote.
This is the one fix that costs you nothing but attention.

Agents put real thought into their homepage. They agonize over their bio photo, wordsmith their tagline, and argue with their web designer about the shade of blue in the header. Then they slap a Wufoo form on the contact page and call it a day.
The problem is that the contact page is the last stop before someone becomes a lead. It's where all that homepage work either pays off or doesn't. A visitor who gets to your contact page is already interested. You don't have to convince them you're a real estate agent. You've already done that. What you have to do now is make it feel safe and easy to reach out.
Most contact pages don't do that. They do the opposite. They present a sterile, impersonal form with no context, no warmth, and no indication of what happens after someone hits submit. And then the agent wonders why their website isn't generating leads. If you've already put work into writing a homepage that converts, the contact page is where you finish the job. Don't leave it unfinished.
Walk through a dozen agent contact pages right now and you'll see the same things: a heading that says "Contact Me" or "Get In Touch," a form with four fields (name, email, phone, message), and sometimes a photo of a house or a city skyline that has nothing to do with contacting a person.
What visitors are actually looking for when they land on a contact page is reassurance. They want to know they're reaching a real human, that their message won't disappear into a void, and that they're not about to get added to an automated drip sequence that texts them six times a day. People are genuinely anxious about initiating contact with a real estate agent. They worry about being pressured. They worry about being locked in.
Your contact page needs to address that anxiety without ever naming it. A sentence that says something like "No pressure, no spam, just a real conversation when you're ready" does more conversion work than any form redesign. According to Nielsen Norman Group, users make trust judgments about websites in milliseconds, and those judgments stick. Your contact page has about three seconds to feel trustworthy before someone decides to close the tab.
Trust signals are the elements on a page that tell a visitor they're dealing with a legitimate, responsive professional. On a contact page, they're not optional. They're the difference between a form submission and a back button click.
The most effective ones for real estate agent contact pages are straightforward but consistently skipped.
A real photo of you, not a logo, not a house, you, positioned near the form. People contact people. If the contact page is faceless, it feels like submitting a ticket to a call center. A short, specific sentence about response time, something like "I respond to all messages within a few hours, including evenings and weekends," signals that there's an actual person on the other end who takes this seriously. A phone number that's clickable on mobile. Real reviews or a single pull quote from a past client placed close to the form, not buried at the bottom.
If you've done the work of optimizing your real estate website for search, you've already gotten people to your site. The trust signals on the contact page are what convert that traffic into conversations. Don't skip the last step.

Forms are friction. Every field you add is another reason for someone to reconsider. Most agent contact forms ask for more than they need because the agent wants more data, not because the visitor wants to give it.
The sweet spot for a real estate contact form is three fields: name, preferred contact method (phone or email), and a single open-ended question like "What can I help you with?" That's it. If you're asking for home price range, buying timeline, current address, and whether they're pre-approved, you've turned a contact form into a mortgage application. Nobody fills those out. They close the tab.
HubSpot's research on form conversion has shown consistently that reducing form fields from four to three can lift completion rates meaningfully, and going from six fields to three can more than double them. The information you're not collecting on the form you'll collect in the first phone call. What matters is getting to the phone call.
Also worth checking: is your form actually working? Broken contact forms are more common than they should be on agent websites. Test yours right now by submitting a message to yourself. If you don't receive it within five minutes, your leads have been disappearing into nowhere and you didn't know. While you're looking at your website features, a functional contact form is number one on that list for a reason.
"I'd love to help you with your real estate needs." Nobody has ever read that sentence and felt compelled to reach out.
The copy on a contact page should do one of two things: reduce the friction of reaching out, or tell the person specifically what reaching out will get them. Most agent contact pages do neither. They use generic placeholder language that sounds like it was written to fill space, not to talk to a human being.
What works better is specificity and directness. Tell people exactly what they can expect after they submit the form. Tell them what kinds of questions you're good at answering. Tell them if there's a better way to reach you quickly, like texting, versus filling out the form. Forbes has noted that buyers and sellers evaluate responsiveness and communication style as the top factors in choosing an agent. Your contact page is the first test of both.
One thing to actively stop saying: "Feel free to reach out." It's passive, it puts the burden entirely on the visitor, and it communicates nothing. Replace it with a direct invitation that acknowledges what they're there for. Something like "If you're thinking about buying or selling in [city], let's talk. Even if you're still a few months out, early conversations cost nothing and usually save you time."
That's honest, human, and removes the pressure. It also works.

Most people who land on your contact page are on their phone. Not their laptop, not their desktop at work. Their phone. Which means your contact page needs to be evaluated on a phone, not designed on a desktop and assumed to work.
Pull out your phone right now and navigate to your contact page. A few things to check: does the form take up the full screen width, or is it squished and requires horizontal scrolling? Are your phone number and email address tap-to-call and tap-to-email links? Does the submit button sit above the keyboard when a form field is active, or is it hidden below it and impossible to tap? Is your headshot cropped in a way that looks intentional on mobile, or is it cutting off your forehead?
Google's mobile usability research has confirmed for years that mobile experience directly impacts search rankings, not just conversion. A contact page that loads slowly or breaks on mobile isn't just losing leads. It's actively damaging your SEO. Given that your contact page is probably linked from every other page on your site via the nav bar, it's one of the highest-traffic pages you have. And if it's broken on the device most people use, you're doing real damage.
If you're on a Webflow, Squarespace, or WordPress build and haven't done a full mobile review lately, start there before anything else. The website tips category has more on what a mobile-optimized agent site actually looks like end to end.
A next step for people who aren't ready yet.
Not everyone who visits your contact page is ready to fill out a form. Some of them are still in research mode. Some are six months out from a move. Some are curious but not committed. If your contact page has only a form and nothing else, those visitors leave with nothing, and you leave with no chance of staying in front of them.
The fix is simple. Add one low-friction alternative below or beside the form. A link to your most useful blog content, a calendar link for a no-pressure call, a link to a neighborhood guide or a market update, something that gives the not-yet-ready visitor a reason to stay in your orbit without committing to a conversation. Even a line that says "Not ready to reach out yet? Browse our resources here" with a link to your popular agent tools or blog gives that visitor something to do besides leave.
The agents who convert the most website traffic into actual clients aren't just good at generating visits. They're good at capturing the people who aren't quite ready yet. Your contact page should work for both. The form for the ready ones, the soft offer for everyone else.
If your website needs a bigger overhaul than a contact page fix, our digital solutions team works with agents on Webflow builds that are designed to convert from the ground up. Or if you're just starting to think through what your site actually needs, reach out here and we can talk through it. No form required on our end either.