Buyers today research for weeks before they even think of picking up the phone. They watch videos, check reviews, scroll neighbourhood pages. By the time they reach out, they already have a shortlist in mind.

This is exactly why smart real estate marketing has become the real engine behind growth for agents and brokerages across Canada. In this blog, we will break down what is actually working in 2026 and how you can use it.

Why Marketing Has Become the Backbone of Real Estate Business Development

Ten years back, a good signboard and a strong handshake could get you far. That is not true anymore. Rising interest rates, tighter inventory, and more informed buyers have changed the game completely.

Today, a well-planned real estate marketing strategy is not an extra cost. It is the foundation of real estate business development for any agent who wants to grow steadily instead of chasing one deal at a time.

Here is what has changed the most:

  • Buyers compare 4 to 5 agents online before contacting even one
  • Listings without video get scrolled past in seconds
  • Referrals still matter, but they now start with a Google search first
  • Brokerages with weak online presence lose younger buyers completely


If your marketing is an afterthought, your business growth will always feel like an afterthought too.

The Shift in Buyer Behaviour: Canadians Are Researching Before They Call

Canadian buyers in 2026 are doing far more homework than they used to. They are using AI search tools, watching short videos, and reading community-specific content before they shortlist any agent. 

This shift means your first impression often happens online, long before a phone call or a showing. If that first impression is generic, you have already lost the buyer’s attention.

Hyper-local content wins the attention game

Buyers are not searching for “Toronto real estate” anymore. They are searching for specifics.

  • Which street has better resale value
  • How long is the commute from a particular neighbourhood
  • What are the school options nearby
  • What does a two-bedroom actually cost in that pocket of the city

Agents who create content around these exact questions build trust faster than agents posting generic listing photos. This is a simple but powerful part of real estate business development that many agents still ignore.

Consistency beats perfection here. An agent posting simple, useful content every week will outgrow an agent posting once a month with perfect lighting and zero personality.

Real Estate Lead Generation in 2026: What Is Actually Working

Everyone wants more leads, but not every channel gives the same return. Some channels bring quick numbers with low quality. Others take longer to build but bring buyers who are ready to move.

Here is a quick comparison of channels agents are using for real estate lead generation right now:

 

Channel

Best for

Effort level

Short-form video (Reels, Shorts)

Brand visibility, young buyers

Medium

AI search optimisation

Long-term discovery and trust

High initially

Email nurture sequences

Warming up cold leads

Low ongoing

Paid social ads

Quick short-term leads

Medium to high

Referral and review systems

High-quality, low-cost leads

Low ongoing

No single channel works in isolation. A brokerage that mixes video content with a solid email nurture system usually sees steadier results than one relying only on paid ads.

Real estate lead generation works best when it feels like a system, not a one time campaign.

A practical video routine for every listing

Most agents quit video because they try to make it perfect. Drop that idea completely. Here’s a routine that takes under 20 minutes per listing and still gets results:

  • Walk through the property once with your phone, no script, just point out what you’d notice as a buyer..
  • Record a second, ten-second clip standing outside. You can say the neighbourhood name and one honest fact about it.
  • Post the walkthrough as a Reel and the outside clip as a Story the same day.
  • Reply to every single comment within the first hour. This is what actually pushes it to more people.

 

Do this for every listing, even the small ones. After about eight to ten videos, a pattern usually shows up. One neighbourhood or one type of property starts pulling more views than the rest. That’s your signal to lean in harder on that specific angle.

Turning cold emails into warm conversations

Cold leads don’t disappear because agents give up on them too early. Try this instead of a generic monthly newsletter.

  • Week 1: Send a short welcome email with three listings that match what they searched for
  • Week 3: Send one useful piece of content, a mortgage rate update or a neighbourhood price shift
  • Week 6: Ask a direct question, something like “Still looking, or did your plans change?”
  • Week 10: If no reply, drop the frequency to once a month and keep sending value only

This kind of sequence takes maybe an hour to set up once, and it runs on its own after that. Most of the leads that convert three or four months later come from exactly this kind of quiet, consistent follow-up, not from a big splashy campaign.

Where AI Actually Fits In

AI in real estate stopped being a buzzword a while back. It’s now part of how a lot of serious agents get through their week.

At MarkitMe, we’ve watched agents save real hours by letting AI handle the repetitive stuff: drafting first versions of captions, writing rough follow-up emails, turning long listing details into short social posts.

The agent still edits everything and adds their own voice before it goes out. AI just clears the blank page; it doesn’t replace the person behind the message.

The part most agents are missing

Buyers are now asking AI tools questions directly, things like “best neighbourhoods for families in Toronto” or “should I buy pre-construction or resale in Vaughan right now.”

Barely any agents have content built to answer these. The few who do are getting mentioned in places their competitors haven’t even thought to check yet.

This isn’t the future of real estate marketing anymore. It’s already happening quietly in the background.

From Leads to Long-Term Business Development

Closing a deal feels like the finish line. It isn’t. The real work starts right after the keys get handed over, and most agents miss this completely.

A lead becomes a client through one good transaction. But a client becomes a repeat source of business through everything you do after that transaction ends, and this is exactly where most agents go quiet.

Think about the last three people you helped buy or sell a home. Have you spoken to any of them since closing day? If the answer is no, you’re leaving money on the table without realising it.

  • Check in later: Six months after closing, send a short message. Ask how the new place is treating them. You should keep in touch with your leads. Nothing salesy, just a genuine check-in. This single habit keeps you on their radar for the next favour, referral, or move.

 

  • Share local updates: Skip the generic national housing news. Send something specific to their street or neighbourhood instead. It can be a price change nearby, a new development, or a new pre-con development. It shows you’re still paying attention to their world, not just chasing your next commission.

 

  • Time your reviews: Don’t wait weeks to ask for a review. Ask right after a good moment, maybe the day they get their keys or right after a successful negotiation. This is very important for any agent. Emotions are high, gratitude is fresh, and the review writes itself.

 

  • Track referrals: A simple spreadsheet works fine. Note who referred whom, and thank that person properly when the referral turns into a closed deal. This one habit alone keeps your best sources of business engaged for years.


If building this kind of structured follow-up feels like a lot to manage on top of showings and paperwork, it helps to bring in outside support.
Digital marketing services in Toronto often set up these nurture systems for agents so nothing slips through after closing day.

We remind our clients at MarkitMe often that one well-nurtured past client tends to bring in more business over a few years than five brand new cold leads ever will. Cold leads need convincing from scratch. Past clients already trust you, and that trust is worth more than any ad spend.

This is the quieter half of real estate business development, the half most agents skip because chasing new leads feels more urgent, even when it clearly isn’t more valuable. Long-term thinking simply pays off more than short-term hustle ever does.