The Simple Letter that Helped Drive a $2.5M Listing Campaign

A plain-text letter with zero design ended up outproducing high-end marketing pieces inside a $2.5M listing campaign. Here’s exactly why it worked, and how agents can copy the strategy.
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Agents often obsess over the big, polished deliverables, the cinematic listing video, the beautiful brochure, the launch event, and the paid ads. 

These pieces matter. And in a multi-million-dollar listing campaign, they absolutely have to be there.

But inside one of the largest listing rollouts I executed this year (a fully renovated $2.5M equestrian property in Yorba Linda), the most unexpectedly powerful piece of marketing wasn’t the part we spent the most time or money on.

It was a plain-text letter.

No branding.
No design.
No QR codes.

Just a mail-merged name, a specific message, and a simple invitation to reach out.

And that letter turned out to be one of the highest-ROI elements in the entire multi-channel campaign that ultimately produced:

  • A $2M buyer who went into escrow directly from the launch event
  • Three calls directly from the letter
  • One listing appointment from the letter
  • Two additional active buyers (one already writing offers)
  • Two seller opportunities still in follow-up
  • A surge of neighborhood visibility and engagement

The lesson isn’t that the letter replaced the campaign.

It’s that simple, personal communication can punch far above its weight when you layer it into a strategically built marketing stack.

This breakdown walks you through exactly why it worked, and how you can replicate it.

Inside a $2.5M Listing Campaign

This property deserved a full-scale, multi-channel rollout. The campaign included:

  • A just-listed postcard campaign
  • A door-knocking blitz before launch
  • A digital-first media push
  • Paid ads with retargeting
  • A themed launch party (yes, a petting zoo)
  • Custom print marketing
  • A full open-house experience
  • A plain-text letter mailed to 500 surrounding homes

The letter was not the most glamorous part of the campaign. But from a cost-efficiency standpoint, it became one of the most effective.

The Plain-Text Letter 

The reason the letter worked is that it felt personal. It made neighbors feel like insiders, and gave people a reason to reach out.

Here’s the exact copy I used. Steal it and make it your own: 

Dear Neighbor,

Even if you love your current home, this one might make you look twice.

In just a few weeks, a fully renovated 4-bedroom, 3-bath equestrian home is set to hit the market at XXX Gordon Ln, but I wanted you to hear about it first.

It’s rare to find a property like this in Yorba Linda, one that blends modern comfort with true lifestyle value:

    • Complete top-to-bottom renovation
    • Resort-style pool + spa
    • Private orchard bursting with avocados + oranges
    • Room for 2 horses and access to equestrian living
    • Privacy, with space to breathe

We’re planning to go live on September 24, but I’m reaching out early because I know how connected this neighborhood is and how often the next buyer is just one introduction away.

If you or someone you care about has been looking for a home like this, now’s the time to reach out before the public ever sees it. I’d be happy to give you a quiet preview or share more details.

Also, as a heads-up: we’re planning a big marketing push, and the buzz may mean a little more traffic on Gordon Lane around launch week. I hope you’ll forgive the excitement; this one deserves it.

If you’d like a private look or just want to talk about the market, I’d love to connect.
Call or text me directly at [phone number].

Warmly,
Krys Benyamein

A Note on Mail-Merge Personalization

The letter didn’t say “Dear Neighbor.” Every letter used the actual homeowner’s name.

This one detail significantly increases open rates, read rates, and response rates. Plain text and  personalization is one of the most potent combinations in direct mail.

How To Deploy This In Your Own Market

This took just about an hour to draft and $470 to mail 500 letters. The ROI has been incredible, and that’s before counting opportunities still in follow-up. 

Here’s the framework we used to send the letter:

  • 300–600 surrounding homes
  • Plain white envelope
  • Printed address label
  • No logos or branding
  • Mail-merged homeowner names
  • Text-only letter with property and lifestyle or neighborhood features
  • Direct phone number (not a website link)
  • Sent 2–3 weeks before launch

Final Thought

This letter wasn’t flashy. It wasn’t expensive. It wasn’t designed.

But it delivered real conversations, and conversations are the currency of real estate.

When you’re marketing a multi-million-dollar listing, you turn over every stone. You activate every channel. You create every possible touchpoint.

And sometimes, the quietest touchpoint delivers the loudest result.

If you want more resources like this, including social and print templates, scripts, and live office hours sessions, you’ll find all of it inside BAMx. Start your free trial today for access to all of it for 7 days.  

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About the Author

Meet Krys Benyamein, the driving force behind Estate of Grace Real Estate. A trailblazer in video-first marketing, Krys helps lead his team to an average of 100 home sales per year. His journey from lawyer and public defender to realtor and investor showcases his diverse expertise. When not closing deals, Krys conquers mountains both figuratively and literally and recently summited Mount Everest, the tallest point on earth. He's a devoted family man, cherishing time with his wife, Paige, a plastic surgeon and their first child, Hendriks.

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