INDUSTRIES · REAL ESTATE · PROPERTY LAUNCHES

Property Launch Campaigns That Sell on the Day, Not After Six Months of Price Reductions

A successful property launch is not produced by a launch event — it is produced by 12 months of audience development before the launch event. DAM Networks plans and executes property launch campaigns where the registered interest database, the media coverage, and the agent relationships are built before the sales centre opens.

THE PROBLEM

Property developments that launch without a pre-built audience are not launching — they are opening and then hoping.

The commercial outcome of a property launch is determined before the launch date in almost all cases. The size and quality of the registered interest database, the awareness level among investor audiences for investment-led products, the agent relationships for products with intermediary distribution, and the quality of the digital and print collateral that has been in the market during the pre-launch phase — these factors predict launch velocity far more reliably than the launch event itself. A launch event is the conversion mechanism for an audience that has been built. Without a pre-built audience, the launch event introduces the product to people who have not previously considered it — and a purchase decision that took others 12 months of research will not be made on launch day.

Pre-launch programmes are commonly underinvested relative to launch-period spending. Developers and agents allocate the majority of their marketing budget to the launch window — the event, the advertising, the media, the collateral — and a fraction to the 12 months before it. The result is high launch-period spend against a small pre-built audience, producing a slow release and a long tail of unsold units at increasing discount. The same total budget, reallocated with 40 to 50 percent in pre-launch audience development and 50 to 60 percent in the launch window, consistently produces better launch-period absorption at full price.

DAM Networks plans property launch campaigns starting from the pre-launch phase, with the launch event positioned as the conversion moment for an audience developed over the preceding 12 to 18 months — not as the beginning of the marketing programme.

CAPABILITIES

What DAM delivers across property launch campaigns

Pre-Launch Audience Development

12 to 18-month pre-launch programme covering digital lead capture, investor audience development, agent briefing programme, press and editorial outreach, and registered interest database build. The pre-launch programme is documented with milestone targets — database size, agent registrations, media coverage — that predict launch-period performance.

Brand and Collateral Development

Development brand identity, CGI and visualisation briefing, brochure and digital collateral, sales centre design, and signage. Collateral that is available in pre-launch for registered interest nurture, not only produced for the launch event.

Launch Event Management

Launch event concept, venue and production management, VIP preview programme for priority registered interest contacts, agent launch briefings, and press day management. The event is structured to convert pre-built audience, not introduce the product to people who have not previously engaged.

Post-Launch Sales Support

CRM pipeline management for post-launch registered interest, digital retargeting of non-converted launch attendees, media and PR coverage for ongoing phase releases, and digital advertising maintenance during the sales period.

DAM APPROACH

Property launch campaigns are planned backwards from the launch date — with the pre-launch milestones determining the launch strategy, not the other way around.

The launch campaign plan begins with the target launch-period absorption: how many units must be sold in the first 30 days, the first 90 days, and the full sales period. Working backwards from those targets, DAM establishes the registered interest database size required to produce that absorption at typical conversion rates for the product type, price point, and market conditions. The pre-launch programme is then designed to build that database — with monthly milestone targets that allow the launch timeline to be adjusted if the audience development is behind target.

Investor and intermediary audiences are developed separately from the owner-occupier audience. Investment-led properties or products with significant investor allocation require early engagement with investor networks, property investment clubs, and overseas buyer audiences — channels that require 12 to 18 months of relationship development and cannot be activated in the launch window. The investor allocation strategy is planned at the pre-launch stage, not as a decision made at launch when the absorptions figures are below target.

Press and editorial coverage is planned and solicited over the pre-launch period rather than concentrated at the launch date. A development that has appeared in relevant property and lifestyle media three times in the 12 months before launch is a known quantity to the audience by the time the launch event arrives. A development that generates its first press coverage at the launch event starts from zero recognition — which is the audience development position that produces slow launch-period absorption.

WORK WITH DAM NETWORKS

If the launch campaign begins in the month before the launch event, the audience development phase has already been missed — and the launch is starting from zero recognition.

DAM Networks plans and executes property launch campaigns starting 12 to 18 months before the launch date. The launch event is the conversion moment for a pre-built audience — not the beginning of the marketing programme.

FREQUENTLY ASKED QUESTIONS

Questions about property launch campaigns

The registered interest database size required for a target launch-period absorption depends on the conversion rate from registered interest to reservation, which varies by product type, price point, and market conditions. For a UK residential development in a mainstream price bracket, conversion rates from qualified registered interest to reservation typically range from 3 to 8 percent, depending on how well the pre-launch nurture programme has been managed and how closely the registered interest matches the buyer profile. A development targeting 30 reservations in the first 30 days from a 5 percent conversion rate requires 600 active, qualified registered interest contacts at launch. The database size target should be set at the start of the pre-launch programme — not discovered at the end of it.

A VIP preview event serves two functions: it rewards and converts the highest-intent registered interest contacts before the general launch, and it creates urgency among the broader registered interest database by demonstrating that early access is available and that a limited number of units will be reserved before the public launch. VIP preview access should be tiered by engagement level and buying intent signal rather than by registration date alone — a contact who has attended a show home viewing and requested a specific unit type is more likely to convert than a contact who registered 14 months ago and has not engaged since. The preview event should not be so large that it dilutes the exclusivity signal that drives conversion — a preview event with 600 invitees has the same urgency profile as the public launch.

Overseas buyer audiences for UK residential property — particularly from Hong Kong, Singapore, Malaysia, the Middle East, and China — require channel-specific engagement that differs from the domestic audience. Overseas buyers use different search platforms (Baidu, WeChat, local portals), rely more heavily on diaspora community networks and overseas property investment events, and require specific legal and financial guidance around foreign ownership, stamp duty surcharges, and mortgage availability for non-UK residents. Overseas buyer development requires a 12 to 18-month pre-launch programme working with established overseas agent networks in the target markets — which cannot be compressed into the launch window. Developers who decide to target overseas buyers at the launch stage, rather than at the pre-launch stage, typically find that the channels are not adequately developed to produce meaningful allocation within the launch period.