Know Your Buyer: Motivation, Friction, and Voice
First-time buyers crave clarity and security, move-up buyers seek space and status, and investors want numbers and predictability. Write to the emotion behind the purchase, then validate it with facts. Share your top audience below, and we’ll send a persona template you can adapt instantly.
Know Your Buyer: Motivation, Friction, and Voice
Address price anxiety, commute length, and renovation worries before readers ask. Reframe “small kitchen” as “efficient chef’s layout” only when true, and pair it with a floor plan and storage walkthrough. I once swapped “cozy” for “low-maintenance” and doubled inquiries. Want that checklist? Subscribe for the playbook.
Know Your Buyer: Motivation, Friction, and Voice
Luxury buyers expect crisp elegance; suburban families prefer warm practicality; investors need straight, data-first language. Build a mini style guide with sample phrases, banned clichés, and tone notes. Read your copy aloud—if it sounds like you’d say it to the client, you’re close. Save your guide and iterate monthly.
Know Your Buyer: Motivation, Friction, and Voice
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