
We talk to a lot of land brokers on The Land Broker's Edge podcast. The ones closing the most deals have something in common—and it's not what you'd expect.
It's not that they know more about land. It's not that they have better relationships with sellers. It's not even that they work harder.
The top performers think like marketers first and brokers second.
Here's what that actually means.
The Old Model Is Broken
For decades, land brokerage worked the same way. Get a listing. Put it on MLS. Maybe run a print ad. Wait for the phone to ring.
That model assumed scarcity—there weren't many ways for buyers to find land, so brokers controlled the information. Whoever had the listing had the power.
That's not true anymore. Buyers can find land themselves. They can search Zillow, LandWatch, Land.com, Facebook Marketplace. They don't need a broker to show them what's available.
So why do they choose to work with you?
Not because you have access. Because you have expertise, trust, and presence. Because when they search for land in your market, your name keeps coming up. Because you've already answered their questions before they knew to ask them.
That's marketing. And the brokers who understand it are winning.
The Shift From Transactions to Audience
Old-school brokers think in transactions. One listing, one buyer, one deal. Start over.
Marketing-minded brokers think in audience. Every piece of content they create, every property they list, every conversation they have—it's all building something larger. An audience of people who know them, trust them, and think of them first when they're ready to buy or sell.
A transaction feeds you today. An audience feeds you for years.
That's why consistent social media matters. That's why educational content matters. That's why showing up regularly—even when you don't have a listing to promote—matters. You're not just closing deals. You're building a brand that generates deals.
What Marketing Actually Looks Like for Land Brokers
Marketing doesn't mean billboards and radio ads. For most land brokers, it means three things:
- Consistent presence. Showing up regularly where your buyers and sellers spend time. That's usually social media, but it could also be local events, industry associations, or community involvement. The goal is simple: stay top of mind.
- Educational content. Answering the questions your buyers and sellers are already asking. What does an easement mean? How do I price my land? What should I look for in a hunting property? When you're the one providing answers, you're the one they call when they're ready to act.
- A clear brand. Not a logo—a reputation. What are you known for? What type of land? What market? What approach? The brokers with the clearest positioning win the most listings because sellers know exactly what they're getting.
None of this requires a marketing degree. It requires intention and consistency.
The Content Advantage
Here's what we hear from top brokers over and over: content changed their business.
Not because any single post went viral. But because showing up consistently, month after month, built a compounding asset. People started recognizing them. Referrals came in from strangers who had been following them for months. Listing appointments got easier because sellers already felt like they knew them.
Content is the new cold calling—except instead of interrupting people, you're attracting them.
The brokers who figure this out early have an enormous advantage. The ones who wait until everyone else is doing it are playing catch-up forever.
You Don't Have to Do It All Yourself
The most common objection we hear: "I don't have time to be a marketer. I'm busy selling land."
Fair. But that's not an excuse to do nothing—it's a reason to build a system.
Some brokers batch content creation. One afternoon a month, they create everything they need for the next four weeks. Scheduled, done, off their plate.
Some brokers use done-for-you services. They hand off content creation entirely and focus on what they do best—working with buyers and sellers.
Some brokers combine both. They create some content themselves and outsource the rest.
Any of these approaches works better than sporadic effort. The worst outcome isn't choosing the wrong system—it's having no system at all.
The Broker Who Gets Found Wins
Ten years ago, the best listing broker in a market was the one with the best relationships. That still matters. But increasingly, the best listing broker is the one who gets found first.
When a seller searches "land broker in [your county]," do you show up? When a buyer scrolls through Instagram looking at land content, is your face in the feed? When someone mentions they're thinking about selling their family's acreage, does a friend say "You should call [your name]"?
That's what marketing does. It makes sure that when someone's ready to act, you're the one they think of.
The brokers who understand this are building businesses. Everyone else is just chasing the next deal.
The Land Broker's Edge podcast shares insights from top-performing land brokers every week. Subscribe wherever you listen to podcasts, or find episodes at landverseai.com/podcast.



