Before creating a single automation, build your contact field architecture. Real estate agents need these custom fields at minimum: Lead Source (dropdown: Zillow, Facebook, Website, Referral, Open House, Other), Contact Type (dropdown: Buyer, Seller, Both, Past Client, SOI), Buyer Price Range (text or range field), Buyer Target Neighborhoods (text), Seller Property Address (text), Last Appointment Date (date), Close Date (date), Property Sold (text), Lead Score (managed automatically by scoring rules). Creating these fields first means every automation you build can use them for conditional routing and personalization. Building automations before creating the right fields produces sequences that can't personalize and can't route correctly.
Tags in ActiveCampaign serve a different purpose than custom fields: they're used for workflow triggers and sequence routing rather than storing data. Core tags to create before building: by lead source (zillow-lead, facebook-lead, website-lead, referral, open-house-[address]), by status (active-buyer, active-seller, under-contract, closed, past-client, soi), by action (booked-showing, booked-consultation, requested-cma, viewed-listing-3x). Tags are the traffic signals that direct contacts into the right automation paths. A well-designed tag architecture allows your automations to react to specific contact behaviors without complex conditional field checks.
STEP 2: CORE INTEGRATIONSSet up integrations before building automations β your workflows will fire on live data from the moment you activate them. Priority order: (1) Your primary lead source β the Zillow, Facebook Lead Ad, or website form that generates the most volume. Get one lead source triggering correctly before connecting others. (2) Your scheduling tool β Calendly or similar, so booking events can exit contacts from outreach sequences. (3) Your CRM β Follow Up Boss, LionDesk, or Wise Agent if you use one, so stage changes can route contacts. (4) Your transaction management tool β Dotloop or similar, so closing events trigger the post-close sequence. Start with one integration fully working before adding the next. Debugging a single Zap is straightforward; debugging four simultaneous Zaps is not.
Every integration must be tested with live data before you build automations on top of it. For each Zapier connection: submit a real test lead through the source, confirm it arrives in ActiveCampaign with all fields populated correctly, verify that the trigger tags are applied, and confirm that the contact shows the correct lead source and type fields. Use ActiveCampaign's built-in automation testing to trigger a workflow manually on a test contact before activating it on live leads. This 30-minute testing investment prevents the scenario where a live lead enters your system, triggers the wrong sequence, and receives a confusing first message.
STEP 3: CORE WORKFLOWSBuild automations in this order to maximize immediate impact: (1) New Lead Immediate Response β trigger: contact created with any lead source tag; action: immediate first-touch email + agent SMS notification. Build this first because it affects every future lead. (2) Buyer Nurture Sequence β 30-day structured follow-up with weekly listing alerts. (3) Open House Follow-Up β 14-day sequence triggered by open-house tag. (4) Seller Lead Nurture β 6-month monthly market update sequence. (5) Post-Close SOI Enrollment β triggered by close date field population, enrolls in birthday/anniversary/quarterly touchpoints. Each automation serves a distinct lifecycle stage. Building them in this order means you're capturing value from the highest-volume use case first.
Every sequence that involves lead follow-up must have a goal configured that exits the contact when they convert. For buyer follow-up sequences, the goal is 'contact booked showing' β add the booked-showing tag to this contact, and the goal exits them from any active outreach sequence. For seller follow-up, the goal is 'contact booked CMA consultation.' For all outreach sequences, configure the goal before activating the sequence. Running a sequence without goal exits sends messages to contacts who have already converted β the most common professional impression problem agents have with email automation.
SETUP WORKS WELL WHENPlan for 10β15 hours of focused setup time spread over 2β3 weeks. Breakdown: account and field architecture (2β3 hours), Zapier integrations (2β4 hours), core workflow builds (5β6 hours), testing and refinement (1β2 hours). Most agents complete the setup on evenings and weekends alongside their active business. Outsourcing to a specialist who knows real estate automation can compress this to 6β10 hours of their time, typically at a cost of $1,000β$2,000.
At minimum: Lead Source (dropdown), Contact Type (Buyer/Seller/Past Client/SOI), Buyer Price Range, Buyer Target Neighborhoods, Seller Property Address, Last Appointment Date, Close Date, and Property Sold. These fields enable personalization in your sequences (referencing the right property or neighborhood) and conditional routing (sending buyers to buyer sequences, sellers to seller sequences). Setting up these fields correctly before building any automations is the most important setup step.
ActiveCampaign's built-in Deals pipeline is adequate for individual agents who don't need MLS integration, team lead routing, or showing management. If you're already using Follow Up Boss, LionDesk, or Wise Agent and your team depends on those tools for pipeline visibility, keep them and connect to ActiveCampaign via Zapier. The integration handles contact sync and sequence triggers. If you're starting fresh with no existing CRM and are primarily a solo agent, ActiveCampaign's built-in pipeline reduces the number of tools you need to maintain.
Start a free ActiveCampaign trial β then use this setup guide to build your first lead response, open house follow-up, and SOI sequence.
Try ActiveCampaign FreeIf you'd rather have an expert configure and test your real estate automation sequences, schedule a consultation.
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