Sales and Marketing Power Hour: Love Your Buyers: Build Referrals

Sales and Marketing Power Hour: Love Your Buyers: Build Referrals

Love Your Buyers, Build Referrals

What if the easiest sale you’ll ever make is one you’ve already completed?

In today’s challenging and unpredictable housing market, builders everywhere are asking the same question:

How do we generate more traffic?

But during the February 11, 2026 episode of Sales & Marketing Power Hour, hosts Carol Morgan and Kimberly Mackey flipped that question on its head alongside guests Haley Naebig of NoviHome and Jessica Sickler and John D’Angelo from Berks Homes.

Instead of asking how to find more buyers, the conversation focused on something far more powerful:

Are we doing enough to love the buyers we already have?

Because referrals don’t come from marketing campaigns alone.
They come from experiences buyers remember — and relationships that continue long after closing.

When Does the Builder–Buyer Relationship Start to Fade?

Most builders would agree that the customer journey is intense leading up to closing. Sales, construction, selections, financing, walkthroughs — communication is constant.

Then something happens.

The home closes.
The handoffs occur.
Warranty steps in.

And communication slows dramatically.

As discussed during the program, this post-closing phase is where many builder relationships unintentionally fade. Buyers who once heard from multiple team members regularly may suddenly experience long gaps in communication, hearing from the builder only when an issue arises.

Ironically, this is also the moment when loyalty should be strengthened.

The excitement of moving into a new home creates emotional momentum. Builders who maintain engagement during this period are far more likely to earn advocacy, positive reviews, and referrals.

Referrals Are Not Accidental

One of the clearest takeaways from this discussion is simple:

Referrals must be designed into the process.

Berks Homes shared how they intentionally evaluate communication gaps throughout the buyer journey. Leadership teams actively look for periods where significant construction activity may be happening, yet no planned customer touchpoints exist.

Those silent gaps matter.

If weeks pass without communication, buyers begin to feel disconnected — even when progress is being made behind the scenes.

Planning communication touchpoints ensures buyers always know:

  • What just happened

  • What happens next

  • What it means for them

That clarity builds confidence. Confidence builds trust. And trust builds referrals.

Proactive Beats Reactive — Especially in Warranty

One of the most practical examples shared came from the construction side of the business.

Rather than waiting for homeowners to submit warranty lists, Berks Homes shifted toward proactive inspections. Their team schedules early warranty visits and walks the home with the buyer using a detailed checklist, identifying concerns together instead of relying solely on homeowner-reported issues.

The impact is significant.

Instead of beginning warranty conversations with denial or disagreement, the builder demonstrates partnership and ownership from the start. Buyers see the company actively looking for ways to help rather than reacting to complaints.

Survey results reflected measurable improvement following this change, reinforcing that proactive communication directly influences customer satisfaction.

The Hidden Power of Speaking the Same Language

Another theme repeated throughout the conversation was alignment across departments.

Sales explains the process one way.
Construction explains it another way.
Warranty introduces new terminology altogether.

From the buyer’s perspective, inconsistency creates confusion — and confusion erodes trust.

Berks Homes identified this challenge internally and began working toward standardized terminology shared across marketing, sales, construction, and warranty teams. The goal is simple but powerful:

One company. One message. One customer experience.

When expectations are clearly defined early and reinforced consistently, buyers feel informed rather than overwhelmed.

Technology Doesn’t Replace Relationships — It Supports Them

Technology played an important role in the discussion, but not in the way many builders expect.

The panel emphasized that success does not come from constantly adding new tools. Instead, builders benefit most when they fully implement and maximize the technology already within their tech stack.

CRM systems and buyer engagement platforms allow teams to:

  • Track communication history

  • Monitor buyer sentiment

  • Identify happy homeowners for testimonials

  • Recognize referral opportunities

  • Maintain consistent engagement throughout construction and beyond

Technology becomes the connector that keeps communication visible across departments — ensuring nothing falls through the cracks.

Education Is Marketing (Before, During, and After the Build)

A powerful insight surfaced late in the conversation:

Education is one of the most effective marketing tools builders have.

Buyers often enter the process unfamiliar with home maintenance, construction timelines, or ownership responsibilities. When builders provide education in manageable, ongoing touchpoints — rather than overwhelming documents — anxiety decreases dramatically.

Examples discussed included:

  • Maintenance reminders

  • Seasonal homeowner guidance

  • Homeownership milestones

  • Market or value updates

  • Anniversary or birthday recognition

These interactions provide real value while keeping the builder top of mind long after move-in.

And when homeowners feel supported, they naturally share that experience with others.

Are You Asking for Referrals — or Hoping for Them?

Another honest moment in the discussion addressed a common industry reality:

Many builders want referrals but never formally ask for them.

Berks Homes integrates referral opportunities into surveys, homeowner communications, and ongoing engagement efforts. By maintaining relationships through newsletters, updates, and outreach, the company ensures past buyers continue to feel connected to the brand.

Because the lowest-cost lead is rarely new.

It’s the satisfied homeowner already telling your story.

Loving Your Buyers Is a Growth Strategy

The theme of the episode was perfectly captured in the opening idea:

It’s easier to love a brand when the brand loves you back. Builders who intentionally extend the customer experience beyond closing create something competitors cannot easily replicate — emotional loyalty.

And in uncertain markets, loyalty becomes a powerful differentiator.

Watch the Full Conversation

This blog only scratches the surface of the strategies, real-world examples, and practical ideas shared during this episode of Sales & Marketing Power Hour.

Watch the full discussion to hear how leading builders are:

  • Aligning teams across departments

  • Using technology strategically

  • Creating proactive customer experiences

  • Turning homeowners into referral partners

Because the question may not be how to find more buyers.

It may be whether you are fully caring for the ones you already have.

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