When the lead board goes quiet, the reflex is always the same: buy more leads.
But that reflex is costing you deals you already own.
A landmark Harvard Business Review study found that teams who respond within the first hour are 60x more likely to qualify a lead than teams who wait 24 hours.
The problem isn't lead volume. It's what happens after the lead arrives.
Before you sign another portal contract, it's worth understanding what your database is actually worth and how much commission is already sitting in contacts you own.
Your database probably looks dead: bounced emails, disconnected numbers, silent contacts.
That's not a lead quality problem. That's data decay.
According to ZoomInfo's research on contact data decay, a significant portion of CRM records degrade every year as people move, change jobs, and update contact information.
A dead lead is gone. A stale record is a fixable problem.
Data hygiene isn't an afterthought. It's the prerequisite. Fello's platform continuously updates contact information and surfaces signals like equity changes and life events before any outreach runs.
Research from SPOTIO shows:
Agents stop at exactly the wrong moment. Not because they don't care. Because human attention is finite and calendars fill up.
Teams without consistent follow-up systems often convert well below 2%. With systems in place, that number can reach 3% to 5% from the same leads.
That's an operational fix, not a marketing one.
If your conversion rate is low and you add more leads, you scale the leak rather than plug it.
The teams building predictable growth aren't buying more leads. They're winning on three things:
Building a consistent follow-up system around those signals is one of the highest-leverage moves a team can make.
The question used to be "how do we remind agents to follow up?"
Now it's "how do we build follow-up that runs whether or not the agent remembers?"
Felix is Fello's AI teammate, and consistent follow-up is exactly what he's built for.
He works calls, texts, and emails around the clock. He carries real one-to-one conversations until a warm handoff is ready. When a contact is ready to talk, Felix bridges the call live so your agent picks up already briefed on the full history.
That means:
Felix handles the volume, the off-hours contacts, and the multi-touch cadences that tend to break down under pressure. Your human ISAs stay focused on the relationship-forward conversations where they add the most value.
Felix handles everything else. Consistently. Every time.
One large team pulled 188 listing appointments from a 200,000-contact database they already owned. No new lead sources. Measurable ROI within 60 days.
As Inman has reported, teams are already using AI to reactivate old databases without increasing lead spend.
The Lance Loken Group put it plainly:
"Fello is 14% of our business. We're getting 4 to 6 extra listing conversations per month that we weren't having before."
Those conversations came from a database they already owned.
Four steps to start this week.
1. Audit your data. What percentage of contacts have a valid phone number and email? If you don't know, that's the first problem.
2. Identify your hand-raisers. Who has opened an email, checked a home value, or clicked a listing alert in the last 90 days? Those contacts are already signaling intent.
3. Build a follow-up SLA. Commit to response times and define a sequence through at least days 2, 5, 10, and 30.
4. Find where your handoffs break. Most teams hold together for the first two touches and fall apart by touch three. That's exactly where the SPOTIO research says the deals live.
Your next listing is already in your database.
How do I know if my follow-up is actually broken? Ask whether your team can answer "what happened to that lead?" for any given contact. Conversion rates below 2% and no defined sequence past the first touch are the clearest signals.
Isn't it more efficient to just buy fresh leads? Fresh leads have value, but they don't fix an operational problem. The HBR research is clear: speed and consistency of follow-up drive conversion more than lead source quality.
How many touches are actually needed before giving up? 80% of deals require five or more touches. Plan for at least five to eight touches across calls, texts, and emails over 30 days before moving a contact to long-term nurture.
The database you already own is not the problem. The follow-up system sitting on top of it is. What most teams are missing is a system that stays current, catches intent signals, and executes consistent follow-up at scale.
Curious how leading teams are turning their existing databases into reliable listing pipelines? Learn how Fello approaches database activation and follow-up.