Leads with a declared unit: why they convert faster (and what that’s worth in construction interest)
The difference between a generic lead and a lead that has already chosen a unit changes the sales team’s work — and the financial outcome of the launch. Here is the math.
There’s a fundamental difference between two kinds of lead that reach a new-development sales team. It’s not a difference of volume, nor of channel. It’s a difference of qualification at the moment of arrival — and it changes everything that comes after.
Two leads, two costs
Lead type 1. Arrives without context: name, phone, maybe an email. The agent’s first question is “what are you looking for?”. The buyer doesn’t know yet — or knows, but hasn’t said. The conversation starts from zero. On average, three to five contacts are needed before any visit to the show apartment.
Lead type 2. Arrives with a declared unit: “I’m interested in unit 302, 3 bedrooms, east-facing, R$ 680,000”. The agent’s first question is different: “when would you like to visit the show apartment?”. The conversation starts where the other one would take weeks to arrive.
Where the difference comes from
Lead type 2 only exists when the buyer had the chance to orient themselves before making contact. When they could explore the development, compare units, understand what’s available and arrive at a preference — before any sales conversation.
That is exactly what an interactive unit selector enables. It isn’t just convenience for the buyer — it’s passive lead qualification before any human intervention. The buyer does the screening work on their own, in exchange for transparency.
What changes in the sales operation
With qualified leads entering the funnel:
- Time to the show-apartment visit drops. The first call is to schedule a visit, not to map interest.
- Lead-to-visit conversion goes up. Fewer discarded leads, more value from what enters the funnel.
- Closing speed increases. The buyer arrives at the show apartment already decided on the typology.
- SDRs do less screening and more relationship. The operation stops doing catalogue work and starts doing sales work.
Why this matters especially at launch
In a new development, time has a direct financial cost. In the first weeks, the unit mix is complete, prices are at launch level and absorption pressure is at its peak. Every well-qualified lead that enters on day 1 is worth multiple generic leads entering in month 3.
The math is direct:
- Sales velocity defines how much construction interest the developer pays.
- Sales velocity depends on the speed of the sales funnel.
- Funnel speed depends on the quality of the leads coming in.
It’s a chain effect. A launch that sells 60% in the first 60 days has a radically different financial dynamic from one that sells 60% in twelve months — the same total sales value, a very different outcome for the developer.
Why it isn’t the standard in Brazil yet
Lead quality at the entrance is a direct function of how clear the buyer’s point of contact with the product is. In markets where property sales professionalised digitally — Norway, Sweden, Denmark — the qualified lead is the norm. In Brazil, it’s still the exception. The distance between the two models is a question of adoption, not culture — and it’s closing fast.