A dealer's sales problem is a park's sales problem, multiplied. More inventory means more listings, more listings mean more inquiries across more channels, and every unanswered evening message is margin walking to the retailer down the road. Your salespeople are strongest face-to-face on the lot — not chained to a phone at 9 PM re-answering "is the 3-bed still available?" for the fifth time that day.
What the agent does for a dealership
- Covers the whole inventory. Each active listing gets its own details — price, bedrooms, features, financing options — so the agent answers about the specific unit the buyer asked about, not a generic script.
- Answers every channel. Facebook Marketplace, MHVillage, Zillow, Craigslist, and your inbound sales line — one agent, every source, every hour.
- Books lot visits. Showings land directly on your calendar, so your salespeople walk in to scheduled appointments instead of cold voicemail lists.
- Runs the follow-up. The 7-touch, 3-day cadence on every lead, automatically — the discipline that's hardest to sustain when the floor gets busy.
- Keeps the record. Every call recorded and transcribed, every text and email in one thread per buyer — so a salesperson picking up a hot lead can read the whole story in a minute.
Your team sells; the agent qualifies
The handoff is deliberate: the agent does the repetitive top of the funnel — the availability questions, the basic financing questions, the scheduling, the polite persistence — and your people do what actually closes homes: the walkthrough, the negotiation, the paperwork, the keys. Hot buyers who want a human get transferred live.
Pricing that scales with inventory
Per home, like everything else: $799 per home per month while it's listed, or $1,999 flat per home until it sells. Moving 25+ homes? Ask about volume pricing in a demo. No contract either way — see pricing.
Related: how it works, the AI answering service, and the FAQ.