How a 5,000-Unit Mailer Turns Into a $100,000 Land Deal
How a 5,000-Unit Mailer Turns Into a $100,000 Land Deal
By Jill DeWit
If you’ve never sent a 5,000-unit offer mailer before, it’s easy to assume it’s a giant leap—expensive, risky, and overwhelming.
It’s not.
In fact, 5,000 units is often the perfect “starter” volume because it’s big enough to produce real deal opportunities, but small enough that you can still manage the responses, learn the process, and build confidence without feeling buried.
And yes—done the Land Academy way, a mailer that size can absolutely turn into a $100,000 land deal. We’ve done it many times.
Let’s break down exactly how it happens—step by step—so you can see the logic behind it and what you should be doing if your goal is to create predictable, repeatable results.
First: why “stale inventory” moving matters (and why we love change)
One of the weirdest and best things about real estate is how quickly the environment can shift. A property can sit for months and then suddenly move—at the exact price you wanted—because the market mood changes, buyers get more comfortable, or demand shifts.
That’s why Jack and I always say we thrive on change. If you’re doing this the right way, you’re not “hoping the market is perfect.” You’re learning how to profit on the way up and on the way down.
Your job isn’t to guess what the market will do next. Your job is to build a pipeline and choose the best deals that come out of it.
The 3-part system behind every $100,000 deal
Every big deal (including a $100k profit deal) comes from the same three-part system:
- Create a pipeline of deal opportunities
- Buy the property (cleanly, professionally)
- Sell the property with speed and confidence
A 5,000-unit mailer is simply a pipeline generator. It’s not the whole business—it’s the start of the business.
The mistake most people make is they treat the mailer like the business.
It’s not.
The business is what you do after the responses come in.
Step 1: Set the financial target before you pick the market
If you want to make $100,000 on a deal, you can’t start by randomly picking a county and sending offers.
You start by setting your “deal parameters” first.
Here’s how Jack thinks about it (and it’s one of the simplest mental models we teach):
The rule of quarters (simple version)
If you want to net a big number, you need to start with properties that support that resale price.
So for a $100,000 profit deal, you need to be looking at areas where land is regularly selling (retail) in the range that makes your math work. Jack often targets land retailing around $150k–$200k for this type of deal, because then the acquisition price can live far below that while still leaving room for profit.
In plain English:
- If land regularly sells for $150k–$200k,
- you want to buy for something like $50k (give or take),
- so you have enough room to resell and still create a huge margin.
This is why we don’t “guess.” We back into the deal using the market’s real pricing.
Step 2: “Trolling” for markets that support your target deal
Jack calls it trolling, and I love the term because it’s exactly what it sounds like: you’re scanning for areas where the numbers support what you’re trying to do.
Here’s what that looks like:
- Go to Zillow (or another source)
- Filter for land
- Look at sold in the last 12 months
- Set a price range that matches your target retail (example: $150k–$200k)
- Watch where the map lights up with activity
The key takeaway I want you to understand is this:
There are more deals out there than most people believe. They just don’t believe it because they’re still thinking like “real estate = houses.” Land operates differently—and once you start scanning the map, it’s obvious there’s volume.
But trolling is only the first pass. It tells you where activity exists. It doesn’t tell you where to mail yet.
Step 3: Validate with the Red/Yellow/Green test
After you’ve found a general area that appears to support your pricing target, you validate it with data.
Jack’s Red/Yellow/Green (RYG) test is essentially a way to compare ZIP codes (or pockets of a county) and answer questions like:
- When properties are listed, do they sell quickly?
- Are pending listings stronger than new listings?
- What percentage of the whole market is actually for sale?
You’re trying to avoid sending mail into an area where inventory is sitting forever. You want the ZIP codes where velocity is real—where demand is present.
When you do this correctly, you stop wasting money on mailers that “should have worked.”
You’re sending mail where the data says the strategy is supported.
Step 4: Send the mail—then expect predictable responses
Here’s the part that calms people down:
A 5,000-unit mailer is not going to generate 5,000 conversations.
It typically generates around a 1% response rate.
That means you’re dealing with roughly 50 responses, give or take.
And only a small slice of those responses will become real deals—because:
- some properties won’t pass due diligence
- some sellers want too much
- some situations are messy
- some people aren’t actually ready to sell
That’s normal.
This is also why we like scale. The larger your mail volume, the more “good” you can select from. The worst feeling in the world is evaluating a deal you don’t love… because it’s the only one you have.
If you send enough mail, you don’t need to force deals.
You choose.
Step 5: How to handle angry calls (and why I actually like them)
Let’s talk about the part that freaks people out: the “hate” calls.
You will get them.
And here’s the mindset shift: when someone calls angry, it usually means you did something right—your offer hit the wrong person in the right way.
Most people who aren’t interested will throw it away.
The people who pick up the phone are calling for a reason.
So when someone calls mad, I don’t argue. I do this:
- I calm them down
- I make them feel heard
- and then I ask the magic question:
“What did I miss?”
That question turns emotion into information.
Sometimes the seller tells you something the data won’t: a new employer moving in, development coming, a local change that impacts value. Great—now you have market intelligence.
Sometimes they just wanted to vent. Fine—remove them and move on.
But you cannot be afraid of a few angry calls. They are a normal part of running a mail-based business.
Step 6: Choose the best deals and buy like a professional
Once your responses come in, you run deals through due diligence and pick the best one or two. That’s why volume matters—so you’re selecting, not settling.
When you buy, we buy to own. We don’t mess around with half-commitments. We use escrow and title insurance when appropriate, and we close like adults.
This matters more than people realize because it makes the rest of the process easier:
- clean chain of title
- clean transaction
- clean resale
- clean buyer confidence
And if you’re doing bigger deals, professional escrow isn’t optional—it’s part of the plan.
Step 7: Sell with velocity (and let pros do the heavy lifting)
My job is to make the phone ring on both sides: sellers calling to sell, buyers calling to buy.
After we acquire, we move into selling—and the way we sell is built for velocity.
Sometimes that means a neighbor letter first.
Often it means listing with an agent who knows land.
Agents and title companies aren’t “taking your profit.” They’re allowing you to focus on the next deal while they handle the heavy lifting:
- photos
- buyer calls
- showing questions
- transaction coordination
- closing logistics
The more you treat this like a repeatable system, the more it becomes a circle:
mail → calls → buy → sell → repeat
That is how a $5,000 mailer becomes a $100,000 deal over time.
Where Deal Complete fits into this (and why it matters)
Here’s the honest truth: the hardest part of scaling isn’t finding out what to do. It’s keeping the workflow organized.
Deal Complete was built to automate and simplify the steps you just read:
- market validation
- pipeline management
- organizing deal flow
- helping you move from “idea” to “mail out” without spreadsheet chaos
If you’re already a Land Academy member, you should use it.
If you’re not, it’s still worth checking out—because the workflow matters.
The real definition of “successful” mail
People love to ask, “What’s a good response rate? When is it successful?”
Here’s the simplest answer:
A mailer is successful if it produces a deal you can profitably close.
If you send 5,000 offers and buy one property—and that one property makes you $30k, $50k, or $100k—your ROI is staggering.
So don’t obsess over the wrong metric.
Obsess over this:
- Are you mailing consistently?
- Are you buying at the right price?
- Are you selecting the best deals?
- Are you selling with a repeatable process?
That’s how this becomes predictable.
Take a moment this weekend to connect with a fellow investor, join a discussion in our community, or dive into a new podcast episode.
If you’re ready to join these members and call yourself a successful investor in the next 60 days, join us now.
You are not alone in your real estate ambition.
