Industry research from the National Association of Realtors consistently shows that more than 90% of home buyers begin their new home search online. They research listings, neighborhoods, school districts, and commute patterns long before they visit a model home.
Digital marketing is critical for creating awareness in this first stage of consumer research, but awareness does not complete the journey.
Homes are not purchased online. Eventually almost every buyer gets in a car and drives.
That moment is where omnichannel marketing becomes real.
Omnichannel marketing, or multichannel marketing, simply means coordinating channels so customers experience one connected journey.
In the home building industry, omnichannel marketing typically follows a four-stage buyer journey:
Digital channels introduce the community’s value proposition. The physical environment confirms it. When those pieces align, model home traffic increases.
But there’s often a gap in omnichannel marketing for home builders.
Digital campaigns generate impressions. Website traffic increases. Listing views grow.
But model home traffic doesn’t rise at the same pace for one simple reason – digital interest does not automatically translate into physical traffic.
Communities are often tucked behind new roads, inside master-planned developments, or just off major corridors.
Buyers may want to visit but still struggle to find them.

Signage extends your multichannel marketing efforts into the channel that drives shopping decisions – the road!
Rather than designing routes based purely on proximity to a community, some builders are increasingly looking at buyer-origin zones or areas where potential buyers begin their drive. Buyer-origin zones often include commute corridors, major retail centers, school districts, and lifestyle hubs where weekend trips start.
A single sign captures attention along a main road by reminding the buyer of their online research. Another confirms the direction. Additional signs guide the final turns. The route leads to the model homes.
Digital channels create awareness. Physical sign routes capitalize on that awareness by capturing buyers and guiding them to your development.
Multiple marketing channels reinforce one another.
Omnichannel marketing for home builders does not end online.
Buyers may start their search digitally, but they still rely on physical exploration to evaluate communities.
Digital creates awareness. The road creates visits.
Builders who invest in both the digital and physical elements of their omnichannel marketing strategy deliver a smoother experience for home buyers – and enjoy stronger model home traffic as a result.
Discover the four sign types that connect new home search to new home sales. Download our whitepaper now!