
The way we connect with senior living prospects and their families has transformed dramatically over the last decade. While we once relied heavily on phone calls and in-person tours, selling senior living has evolved into a complex, multi-touch, multi-channel journey.
For today’s sales and marketing teams in senior living, success comes down to this: adapt, personalize, and persist.
Drawing from “Meeting the Communication Needs of Today’s Senior Living Prospects,” a recent Grow Your Occupancy webinar hosted by Julie Podewitz and her panelists Rachelle Strasburg from Sholom and Christy Van Der Westhuizen from Jaybird Senior Living, here are the key trends and takeaways on how to meet the communication needs of today’s senior living prospects.
The changing dynamics of communication
Gone are the days when the adult daughter was the only decision-maker in an older loved one’s move to senior living. Now, spouses, grandchildren, friends, and even neighbors are part of the process. Each brings unique motivations, concerns, and preferred communication styles.
As one panelist joked, it often feels like Ross from Friends yelling “Pivot!” while trying to get the couch up the stairs. That’s exactly what senior living sales requires today: adaptability to match the shifting dynamics of families and influencers.
Connection points and polite persistence
Here’s a statistic worth remembering: the average move-in requires 28 touches from inquiry to decision. Yet many sales teams still assume it takes only 7–8 touches. That gap creates a dangerous blind spot.
The truth? Some move-ins may happen quickly, while others require over 100 touchpoints. Both are normal. What matters is embracing polite persistence. When a family raises their hand, they are asking for help. Every call, email, or message is not a bother, it’s guidance.
Timing and layered communication methods
Not everyone is available between 9 a.m. and 5 p.m. Some prospects’ family members work full-time, meaning evenings and weekends may be the best windows. Flexibility is key.
Equally important is layering communication. Success rarely comes from a single method. Consider phone calls, texts, handwritten notes, video messages, home visits, peer-to-peer introductions, and even social media DMs. The more creative and personalized your approach, the more likely you’ll build trust.
Generational and personal preferences
While many seniors still value a friendly phone call, their adult children—or even grandchildren—often prefer texts, video chats, or digital tools. But it’s not just about age. Personality plays a huge role.
Some people never answer unknown numbers showing up on their phone but will almost always respond to a text. Others want to see a face-to-face video message before committing to a tour. Asking prospects their preferred method early—and honoring it—can make all the difference.
Pricing transparency builds trust
Not long ago, communities hesitated to share pricing upfront. Today, transparency is expected. Families are informed, researching online, and comparing options before ever stepping through the door.
The role of the salesperson has shifted from “keeper of information” to guide. Families are the heroes of their own stories—we’re simply there to walk alongside them, providing clarity, empathy, and support as they navigate one of life’s biggest transitions.
Technology as a human connector
Technology is no longer optional, it’s essential. But it should never replace the human touch; it should amplify it.
A healthy CRM is the lifeline of your sales pipeline, allowing teams to track conversations, log barriers, and personalize follow-up. Video messages add warmth and trust. AI-driven assessments and website tools can help qualify leads and guide nurturing campaigns, ensuring prospects receive the right communication at the right time.
When sales teams embrace these tools strategically, they create more meaningful connections, not less.
Advice from those in the field
The webinar panel closed with a few key reminders:
- Mindset matters: You’re not bothering prospects—you’re guiding them.
- No doesn’t mean forever: A “not now” lead can become tomorrow’s move-in.
- Know your tools: Always be aware of what marketing campaigns are reaching your prospects.
- Celebrate wins: Every touchpoint matters. Small, consistent actions create long-term results.
Conclusion
Meeting the communication needs of today’s senior living prospects requires more than scripts and call logs. It takes flexibility, creativity, empathy, and the willingness to persist. By layering outreach methods, embracing technology, and leading with transparency, senior living sales professionals can connect with prospects in ways that feel both personal and meaningful. Because at the end of the day, families don’t want to feel sold to—they want to feel seen and heard. And that is the true heart of senior living sales.
Communication is a skill that needs training and coaching, and Grow can help
Grow Your Occupancy’s experienced sales trainers and coaches are here to work with your team to sharpen their communication skills. Learn more about these services and more here. Or call 877-GROW-OCC to schedule a conversation with our team.