The most useful marketing idea this week isn't a rate hook — it's a reframe, and the industry just handed it to you. HousingWire's widely-circulated piece argues the "rate obsession is fading": life events, not interest rates, are driving 2026 originations, and the LOs winning are the ones acting like financial advisors rather than rate-quoters. That thesis landed the same morning Redfin published fresh Q1 migration data showing nearly one in five house hunters looking to relocate to a new metro, with Florida, Phoenix, and Las Vegas pulling the most inbound demand. Put together, they point at the same marketing pivot: stop building campaigns around a rate number that won't move, and start building them around the reasons people actually buy.
The rate backdrop makes the case for you. The 30-year is flat at 6.54% — basically unchanged on the month and squarely mid-range over the last 90 days. A "rates just dropped, act now" blast simply isn't true this week, and borrowers can check that in five seconds. So lead your purchase outreach with life triggers instead: a new job, a growing family, a relocation, a kid starting school in a new district. For the refi side, the math still quietly works for the 7.25%-and-up cohort — roughly $130 a month on a $400K loan — but that's a targeted follow-up, not the headline. The headline is the move.
Tactically, build a relocation referral play this week. If your borrowers are flowing toward the Sun Belt, the highest-leverage move is partnering with a buyer's agent in an inbound metro and co-creating a short "relocating to [city]?" resource — financing readiness, what a payment looks like there, how to get pre-approved before you list back home. Pair it with a simple life-event nurture: a quick, warm "congrats on the new job / new baby / new chapter — when you're ready to talk about the move, I've already got your numbers" touch. It costs nothing, it's genuinely helpful, and it puts you in the conversation months before the rate-shopper ever calls.
write one short "relocating this year?" post or email aimed at movers, name the top inbound metros from the Redfin data, and end it with an offer to run a real payment for that destination's price range. Send it to your past-purchase clients first.