Real estate in Canada · AI course

Write listing descriptions from a features list

Turn a quick list of a property's features into a polished listing description you just review and post.

Beginner11 minWorks with ChatGPT, Claude, Gemini

What you’ll do

  1. List the property's key features, location and standout points.
  2. Ask for a listing description in your tone, at the right length.
  3. Review for accuracy and compliance, then publish.
Try this prompt
I'm a real estate agent. Here are a property's features: [paste list]. Write a polished listing description in a warm, professional tone, around [X words]. Don't invent any features — only use what I've given you.
The payoff: A first-draft listing description in minutes — you check it, you publish.

Common questions

Will AI invent features the property doesn't have?

It can if you let it guess — so the lesson shows how to tell it to use only what you paste in. Always read the draft against your actual notes before publishing; you're the one who knows the property.

Can I make the copy sound like me, not a generic agent?

Yes. Paste in one listing description you've written before and tell it to match that style. Most agents find the first draft is 80–90% there and just needs a few tweaks.

What about advertising compliance — fair trading rules, misleading claims?

AI doesn't know your local rules and won't flag a borderline claim for you. The final compliance check is always yours — read it as you would any listing copy before it goes live on a portal.

Does this connect to realestate.com.au, Domain or my CRM to publish automatically?

No. You paste the property details in, AI drafts the copy, and you copy it into wherever you publish. Nothing is posted or submitted on your behalf.

How much detail do I need to give it?

The more specific the better — bedrooms, standout features, location highlights, target buyer. Thin notes get thin copy. The lesson shows a simple list format that takes a minute to fill in.

Can I use the same approach for different property types — apartments, rural, commercial?

Yes. Tell it the property type, audience and any tone notes (e.g. 'prestige' vs 'first-home buyer') and it'll adjust. You review each one before it goes anywhere.

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