Saleswise is where I send a real estate agent who is tired of either rewriting the same listing template or spending 20 minutes per property getting the language right. It is a writing assistant tuned for the work agents actually do: listing descriptions, follow-up emails, social posts, and comparative market analyses. Because it is trained on real estate content rather than being a general writing tool, the defaults already use correct terminology and the framing that buyers and sellers expect.
What it does best
The CMA presentation builder is the most differentiated piece. You feed it a property address and comparable sales, and it formats a client-ready presentation with the data organized the way sellers want to see it. For agents who run listing presentations every week, systematizing that one task saves real prep time. The listing description generator is the other daily workhorse, and the social post generator turns a few inputs into market-update and listing-announcement posts you would otherwise stare at a blank box to write.
Pricing and what you actually get
Saleswise runs a single plan at $39/month, with a $1 seven-day trial so you can test the full toolset before committing. There is no permanent free tier, so the trial is the only way in cheap. The upside of one plan is that nothing is gated: CMAs, content, and the rest are all included rather than split across tiers you have to upgrade through. For a solo agent that is simpler to reason about than a laddered subscription.
Where it falls short
The output reads generic until you push it. Left to its defaults the real estate tone leans on stock phrasing, so you will edit for your own voice rather than publish raw. The market-update content is also only as current as what you hand it, since the tool does not pull live MLS data on its own. And with no free plan, the $1 trial is a real but narrow window to decide whether the workflow fits before the monthly charge starts.
Who it's for
Solo agents and small teams who write listings, emails, and social posts often enough that the time adds up, and who want better content without hiring a copywriter. If you mainly need a CRM with follow-up automation rather than a writing tool, Top Producer fits that job better; Saleswise is the content layer, not the database.
Getting the most out of it
Feed it specifics. For each listing, give it three features competitors will not have, the year the kitchen was renovated, the exact view from the primary bedroom, the walk score, and the copy stops defaulting to "spacious living room with natural light." Treat the first draft as a starting point, edit one or two for your voice, then reuse that edited version as your own template so the tool matches how you actually sound.