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What Happens When a $5 Billion Publicly Traded Company Has No Digital Presence


The contrast is jarring. A publicly traded company managing billions in real estate assets across multiple countries operates with no meaningful digital footprint, no systematic investor acquisition process, and no corporate marketing infrastructure – yet it is actively trying to raise capital in 2026 from American retail investors who expect to research companies online before committing a dollar.
This isn’t an isolated case. Mor Milo, co-founder and CEO of Relli, a PropTech platform connecting accredited investors with commercial real estate syndication opportunities, recently closed a deal with a publicly traded Israeli company managing $5 billion across 175 properties in the United States. Despite being publicly traded in Europe, the firm had virtually no American digital presence and no systems for consistently generating or nurturing retail investor leads.
The gap between operational sophistication and marketing capability shows up across firm sizes – from operators managing $180 million with no logo or website to multi-billion dollar enterprises that struggle to follow up with prospective investors. The firms are often strong operators with solid track records. What they lack is the infrastructure every other capital-raising industry treats as standard.
The Institutional Relationship Trap
For decades, real estate development firms built their businesses around a small number of high-value relationships. Ten institutional investors writing $10 million to $50 million checks each provided all the capital needed. Marketing meant golf outings and private dinners, not websites and email campaigns. Sales meant maintaining existing relationships, not generating new leads.
That model held until institutional investors began moving capital toward debt investments offering 12% to 15% returns with better security than equity deals. Operators noticed capital becoming harder to secure but assumed markets would normalize. Many are still waiting while competitors build retail investor pipelines.
“A lot of operators are coming to us and saying, ‘We don’t want to be pigeonholed to only the 10 institutional investors that we’ve worked with the last 20 years,'” Milo notes. Recognition of the problem is spreading, but the gap between awareness and execution remains large.
One operator managing $800 million across 45 transactions wanted to grow his investor base from 200 to 1,000 in a single year. The math reveals the difficulty. Growing by 800 investors in 12 months requires closing three qualified investors every day, without breaks or slowdowns. As Milo put it, “That’s closing meetings, not discovery calls. If you have 10 or 15 people who can drive the funnel, no problem. But if you’re by yourself, that’s a different game.”
Why Strong Operators Struggle With Basic Marketing
The skills that make someone an effective real estate operator have almost nothing to do with the skills required for systematic marketing and sales. Underwriting deals, managing construction timelines, negotiating with contractors, and optimizing property performance are entirely different competencies than building CRM systems, creating consistent content, or running lead nurturing campaigns.
Professional athletes turned real estate developers illustrate this disconnect clearly. They have capital, credibility, and strong networks – but no corporate marketing infrastructure, and they often don’t recognize the gap until their friends-and-family capital runs dry. Milo recently worked with a group of professional athletes managing $180 million in assets whose entire business ran on personal relationships with other athletes and private equity managers. “They don’t have a logo, they don’t have a website, they don’t have any marketing collateral,” he says.
The challenge isn’t just building a website. Moving from a relationship-dependent model to a systematically scalable one requires messaging frameworks, automated follow-up sequences, lead scoring systems, content calendars, and conversion tracking. Most operators have never built these systems because they’ve never needed them.
The Lead Conversion Problem Nobody Discusses
Generating leads is the easier part of the problem. Digital advertising platforms can deliver 20 to 50 qualified accredited investor leads monthly for under $5,000 in ad spend. The breakdown happens after leads arrive.
Most operators are not prepared for what consistent lead follow-up actually requires. Retail investors expect regular communication – emails explaining deal structures, text message updates, voicemails demonstrating persistence, and systematic outreach that signals the operator takes them seriously. Without automated systems delivering this consistently, leads go cold regardless of deal quality.
Relli now helps operators build foundational sales and marketing infrastructure before launching lead generation campaigns – including CRM implementation, automated outreach sequences, messaging development, and team training. Operators who have built these systems have seen measurable results. One customer achieved an 11x return on advertising spend. Another generated $17 for every advertising dollar invested. Both outcomes depended on systematic follow-up infrastructure that converted leads into investors rather than allowing them to go cold after one or two phone calls.
The Six-Month Investor Who Waited for the Right Deal
Digital lead generation creates a dynamic that operators accustomed to relationship-based sales are rarely prepared for. The most committed investors often take months to act, requiring consistent value delivery long before any transaction takes place.
Relli’s platform recently recorded a $250,000 investment reservation from someone who had created an account six months earlier, used the platform’s content and tools without paying anything, and returned when the right opportunity appeared. That kind of outcome depends on infrastructure most firms don’t have: consistent content production, automated email sequences, and systematic engagement that doesn’t require aggressive selling.
The platform data shows the approach gaining traction. The fourth quarter of 2025 generated $700,000 in investment reservations, compared to $1,700 total across the previous two years. The acceleration came from sustained relationship building rather than one-time outreach.
What This Means for Operators in 2026
The operators building digital infrastructure now will have a clear advantage in capital raising over the next several years. Those waiting for institutional capital to return, or relying on personal networks that have already been tapped, will find it harder to compete for deals regardless of how well they operate.
The conditions driving this are not temporary. Institutional investors are unlikely to return to equity deals while debt continues to offer comparable returns with stronger security. Retail investors are not becoming less sophisticated or less likely to research a sponsor online before committing capital. “The longer these sponsors wait to fix this problem, the more desperate they become,” Milo says.
For operators managing hundreds of millions or billions in assets, the requirements are straightforward: build a website, develop clear messaging, implement a CRM, create automated follow-up sequences, and produce consistent content. The tools exist and the approach is proven. The $5 billion publicly traded company now has that infrastructure through its partnership with Relli. The question for other operators is how long they will wait before building their own.
About Mor Milo: Mor Milo is Co-founder and CEO of Relli, a PropTech platform connecting accredited investors with commercial real estate syndication opportunities. Connect with Mor on LinkedIn.
Disclaimer: This article is based on information provided by the expert source cited above. It is intended for general informational purposes only and does not constitute legal, financial, or real estate advice. Readers should conduct their own research and consult qualified professionals before making any real estate or financial decisions.
This article was sourced from a live expert interview.
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