The most successful destination openings I've been part of felt inevitable. By the time the doors opened, the community already had opinions. People had stories about watching the construction progress. There were email subscribers who had been following the development for 18 months. There were journalists who had covered the project multiple times already. There were neighborhood advocates who felt genuinely invested in its success.
None of that happened by accident. Every piece of it was built deliberately, through a structured pre-opening community strategy that treated the construction period as the most valuable marketing time available.
"Opening day should feel like the payoff of a story the community has already been following, not the first chapter of a story they've never heard. Building that prior investment is the work of pre-opening community strategy."
Why Pre-Opening Community Building Is Different From Pre-Opening Marketing
The distinction matters because it changes how you invest your time and budget during the construction period.
Tells people the development exists and what it will offer. Creates awareness. Reaches people. Generates impressions and recognition. Essential, but insufficient on its own.
Creates genuine investment in the development's success among the people who will determine whether it thrives. Creates advocates who tell the story to their own networks with the credibility of personal conviction.
Marketing reaches people. Community building engages them. And advocates do something marketing cannot: they tell the story to their own networks with the credibility of personal conviction rather than paid promotion.
The LHSA Pre-Opening Community Stack
The LHSA Pre-Opening Community Stack identifies five audience layers that should be systematically built before a development opens. Each layer compounds the others, and together they create opening momentum that feels organic but is systematically built.
The Email List as the Anchor Asset
If there is one pre-opening community asset I prioritize above all others, it is the email list. Email subscribers are the highest-intent, most valuable pre-opening audience available. They have actively opted in to the development's story. They receive communications directly without algorithmic filtering. And they are the most likely to translate into first-day visitors, social advocates, and long-term loyal community members.
Building this list before opening requires intentional capture mechanisms at every touchpoint: the development website, social media profiles, community events, press mentions, and partnerships with aligned local organizations. Every person who becomes aware of the development should have a clear pathway to join the email community.
Advocates cannot be manufactured. But they can be cultivated through genuine relationship-building, early access, honest conversation, and a real effort to hear and respond to neighborhood concerns and interests.
The Neighborhood Advocacy Program
One of the most underinvested pre-opening community strategies is the deliberate cultivation of neighborhood advocates, residents, business owners, community leaders, and local influencers who become genuine champions of the development in their own networks.
Advocates who feel genuinely seen and respected by the development team become its most powerful marketing asset. Their endorsement carries the credibility that no paid communication can replicate because it comes from people who live in the neighborhood, who understand the community's values, and who have chosen to champion the development of their own accord.
Programming the Construction Period
The construction period is not a marketing dead zone. It is a storytelling opportunity that most developers leave almost entirely unexploited. The narrative arc of a destination being built from the ground up is inherently compelling. People are drawn to stories of creation, of vision becoming reality, of a community's future taking shape.
In my pre-opening strategy work, I build a content and programming calendar for the construction period that treats each milestone as a story moment.
Each moment is an opportunity to deepen the relationship between the development and the community it is building for. The developments that use these moments strategically arrive at opening day with a community that has been invested for 18 months, not 18 days.
The developers who build genuine pre-opening community share one orientation: they see the construction period as a narrative asset, not a communications gap. They treat every milestone as a story worth telling, every interested community member as a relationship worth building, and every email subscriber as a future opening-day visitor worth earning. That orientation transforms the construction period from a time of silence into the most productive community-building window in the development's lifecycle.
If you're in the construction period of a development and want to build a pre-opening community strategy, LH Strategic Advisory would be glad to help. Reach out at leslie@lhstrategicadvisory.com.
The LHSA Pre-Opening Community Stack identifies five audience layers that should be systematically built before a development opens: Email Subscribers, Social Community, Neighborhood Advocates, Media Relationships, and Prospective Tenant Advocates. Building all five layers before opening creates the momentum that transforms opening day from a launch into a community event.
Marketing creates awareness, telling people a development exists. Community building creates advocates, people who are genuinely invested in the development's success and who tell its story to their own networks with the credibility of personal conviction. Both are necessary. Community building is the more durable investment.
Email subscribers are the highest-intent audience available. They have actively opted in, they receive communications directly without algorithmic filtering, and they are the most likely to translate into first-day visitors, social advocates, and long-term loyal community members. An email list built before opening is an owned asset that pays dividends for years.
Through genuine relationship-building: early access to development information, invitations to pre-opening events, honest conversations about the development's vision and community commitment, and a real effort to hear and respond to neighborhood concerns and interests. Advocates who feel genuinely seen and respected by the development team become its most powerful and credible marketing asset.