Hey, brokerage owners and team leaders. I’m going to do a quick role play with you right now.
Let’s pretend you’re an agent who just had a failed transaction with one of my agents. I’m going to call you—not text you, but call—and say:
"Hey Jim, I just wanted to reach out. I know you had a transaction with Bob that didn’t come together this morning. I got the bad news, but Bob told me you were an absolute pro throughout the process. This has nothing to do with you or your client—sometimes things just happen. I just wanted to say thank you for your professionalism. We look forward to working with you again in the future. And if there’s ever anything I can do to help, I’m here."
Now, imagine making that kind of call after every failed transaction where the other agent handled things well. What do you think is going to happen on the other end of the call?
Do you think that agent will appreciate it? Absolutely. No other broker is making that kind of call.
What you’re doing is laying a ...
Brokerage owners and team leaders, how do you establish trust with agents in your market area?
The number one way to build trust today is through social media. Specifically by recording video daily. The most effective way to build trust is by letting people get to know who you are.
Thanks to video, people can now get a real sense of your personality, your energy, and your overall vibe.
Think about an agent who’s never seen you on video and hasn’t met you in person because everyone’s so busy. All they know is that you're the owner or leader of XYZ Company. You’d be surprised how many agents feel intimidated. Not because you’re intimidating, but because of your title, experience, and success. They might think that they could never talk to you, let alone calling or texting you.
They don’t know you because you haven’t made the effort to show up.
And the way to break down those walls is to consistently show up on social media and post videos daily. Post them to your personal page. Frie...
If I asked you—as a brokerage owner or team leader—what are your top five differentiation points, could you answer clearly?
What makes your company different from every other company in the marketplace? In other words, what’s your value proposition?
If you can’t answer that, no one else in your market can either.
Some of you might rush to say, “Well, we have the lowest commission plan in the market.” But that’s a terrible value proposition.
If a commission plan were all it took to recruit agents, then the brokerage with the lowest commission would have the most agents. But that’s rarely true.
Why?
Because commission plans are not the single greatest motivator for agents.
The #1 motivator for an agent to join your office is this: Will you help them grow their transaction count?
If your value proposition doesn’t clearly communicate how you’ll help agents do more deals, you’re going to lose—every single day—to competitors who can.
So here’s my challenge to you:
Take some time to...
What is push-button recruiting?
If you're an office leader or team leader, you might be tempted to say, “I want to recruit, but I don't want to spend the time doing it. I just want to plug into a system—a CRM, AI platform, or some kind of tech—that will do the work for me. It’ll send emails, send texts, and every day it’ll do the job automatically.”
Then, like magic, people will just start calling, wanting to work for you.
Well, I wish that were true. That would be nice.
Another version of this is hiring virtual assistants overseas to make a thousand calls a day.
I'm going to tell you something you might not want to hear:
These systems, by and large, do not work.
On the rare occasion they do set an appointment, it’s usually with the lowest-hanging fruit—the kind of agent you don’t want anyway. These are people who’ve changed companies five times in a year.
Why doesn’t it work?
Because it’s not personalized recruiting.
Imagine you’re on the other end. If you're getting a gener...
I've got a question for you as an office leader or team leader:
Do you have a recruiting website?
Most of the people I coach—office leaders and team leaders across the country—don’t. It's just not something they've thought about.
But having a recruiting website is important.
When someone starts to consider joining your company, they’ll do a little Google search. They’ll check out your website. They’ll look to see if it looks professional, if it feels like a good fit, and if it reflects who they are.
Now, if you also have a recruiting website—or at least a dedicated recruiting page—they can dive into the value your company offers without needing to talk to you just yet.
That’s powerful. A lot of agents are nervous about making that first contact. They don’t want to jump on a call right away. You can make it easier by creating a recruiting page on your website—or even a separate website entirely—dedicated to recruiting.
The most important part of that page?
Outlining your entire ...
If you're a brokerage owner or team leader, I want to talk to you about something that's kind of outside the box—and that is what we call “adoption rates.”
What's adoption? Adoption means you bring in technology, a system, a tool, or maybe a training program into the company, and you watch as only 20% of the people utilize it—and 80% do not.
That's the rule of thumb: The 80/20 rule.
So you start to wonder why the heck you would bring anything into this company? You feel tempted to cut everything: the technology they’re not using, the training, the mentorship program—this, that, and the other.
Well, remember there's also an 80/20 rule in production too:
20% of the people are doing 80% of the production.
So when you cut these things, you might actually be hurting the people who are supporting the company the most.
But I want you to rethink the 80/20 rule for a second.
When we measure whether we should cut, keep, or add something to the company, don’t just look at whether people a...
As a brokerage owner or leader of a real estate company, you probably remind your agents every week that the best way to grow their business is by engaging their Sphere of Influence (SOI) and consistently asking for referrals.
But are we holding ourselves to the same standard?
We should be asking our own agents for referrals and recommendations about who we should be talking to in the marketplace.
Questions to ask regularly:
By engaging agents consistently and requesting their generosity, they start to understand the importance of referrals—just like our clients do when we ask.
Agents aren’t conditioned to send referrals unless we ask. The best time to ask is right after you’ve helped them like after:
If you're a brokerage owner or team leader, one thing you might be missing is building out your culture. And culture is incredibly important. One of my good friends told me years ago: "Culture beats strategy every day of the week."
Here's what that means:
You can have amazing technology, great coaching, strong leadership, solid systems, excellent staff, a great location, and competitive commission plans... but if people hate coming to work every day, none of that matters.
You need a culture where people are excited to show up, love the work experience, have work-life balance, and enjoy being part of the team. So the real question is: How do you build culture?
Culture doesn't happen by accident. It's intentional. You have to invest time, effort, and energy into building it.
One thing we do at our company is host social nights—sometimes during the day, but we call them social nights or events. We aim to plan one every 6 to 8 weeks. These events can be anything from go-karting, atten...
What is a standard agent and a gap agent?
If you're a brokerage owner or team leader, you need to understand the difference between the two because it can really impact your recruiting.
Let's say you've created a master list, what we call an avatar list in our coaching program that includes people you're trying to go after. Maybe it's 300, 400, or 500 agents in your market that you've identified as ideal candidates for your company. They're the ones you want to bring on.
Now, if you started researching them individually, you'd likely find that you could classify them as either a standard agent or a gap agent.
What’s a standard agent? A standard agent is someone who has closed a transaction in the last 90 days, meaning they’re typically closing four to six to twelve or more deals a year.
A gap agent, on the other hand, is someone who may have done well in the past but hasn’t closed a transaction in the last 90 days.
Who’s more likely to make a move? The gap agents.
They're lookin...
As a brokerage or team owner, you should be recruiting every day—at least one hour a day. If you're not, that's a whole different conversation. But let’s assume you're doing your job, recruiting daily, because that’s the #1 way to bring new agents into your office.
When you get an objection, how do you react? Do you see it as an opportunity or something that scares you? Do you embrace it, or do you run from it?
Objections are just like the ones you get from buyers and sellers—they actually show interest. The worst thing that can happen is getting no objections at all. If a recruit gives you zero pushback, doesn’t respond, or their eyes glaze over, that means they’re not interested. They just want to move on, and you’re nothing more than a nuisance to them.
But when they object, that means they’re engaged. They’re processing what you’re saying, thinking it over, and that’s a good thing.
One of the best ways to handle objections is to anticipate concerns before they come up. Put your...
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